I\'m building a console application that have to process a bunch of data.
Basically, the application grabs references from a DB. For each reference, parse the conten
You're not leveraging any async I/O APIs in any of your code. Everything you're doing is CPU bound and all your I/O operations are going to waste CPU resources blocking. AsParallel is for compute bound tasks, if you want to take advantage of async I/O you need to leverage the Asynchronous Programming Model (APM) based APIs today in <= v4.0. This is done by looking for BeginXXX/EndXXX methods on the I/O based classes you're using and leveraging those whenever available.
Read this post for starters: TPL TaskFactory.FromAsync vs Tasks with blocking methods
Next, you don't want to use AsParallel in this case anyway. AsParallel enables streaming which will result in an immediately scheduling a new Task per item, but you don't need/want that here. You'd be much better served by partitioning the work using Parallel::ForEach.
Let's see how you can use this knowledge to achieve max concurrency in your specific case:
var refs = GetReferencesFromDB();
// Using Parallel::ForEach here will partition and process your data on separate worker threads
Parallel.ForEach(
refs,
ref =>
{
string filePath = GetFilePath(ref);
byte[] fileDataBuffer = new byte[1048576];
// Need to use FileStream API directly so we can enable async I/O
FileStream sourceFileStream = new FileStream(
filePath,
FileMode.Open,
FileAccess.Read,
FileShare.Read,
8192,
true);
// Use FromAsync to read the data from the file
Task readSourceFileStreamTask = Task.Factory.FromAsync(
sourceFileStream.BeginRead
sourceFileStream.EndRead
fileDataBuffer,
fileDataBuffer.Length,
null);
// Add a continuation that will fire when the async read is completed
readSourceFileStreamTask.ContinueWith(readSourceFileStreamAntecedent =>
{
int soureFileStreamBytesRead;
try
{
// Determine exactly how many bytes were read
// NOTE: this will propagate any potential exception that may have occurred in EndRead
sourceFileStreamBytesRead = readSourceFileStreamAntecedent.Result;
}
finally
{
// Always clean up the source stream
sourceFileStream.Close();
sourceFileStream = null;
}
// This is here to make sure you don't end up trying to read files larger than this sample code can handle
if(sourceFileStreamBytesRead == fileDataBuffer.Length)
{
throw new NotSupportedException("You need to implement reading files larger than 1MB. :P");
}
// Convert the file data to a string
string html = Encoding.UTF8.GetString(fileDataBuffer, 0, sourceFileStreamBytesRead);
// Parse the HTML
string convertedHtml = ParseHtml(html);
// This is here to make sure you don't end up trying to write files larger than this sample code can handle
if(Encoding.UTF8.GetByteCount > fileDataBuffer.Length)
{
throw new NotSupportedException("You need to implement writing files larger than 1MB. :P");
}
// Convert the file data back to bytes for writing
Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(convertedHtml, 0, convertedHtml.Length, fileDataBuffer, 0);
// Need to use FileStream API directly so we can enable async I/O
FileStream destinationFileStream = new FileStream(
destinationFilePath,
FileMode.OpenOrCreate,
FileAccess.Write,
FileShare.None,
8192,
true);
// Use FromAsync to read the data from the file
Task destinationFileStreamWriteTask = Task.Factory.FromAsync(
destinationFileStream.BeginWrite,
destinationFileStream.EndWrite,
fileDataBuffer,
0,
fileDataBuffer.Length,
null);
// Add a continuation that will fire when the async write is completed
destinationFileStreamWriteTask.ContinueWith(destinationFileStreamWriteAntecedent =>
{
try
{
// NOTE: we call wait here to observe any potential exceptions that might have occurred in EndWrite
destinationFileStreamWriteAntecedent.Wait();
}
finally
{
// Always close the destination file stream
destinationFileStream.Close();
destinationFileStream = null;
}
},
TaskContinuationOptions.AttachedToParent);
// Send to external system **concurrent** to writing to destination file system above
SendToWs(ref, convertedHtml);
},
TaskContinuationOptions.AttachedToParent);
});
Now, here's few notes:
TaskContinuationOptions.AttachedToParent. This is very important as it will prevent the worker thread that the Parallel::ForEach starts the work with from completing until all the underlying async calls have completed. If this was not here you would kick off work for all 5000 items concurrently which would pollute the TPL subsystem with thousands of scheduled Tasks and not scale properly at all.