Mutex's and Semaphores - The toilet Example.
Mutex:
Is a key to a toilet. One person can
have the key - occupy the toilet - at
the time. When finished, the person
gives (frees) the key to the next
person in the queue.
Officially: "Mutexes are typically
used to serialise access to a section
of re-entrant code that cannot be
executed concurrently by more than one
thread. A mutex object only allows one
thread into a controlled section,
forcing other threads which attempt to
gain access to that section to wait
until the first thread has exited from
that section." Ref: Symbian Developer
Library
(A mutex is really a semaphore with
value 1.)
Semaphore:
Is the number of free identical toilet
keys. Example, say we have four
toilets with identical locks and keys.
The semaphore count - the count of
keys - is set to 4 at beginning (all
four toilets are free), then the count
value is decremented as people are
coming in. If all toilets are full,
ie. there are no free keys left, the
semaphore count is 0. Now, when eq.
one person leaves the toilet,
semaphore is increased to 1 (one free
key), and given to the next person in
the queue.
Officially: "A semaphore restricts the
number of simultaneous users of a
shared resource up to a maximum
number. Threads can request access to
the resource (decrementing the
semaphore), and can signal that they
have finished using the resource
(incrementing the semaphore)." Ref:
Symbian Developer Library
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