Reputation: 735
Recently I had confusion with understanding concepts: multithreading, concurrency, and parallelism. In order to reduce confusion, I've tried to organize my understanding about these and drawn my conclusion. My question is,
Is there a misunderstanding or something wrong from conclusion below?
References I took can be found here.
Detailed description will be truly appreciated.
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1179
Reputation: 27115
Parallelism Refers to any system in which a single application can make use of more computing hardware than a single CPU can provide. There are a number of different types of parallel computing architecture, but when people say "parallelism" they often are talking about one in particular...
...A Symmetric MultiProcessing (SMP) system is a computer with one memory system, and two or more traditional CPUs that have equal access to it. Most modern workstations, most mobile devices, and many server systems* are SMP.
Multithreading is a model of concurrent computing.** A computer scientist might tell you that two threads run concurrently when the order in which the operations they perform are interleaved is not strictly determined by the program itself. A software developer is more likely to say that two threads run concurrently with each other when both threads have been started and neither of them has finished.
One way to achieve parallelism in an application running on an SMP system is to use multiple concurrent threads.
* Some servers are NUMA, which is a close cousin to SMP. In a NUMA system, the CPUs all access the same memory system, just like in SMP, except that each CPU "owns" part of the physical memory space, and it can access its own memory locations more quickly than it can access memory locations that are owned by other CPUs.
** There are other models of concurrent computing. Some, such as Actors, are used in production software. Others are mostly of academic interest.
Upvotes: 4