Hands-on workshop
Most developers have written or used concurrent code during their careers. Those who use Java are probably familiar with the traditional unit of concurrency: the Thread.
Kotlin brought first class support to a different paradigm, called coroutines.
This workshop intends to demonstrate the differences between concurrency models based on threads and concurrency models based on coroutines. We will present coroutines to developers who have already used threads and answer questions such as:
- How different are coroutines and Threads?
- Are there any new pitfalls that developers should be aware of?
- Do the traditional synchronization methods available in the JRE still apply?
By the end of this workshop, participants will have a good grasp of the paradigm shift that Kotlin coroutines brought to the JVM.
You are expected to have basic notions of threading, concurrency, parallelism and synchronization.
You only need a basic working knowledge of the Kotlin language.
-
Basic principles behind coroutines (presentation).
-
Simple coroutine declaration and usage.
- Bridging worlds with
runBlocking
functions. - The
launch
function. - The
suspend
keyword.
- Bridging worlds with
-
How lightweight are coroutines?
- Create 100000 threads. What happens?
- Create 100000 coroutines. What happens?
-
Cooperative vs. preemptive.
- What happens if a coroutine misbehaves and blocks?
- Explicit yielding.
-
Cancellation and timeouts.
- The
Job
interface. - The
withTimeout
function.
- The
-
Explicit concurrent execution of coroutines.
- The
async
function. - The
Delayed
interface. - The
coroutineScope
function.
- The
-
Shared mutable state...
- Synchronization.
-
Generators (flows).
The presentation slides are available in this repo as well as a PDF file.