The goal of Ply is to be a very low overhead Task abstraction like it is in C#.
Method | Mean | Error | StdDev | Ratio | RatioSD | Gen 0/1k Op | Gen 1/1k Op | Gen 2/1k Op |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C# Async Await | 24.59 us | 0.8028 us | 0.8923 us | 1.00 | 0.00 | 0.2136 | - | - |
Ply | 24.60 us | 1.1610 us | 1.3371 us | 1.00 | 0.07 | 0.3052 | - | - |
TaskBuilder.fs v2.1.0 | 26.86 us | 0.6751 us | 0.6932 us | 1.09 | 0.03 | 0.5798 | - | - |
Allocated Memory/Op is removed as it isn't correct on .NET Core, Gen 0/1k Op is the relevant metric.
Ply comes bundled with these builders:
builder | return type | tfm | namespace |
---|---|---|---|
task |
Task<'T> | netstandard2.0, netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders |
vtask |
ValueTask<'T> | netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders |
unitTask |
Task | netstandard2.0, netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders |
unitVtask |
ValueTask | netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders |
uvtask |
ValueTask<'T> | netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders.Unsafe |
uunitTask |
Task | netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders.Unsafe |
uunintVtask |
ValueTask | netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders.Unsafe |
uply |
Ply<'T> | netstandard2.0,netcoreapp2.1 | FSharp.Control.Tasks.Builders.Unsafe |
More information on when to use which builder:
builder | description |
---|---|
vtask |
Near zero allocation CE, allocates one object for the execution bubble at the start, and two objects per bind if the Task we bind to isn't completed yet. |
unitTask |
As the TPL doesn't know about F#'s unit type Task.FromResult(()) won't ever return a cached task. On netcoreapp we can check for a succesful completion instead to directly return a CompletedTask removing the task allocation. |
unitVtask |
CE shorthand for doing if vtask.IsCompletedSuccessfully then ValueTask() else ValueTask(vtask.AsTask() :> Task) |
uvtask |
An unsafe version of vtask and one of the few zero allocation* CEs Ply comes with. Read about the trade-off under execution bubble |
uunitTask |
An unsafe version of unitTask and one of the few zero allocation* CEs Ply comes with. Read about the trade-off under execution bubble |
uunitVtask |
An unsafe version of unitVtask and one of the few zero allocation* CEs Ply comes with. Read about the trade-off under execution bubble |
uply |
Can be enqueued directly onto the caller's state machine, skips Task and execution bubble. |
*zero allocation only when any Task (or Task-like) you bind against is already completed.
An execution bubble is made by any C# async-await method for capturing and restoring async local and synchronization context changes. Any changes would otherwise escape onto the caller context.
It's rare that methods do anything with async locals or synchronization contexts, even in C#. So if you know anything you use doesn't do that either then there's nothing inherently unsafe about using the Unsafe CEs as you don't need any execution bubble for correctness.
Thanks to @gusty for very valuable SRTP advice, it helped me tremendously to narrow down what specifically was wrong about an earlier approach I took.
Thanks to @rspeele TaskBuilder.fs was a great inspiration in developing Ply.
- Finish up the experimental branch.
- On master we are at 2 allocations per bind, which are the focus of upcoming work. Then there are the few constant factor allocations which are inevitable and equivalent to C# semantics for async methods.