What is PLinq? And what is the difference between this and the normal Linq? I saw this word many times, so I googled it and found that it is a new .NET Framework 4 feature, but I didn't really understand what it is...
Thanks.
What is PLinq? And what is the difference between this and the normal Linq? I saw this word many times, so I googled it and found that it is a new .NET Framework 4 feature, but I didn't really understand what it is...
Thanks.
From Wikipedia's Parallel Extensions:
Parallel LINQ (PLINQ) is a concurrent query execution engine for LINQ, parallelizing the execution of queries on objects (LINQ to Objects) and XML data (LINQ to XML). PLINQ is intended for exposing data parallelism by use of queries. Any computation on objects that has been implemented as queries can be parallelized by PLINQ. However, the objects need to implement the IParallelEnumerable interface, which is defined by PLINQ itself. Internally it uses TPL for execution.
This is Parallel LINQ. It's a way to run LINQ queries in parallel on multi-core/multi-processor systems, in order to (hopefully) speed them up.
There is a good article on this in MSDN Magazine.
For current details and plans, I recommend reading articles on the Parallel Programming with .NET Team Blog. They are the team implementing the parallel extensions, including PLINQ.
It is a library that allows you to take a normal LINQ query, divide it into smaller tasks and execute each individual task on multiple threads taking advantage of processor cores.
It allows you to add .AsParallel to your LINQ to attempt to execute the query using as many processors as possible. Neat, but you still need to know a bit about whether your algorithm is "parallelisable" - it isn't magic.
It basically removes the need to manage a thread pool and manages synchronising the results coming back from each thread - normally without the parallel extensions library you would have to do this manually.
PLINQ is LINQ executed in Parallel, that is, using as much processing power as you have in your current computer.
If you have a computer with 2 cores like a dual core processor you'll get your Language Integrated Query operators do the work in parallel using both cores.
Using "only" LINQ you won't get as much performance because the standard Language Integrated Query operators won't parallelize your code. That means your code will run in a serial fashion not taking advantage of all your available processor cores.
There are lots of PLINQ query operators capable of executing your code using well known parallel patterns.
Take a look at my blog post in which I show the speed up you get when you run a simple LINQ query in Parallel using the AsParallel extension method:
Parallel LINQ (PLINQ) with Visual Studio 2010
If you want to go deep using PLINQ, I advise you to read: