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fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:001# Threading and Tasks in Chrome
2
3[TOC]
4
Gabriel Charette8917f4c2018-11-22 15:50:285Note: See [Threading and Tasks FAQ](threading_and_tasks_faq.md) for more
6examples.
7
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:008## Overview
9
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3810Chrome has a [multi-process
11architecture](https://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/multi-process-architecture)
12and each process is heavily multi-threaded. In this document we will go over the
13basic threading system shared by each process. The main goal is to keep the main
14thread (a.k.a. "UI" thread in the browser process) and IO thread (each process'
15thread for handling
16[IPC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-process_communication)) responsive.
17This means offloading any blocking I/O or other expensive operations to other
18threads. Our approach is to use message passing as the way of communicating
19between threads. We discourage locking and thread-safe objects. Instead, objects
20live on only one (often virtual -- we'll get to that later!) thread and we pass
21messages between those threads for communication.
22
23This documentation assumes familiarity with computer science
24[threading concepts](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_(computing)).
Gabriel Charette90480312018-02-16 15:10:0525
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:1526### Nomenclature
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3827
28## Core Concepts
29 * **Task**: A unit of work to be processed. Effectively a function pointer with
30 optionally associated state. In Chrome this is `base::Callback` created via
31 `base::Bind`
32 ([documentation](https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/HEAD/docs/callback.md)).
33 * **Task queue**: A queue of tasks to be processed.
34 * **Physical thread**: An operating system provided thread (e.g. pthread on
35 POSIX or CreateThread() on Windows). The Chrome cross-platform abstraction
36 is `base::PlatformThread`. You should pretty much never use this directly.
37 * **`base::Thread`**: A physical thread forever processing messages from a
38 dedicated task queue until Quit(). You should pretty much never be creating
39 your own `base::Thread`'s.
40 * **Thread pool**: A pool of physical threads with a shared task queue. In
Gabriel Charette0b20ee62019-09-18 14:06:1241 Chrome, this is `base::ThreadPoolInstance`. There's exactly one instance per
42 Chrome process, it serves tasks posted through
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3843 [`base/task/post_task.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/post_task.h)
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:5144 and as such you should rarely need to use the `base::ThreadPoolInstance` API
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3845 directly (more on posting tasks later).
46 * **Sequence** or **Virtual thread**: A chrome-managed thread of execution.
47 Like a physical thread, only one task can run on a given sequence / virtual
48 thread at any given moment and each task sees the side-effects of the
49 preceding tasks. Tasks are executed sequentially but may hop physical
50 threads between each one.
51 * **Task runner**: An interface through which tasks can be posted. In Chrome
52 this is `base::TaskRunner`.
53 * **Sequenced task runner**: A task runner which guarantees that tasks posted
54 to it will run sequentially, in posted order. Each such task is guaranteed to
55 see the side-effects of the task preceding it. Tasks posted to a sequenced
56 task runner are typically processed by a single thread (virtual or physical).
57 In Chrome this is `base::SequencedTaskRunner` which is-a
58 `base::TaskRunner`.
59 * **Single-thread task runner**: A sequenced task runner which guarantees that
60 all tasks will be processed by the same physical thread. In Chrome this is
61 `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` which is-a `base::SequencedTaskRunner`. We
62 [prefer sequences to threads](#prefer-sequences-to-physical-threads) whenever
63 possible.
64
65## Threading Lexicon
66Note to the reader: the following terms are an attempt to bridge the gap between
67common threading nomenclature and the way we use them in Chrome. It might be a
68bit heavy if you're just getting started. Should this be hard to parse, consider
69skipping to the more detailed sections below and referring back to this as
70necessary.
71
72 * **Thread-unsafe**: The vast majority of types in Chrome are thread-unsafe
73 (by design). Access to such types/methods must be externally synchronized.
74 Typically thread-unsafe types require that all tasks accessing their state be
75 posted to the same `base::SequencedTaskRunner` and they verify this in debug
76 builds with a `SEQUENCE_CHECKER` member. Locks are also an option to
77 synchronize access but in Chrome we strongly
78 [prefer sequences to locks](#Using-Sequences-Instead-of-Locks).
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:1579 * **Thread-affine**: Such types/methods need to be always accessed from the
Gabriel Charetteb984d672019-02-12 21:53:2780 same physical thread (i.e. from the same `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner`) and
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3881 typically have a `THREAD_CHECKER` member to verify that they are. Short of
82 using a third-party API or having a leaf dependency which is thread-affine:
83 there's pretty much no reason for a type to be thread-affine in Chrome.
84 Note that `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` is-a `base::SequencedTaskRunner` so
Gabriel Charetteb984d672019-02-12 21:53:2785 thread-affine is a subset of thread-unsafe. Thread-affine is also sometimes
86 referred to as **thread-hostile**.
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:1587 * **Thread-safe**: Such types/methods can be safely accessed concurrently.
Gabriel Charetteb984d672019-02-12 21:53:2788 * **Thread-compatible**: Such types provide safe concurrent access to const
89 methods but require synchronization for non-const (or mixed const/non-const
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:3890 access). Chrome doesn't expose reader-writer locks; as such, the only use
Gabriel Charetteb984d672019-02-12 21:53:2791 case for this is objects (typically globals) which are initialized once in a
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:1592 thread-safe manner (either in the single-threaded phase of startup or lazily
93 through a thread-safe static-local-initialization paradigm a la
Gabriel Charetteb984d672019-02-12 21:53:2794 `base::NoDestructor`) and forever after immutable.
95 * **Immutable**: A subset of thread-compatible types which cannot be modified
96 after construction.
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:1597 * **Sequence-friendly**: Such types/methods are thread-unsafe types which
98 support being invoked from a `base::SequencedTaskRunner`. Ideally this would
99 be the case for all thread-unsafe types but legacy code sometimes has
100 overzealous checks that enforce thread-affinity in mere thread-unsafe
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38101 scenarios. See [Prefer Sequences to
102 Threads](#prefer-sequences-to-physical-threads) below for more details.
Gabriel Charette364a16a2019-02-06 21:12:15103
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00104### Threads
105
106Every Chrome process has
107
108* a main thread
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38109 * in the browser process (BrowserThread::UI): updates the UI
110 * in renderer processes (Blink main thread): runs most of Blink
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00111* an IO thread
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27112 * in the browser process (BrowserThread::IO): handles IPCs and network
113 requests
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00114 * in renderer processes: handles IPCs
115* a few more special-purpose threads
116* and a pool of general-purpose threads
117
118Most threads have a loop that gets tasks from a queue and runs them (the queue
119may be shared between multiple threads).
120
121### Tasks
122
123A task is a `base::OnceClosure` added to a queue for asynchronous execution.
124
125A `base::OnceClosure` stores a function pointer and arguments. It has a `Run()`
126method that invokes the function pointer using the bound arguments. It is
127created using `base::BindOnce`. (ref. [Callback<> and Bind()
128documentation](callback.md)).
129
130```
131void TaskA() {}
132void TaskB(int v) {}
133
134auto task_a = base::BindOnce(&TaskA);
135auto task_b = base::BindOnce(&TaskB, 42);
136```
137
138A group of tasks can be executed in one of the following ways:
139
140* [Parallel](#Posting-a-Parallel-Task): No task execution ordering, possibly all
141 at once on any thread
142* [Sequenced](#Posting-a-Sequenced-Task): Tasks executed in posting order, one
143 at a time on any thread.
144* [Single Threaded](#Posting-Multiple-Tasks-to-the-Same-Thread): Tasks executed
145 in posting order, one at a time on a single thread.
Drew Stonebraker653a3ba2019-07-02 19:24:23146 * [COM Single Threaded](#Posting-Tasks-to-a-COM-Single_Thread-Apartment-STA_Thread-Windows):
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00147 A variant of single threaded with COM initialized.
148
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38149### Prefer Sequences to Physical Threads
gab2a4576052017-06-07 23:36:12150
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38151Sequenced execution (on virtual threads) is strongly preferred to
152single-threaded execution (on physical threads). Except for types/methods bound
153to the main thread (UI) or IO threads: thread-safety is better achieved via
154`base::SequencedTaskRunner` than through managing your own physical threads
155(ref. [Posting a Sequenced Task](#posting-a-sequenced-task) below).
gab2a4576052017-06-07 23:36:12156
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38157All APIs which are exposed for "current physical thread" have an equivalent for
158"current sequence"
159([mapping](threading_and_tasks_faq.md#How-to-migrate-from-SingleThreadTaskRunner-to-SequencedTaskRunner)).
gab2a4576052017-06-07 23:36:12160
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38161If you find yourself writing a sequence-friendly type and it fails
162thread-affinity checks (e.g., `THREAD_CHECKER`) in a leaf dependency: consider
163making that dependency sequence-friendly as well. Most core APIs in Chrome are
164sequence-friendly, but some legacy types may still over-zealously use
165ThreadChecker/ThreadTaskRunnerHandle/SingleThreadTaskRunner when they could
166instead rely on the "current sequence" and no longer be thread-affine.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00167
168## Posting a Parallel Task
169
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37170### Direct Posting to the Thread Pool
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00171
172A task that can run on any thread and doesn’t have ordering or mutual exclusion
173requirements with other tasks should be posted using one of the
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45174`base::ThreadPool::PostTask*()` functions defined in
175[`base/task/thread_pool.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/thread_pool.h).
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00176
177```cpp
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45178base::ThreadPool::PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&Task));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00179```
180
181This posts tasks with default traits.
182
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45183The `base::ThreadPool::PostTask*()` functions allow the caller to provide
184additional details about the task via TaskTraits (ref. [Annotating Tasks with
185TaskTraits](#Annotating-Tasks-with-TaskTraits)).
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00186
187```cpp
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45188base::ThreadPool::PostTask(
Gabriel Charetteb10aeeb2018-07-26 20:15:00189 FROM_HERE, {base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT, MayBlock()},
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00190 base::BindOnce(&Task));
191```
192
fdoray52bf5552017-05-11 12:43:59193### Posting via a TaskRunner
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00194
195A parallel
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38196[`base::TaskRunner`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task_runner.h) is
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45197an alternative to calling `base::ThreadPool::PostTask*()` directly. This is
198mainly useful when it isn’t known in advance whether tasks will be posted in
199parallel, in sequence, or to a single-thread (ref. [Posting a Sequenced
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38200Task](#Posting-a-Sequenced-Task), [Posting Multiple Tasks to the Same
201Thread](#Posting-Multiple-Tasks-to-the-Same-Thread)). Since `base::TaskRunner`
202is the base class of `base::SequencedTaskRunner` and
203`base::SingleThreadTaskRunner`, a `scoped_refptr<TaskRunner>` member can hold a
204`base::TaskRunner`, a `base::SequencedTaskRunner` or a
205`base::SingleThreadTaskRunner`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00206
207```cpp
208class A {
209 public:
210 A() = default;
211
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45212 void PostSomething() {
213 task_runner_->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&A, &DoSomething));
214 }
215
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00216 void DoSomething() {
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00217 }
218
219 private:
220 scoped_refptr<base::TaskRunner> task_runner_ =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45221 base::ThreadPool::CreateTaskRunner({base::TaskPriority::USER_VISIBLE});
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00222};
223```
224
225Unless a test needs to control precisely how tasks are executed, it is preferred
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27226to call `base::ThreadPool::PostTask*()` directly (ref. [Testing](#Testing) for
227less invasive ways of controlling tasks in tests).
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00228
229## Posting a Sequenced Task
230
231A sequence is a set of tasks that run one at a time in posting order (not
232necessarily on the same thread). To post tasks as part of a sequence, use a
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38233[`base::SequencedTaskRunner`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/sequenced_task_runner.h).
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00234
235### Posting to a New Sequence
236
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38237A `base::SequencedTaskRunner` can be created by
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45238`base::ThreadPool::CreateSequencedTaskRunner()`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00239
240```cpp
241scoped_refptr<SequencedTaskRunner> sequenced_task_runner =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45242 base::ThreadPool::CreateSequencedTaskRunner(...);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00243
244// TaskB runs after TaskA completes.
245sequenced_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskA));
246sequenced_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskB));
247```
248
Alex Clarke0dd499562019-10-18 19:45:09249### Posting to the Current (Virtual) Thread
250
Gabriel Charettefee55662019-11-20 21:06:28251The preferred way of posting to the current (virtual) thread is via
252`base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get()`.
Alex Clarke0dd499562019-10-18 19:45:09253
254```cpp
255// The task will run on the current (virtual) thread's default task queue.
Gabriel Charettefee55662019-11-20 21:06:28256base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(
257 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&Task);
Alex Clarke0dd499562019-10-18 19:45:09258```
259
Gabriel Charettefee55662019-11-20 21:06:28260Note that SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get() returns the default queue for the
261current virtual thread. On threads with multiple task queues (e.g.
262BrowserThread::UI) this can be a different queue than the one the current task
263belongs to. The "current" task runner is intentionally not exposed via a static
264getter. Either you know it already and can post to it directly or you don't and
265the only sensible destination is the default queue.
Alex Clarke0dd499562019-10-18 19:45:09266
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00267## Using Sequences Instead of Locks
268
269Usage of locks is discouraged in Chrome. Sequences inherently provide
Gabriel Charettea3ccc972018-11-13 14:43:12270thread-safety. Prefer classes that are always accessed from the same
271sequence to managing your own thread-safety with locks.
272
273**Thread-safe but not thread-affine; how so?** Tasks posted to the same sequence
274will run in sequential order. After a sequenced task completes, the next task
275may be picked up by a different worker thread, but that task is guaranteed to
276see any side-effects caused by the previous one(s) on its sequence.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00277
278```cpp
279class A {
280 public:
281 A() {
282 // Do not require accesses to be on the creation sequence.
isherman8c33b8a2017-06-27 19:18:30283 DETACH_FROM_SEQUENCE(sequence_checker_);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00284 }
285
286 void AddValue(int v) {
287 // Check that all accesses are on the same sequence.
isherman8c33b8a2017-06-27 19:18:30288 DCHECK_CALLED_ON_VALID_SEQUENCE(sequence_checker_);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00289 values_.push_back(v);
290}
291
292 private:
isherman8c33b8a2017-06-27 19:18:30293 SEQUENCE_CHECKER(sequence_checker_);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00294
295 // No lock required, because all accesses are on the
296 // same sequence.
297 std::vector<int> values_;
298};
299
300A a;
301scoped_refptr<SequencedTaskRunner> task_runner_for_a = ...;
Mike Bjorged3a09842018-05-15 18:37:28302task_runner_for_a->PostTask(FROM_HERE,
303 base::BindOnce(&A::AddValue, base::Unretained(&a), 42));
304task_runner_for_a->PostTask(FROM_HERE,
305 base::BindOnce(&A::AddValue, base::Unretained(&a), 27));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00306
307// Access from a different sequence causes a DCHECK failure.
308scoped_refptr<SequencedTaskRunner> other_task_runner = ...;
309other_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE,
Mike Bjorged3a09842018-05-15 18:37:28310 base::BindOnce(&A::AddValue, base::Unretained(&a), 1));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00311```
312
Gabriel Charette90480312018-02-16 15:10:05313Locks should only be used to swap in a shared data structure that can be
314accessed on multiple threads. If one thread updates it based on expensive
315computation or through disk access, then that slow work should be done without
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38316holding the lock. Only when the result is available should the lock be used to
317swap in the new data. An example of this is in PluginList::LoadPlugins
318([`content/browser/plugin_list.cc`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/content/browser/plugin_list.cc).
319If you must use locks,
Gabriel Charette90480312018-02-16 15:10:05320[here](https://www.chromium.org/developers/lock-and-condition-variable) are some
321best practices and pitfalls to avoid.
322
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38323In order to write non-blocking code, many APIs in Chrome are asynchronous.
Gabriel Charette90480312018-02-16 15:10:05324Usually this means that they either need to be executed on a particular
325thread/sequence and will return results via a custom delegate interface, or they
326take a `base::Callback<>` object that is called when the requested operation is
327completed. Executing work on a specific thread/sequence is covered in the
328PostTask sections above.
329
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00330## Posting Multiple Tasks to the Same Thread
331
332If multiple tasks need to run on the same thread, post them to a
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38333[`base::SingleThreadTaskRunner`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/single_thread_task_runner.h).
334All tasks posted to the same `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` run on the same thread in
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00335posting order.
336
337### Posting to the Main Thread or to the IO Thread in the Browser Process
338
Eric Seckler6cf08db82018-08-30 12:01:55339To post tasks to the main thread or to the IO thread, use
Olivier Li56b99d4e2020-02-11 13:51:41340`content::GetUIThreadTaskRunner({})` or `content::GetIOThreadTaskRunner({})`
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27341from
342[`content/public/browser/browser_thread.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/content/public/browser/browser_thread.h)
343
344You may provide additional BrowserTaskTraits as a parameter to those methods
345though this is generally still uncommon in BrowserThreads and should be reserved
346for advanced use cases.
347
348There's an ongoing migration ([task APIs v3]) away from the previous
349base-API-with-traits which you may still find throughout the codebase (it's
350equivalent):
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00351
352```cpp
Sami Kyostila831c60b2019-07-31 13:31:23353base::PostTask(FROM_HERE, {content::BrowserThread::UI}, ...);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00354
Sami Kyostila831c60b2019-07-31 13:31:23355base::CreateSingleThreadTaskRunner({content::BrowserThread::IO})
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00356 ->PostTask(FROM_HERE, ...);
357```
358
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27359Note: For the duration of the migration, you'll unfortunately need to continue
360manually including
361[`content/public/browser/browser_task_traits.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/content/public/browser/browser_task_traits.h).
362to use the browser_thread.h API.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45363
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00364The main thread and the IO thread are already super busy. Therefore, prefer
fdoray52bf5552017-05-11 12:43:59365posting to a general purpose thread when possible (ref.
366[Posting a Parallel Task](#Posting-a-Parallel-Task),
367[Posting a Sequenced task](#Posting-a-Sequenced-Task)).
368Good reasons to post to the main thread are to update the UI or access objects
369that are bound to it (e.g. `Profile`). A good reason to post to the IO thread is
370to access the internals of components that are bound to it (e.g. IPCs, network).
371Note: It is not necessary to have an explicit post task to the IO thread to
372send/receive an IPC or send/receive data on the network.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00373
374### Posting to the Main Thread in a Renderer Process
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27375TODO(blink-dev)
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00376
377### Posting to a Custom SingleThreadTaskRunner
378
379If multiple tasks need to run on the same thread and that thread doesn’t have to
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45380be the main thread or the IO thread, post them to a
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27381`base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` created by
382`base::Threadpool::CreateSingleThreadTaskRunner`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00383
384```cpp
Dominic Farolinodbe9769b2019-05-31 04:06:03385scoped_refptr<SingleThreadTaskRunner> single_thread_task_runner =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45386 base::Threadpool::CreateSingleThreadTaskRunner(...);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00387
388// TaskB runs after TaskA completes. Both tasks run on the same thread.
389single_thread_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskA));
390single_thread_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskB));
391```
392
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38393Remember that we [prefer sequences to physical
394threads](#prefer-sequences-to-physical-threads) and that this thus should rarely
395be necessary.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00396
Alexander Timine653dfc2020-01-07 17:55:06397### Posting to the Current Thread
398
399*** note
400**IMPORTANT:** To post a task that needs mutual exclusion with the current
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27401sequence of tasks but doesn’t absolutely need to run on the current physical
402thread, use `base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get()` instead of
Alexander Timine653dfc2020-01-07 17:55:06403`base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()` (ref. [Posting to the Current
Gabriel Charette49e3cd02020-01-28 03:45:27404Sequence](#Posting-to-the-Current-Virtual_Thread)). That will better document
405the requirements of the posted task and will avoid unnecessarily making your API
406physical thread-affine. In a single-thread task,
407`base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get()` is equivalent to
408`base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()`.
Alexander Timine653dfc2020-01-07 17:55:06409***
410
411If you must post a task to the current physical thread nonetheless, use
412[`base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/threading/thread_task_runner_handle.h).
413
414```cpp
415// The task will run on the current thread in the future.
416base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(
417 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&Task));
418```
419
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00420## Posting Tasks to a COM Single-Thread Apartment (STA) Thread (Windows)
421
422Tasks that need to run on a COM Single-Thread Apartment (STA) thread must be
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38423posted to a `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` returned by
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45424`base::ThreadPool::CreateCOMSTATaskRunner()`. As mentioned in [Posting Multiple
425Tasks to the Same Thread](#Posting-Multiple-Tasks-to-the-Same-Thread), all tasks
426posted to the same `base::SingleThreadTaskRunner` run on the same thread in
427posting order.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00428
429```cpp
430// Task(A|B|C)UsingCOMSTA will run on the same COM STA thread.
431
432void TaskAUsingCOMSTA() {
433 // [ This runs on a COM STA thread. ]
434
435 // Make COM STA calls.
436 // ...
437
438 // Post another task to the current COM STA thread.
439 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(
440 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskCUsingCOMSTA));
441}
442void TaskBUsingCOMSTA() { }
443void TaskCUsingCOMSTA() { }
444
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45445auto com_sta_task_runner = base::ThreadPool::CreateCOMSTATaskRunner(...);
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00446com_sta_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskAUsingCOMSTA));
447com_sta_task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&TaskBUsingCOMSTA));
448```
449
450## Annotating Tasks with TaskTraits
451
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38452[`base::TaskTraits`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/task_traits.h)
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37453encapsulate information about a task that helps the thread pool make better
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00454scheduling decisions.
455
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45456Methods that take `base::TaskTraits` can be be passed `{}` when default traits
457are sufficient. Default traits are appropriate for tasks that:
Gabriel Charettede41cad2020-03-03 18:05:06458- Don’t block (ref. MayBlock and WithBaseSyncPrimitives);
459- Pertain to user-blocking activity;
460 (explicitly or implicitly by having an ordering dependency with a component
461 that does)
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37462- Can either block shutdown or be skipped on shutdown (thread pool is free to
463 choose a fitting default).
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00464Tasks that don’t match this description must be posted with explicit TaskTraits.
465
Gabriel Charette04b138f2018-08-06 00:03:22466[`base/task/task_traits.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/task_traits.h)
Eric Seckler6cf08db82018-08-30 12:01:55467provides exhaustive documentation of available traits. The content layer also
468provides additional traits in
469[`content/public/browser/browser_task_traits.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/content/public/browser/browser_task_traits.h)
470to facilitate posting a task onto a BrowserThread.
471
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38472Below are some examples of how to specify `base::TaskTraits`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00473
474```cpp
Gabriel Charettede41cad2020-03-03 18:05:06475// This task has no explicit TaskTraits. It cannot block. Its priority is
476// USER_BLOCKING. It will either block shutdown or be skipped on shutdown.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45477base::ThreadPool::PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(...));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00478
Gabriel Charettede41cad2020-03-03 18:05:06479// This task has the highest priority. The thread pool will schedule it before
480// USER_VISIBLE and BEST_EFFORT tasks.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45481base::ThreadPool::PostTask(
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00482 FROM_HERE, {base::TaskPriority::USER_BLOCKING},
483 base::BindOnce(...));
484
485// This task has the lowest priority and is allowed to block (e.g. it
486// can read a file from disk).
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45487base::ThreadPool::PostTask(
Gabriel Charetteb10aeeb2018-07-26 20:15:00488 FROM_HERE, {base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT, base::MayBlock()},
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00489 base::BindOnce(...));
490
491// This task blocks shutdown. The process won't exit before its
492// execution is complete.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45493base::ThreadPool::PostTask(
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00494 FROM_HERE, {base::TaskShutdownBehavior::BLOCK_SHUTDOWN},
495 base::BindOnce(...));
496```
497
498## Keeping the Browser Responsive
499
500Do not perform expensive work on the main thread, the IO thread or any sequence
501that is expected to run tasks with a low latency. Instead, perform expensive
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45502work asynchronously using `base::ThreadPool::PostTaskAndReply*()` or
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38503`base::SequencedTaskRunner::PostTaskAndReply()`. Note that
504asynchronous/overlapped I/O on the IO thread are fine.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00505
506Example: Running the code below on the main thread will prevent the browser from
507responding to user input for a long time.
508
509```cpp
510// GetHistoryItemsFromDisk() may block for a long time.
511// AddHistoryItemsToOmniboxDropDown() updates the UI and therefore must
512// be called on the main thread.
513AddHistoryItemsToOmniboxDropdown(GetHistoryItemsFromDisk("keyword"));
514```
515
516The code below solves the problem by scheduling a call to
517`GetHistoryItemsFromDisk()` in a thread pool followed by a call to
518`AddHistoryItemsToOmniboxDropdown()` on the origin sequence (the main thread in
519this case). The return value of the first call is automatically provided as
520argument to the second call.
521
522```cpp
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45523base::ThreadPool::PostTaskAndReplyWithResult(
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00524 FROM_HERE, {base::MayBlock()},
525 base::BindOnce(&GetHistoryItemsFromDisk, "keyword"),
526 base::BindOnce(&AddHistoryItemsToOmniboxDropdown));
527```
528
529## Posting a Task with a Delay
530
531### Posting a One-Off Task with a Delay
532
533To post a task that must run once after a delay expires, use
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45534`base::ThreadPool::PostDelayedTask*()` or `base::TaskRunner::PostDelayedTask()`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00535
536```cpp
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45537base::ThreadPool::PostDelayedTask(
Gabriel Charetteb10aeeb2018-07-26 20:15:00538 FROM_HERE, {base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT}, base::BindOnce(&Task),
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00539 base::TimeDelta::FromHours(1));
540
541scoped_refptr<base::SequencedTaskRunner> task_runner =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45542 base::ThreadPool::CreateSequencedTaskRunner(
543 {base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT});
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00544task_runner->PostDelayedTask(
545 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&Task), base::TimeDelta::FromHours(1));
546```
547
548*** note
549**NOTE:** A task that has a 1-hour delay probably doesn’t have to run right away
Gabriel Charetteb10aeeb2018-07-26 20:15:00550when its delay expires. Specify `base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT` to prevent it
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00551from slowing down the browser when its delay expires.
552***
553
554### Posting a Repeating Task with a Delay
555To post a task that must run at regular intervals,
556use [`base::RepeatingTimer`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/timer/timer.h).
557
558```cpp
559class A {
560 public:
561 ~A() {
562 // The timer is stopped automatically when it is deleted.
563 }
564 void StartDoingStuff() {
565 timer_.Start(FROM_HERE, TimeDelta::FromSeconds(1),
566 this, &MyClass::DoStuff);
567 }
568 void StopDoingStuff() {
569 timer_.Stop();
570 }
571 private:
572 void DoStuff() {
573 // This method is called every second on the sequence that invoked
574 // StartDoingStuff().
575 }
576 base::RepeatingTimer timer_;
577};
578```
579
580## Cancelling a Task
581
582### Using base::WeakPtr
583
584[`base::WeakPtr`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/memory/weak_ptr.h)
585can be used to ensure that any callback bound to an object is canceled when that
586object is destroyed.
587
588```cpp
589int Compute() { … }
590
591class A {
592 public:
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00593 void ComputeAndStore() {
594 // Schedule a call to Compute() in a thread pool followed by
595 // a call to A::Store() on the current sequence. The call to
596 // A::Store() is canceled when |weak_ptr_factory_| is destroyed.
597 // (guarantees that |this| will not be used-after-free).
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45598 base::ThreadPool::PostTaskAndReplyWithResult(
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00599 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&Compute),
600 base::BindOnce(&A::Store, weak_ptr_factory_.GetWeakPtr()));
601 }
602
603 private:
604 void Store(int value) { value_ = value; }
605
606 int value_;
Jeremy Roman0dd0b2f2019-07-16 21:00:43607 base::WeakPtrFactory<A> weak_ptr_factory_{this};
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00608};
609```
610
611Note: `WeakPtr` is not thread-safe: `GetWeakPtr()`, `~WeakPtrFactory()`, and
612`Compute()` (bound to a `WeakPtr`) must all run on the same sequence.
613
614### Using base::CancelableTaskTracker
615
616[`base::CancelableTaskTracker`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/cancelable_task_tracker.h)
617allows cancellation to happen on a different sequence than the one on which
618tasks run. Keep in mind that `CancelableTaskTracker` cannot cancel tasks that
619have already started to run.
620
621```cpp
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45622auto task_runner = base::ThreadPool::CreateTaskRunner({});
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00623base::CancelableTaskTracker cancelable_task_tracker;
624cancelable_task_tracker.PostTask(task_runner.get(), FROM_HERE,
Peter Kasting341e1fb2018-02-24 00:03:01625 base::DoNothing());
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00626// Cancels Task(), only if it hasn't already started running.
627cancelable_task_tracker.TryCancelAll();
628```
629
Etienne Pierre-dorayd3882992020-01-14 20:34:11630## Posting a Job to run in parallel
631
632The [`base::PostJob`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/post_job.h)
633is a power user API to be able to schedule a single base::RepeatingCallback
634worker task and request that ThreadPool workers invoke it concurrently.
635This avoids degenerate cases:
636* Calling `PostTask()` for each work item, causing significant overhead.
637* Fixed number of `PostTask()` calls that split the work and might run for a
638 long time. This is problematic when many components post “num cores” tasks and
639 all expect to use all the cores. In these cases, the scheduler lacks context
640 to be fair to multiple same-priority requests and/or ability to request lower
641 priority work to yield when high priority work comes in.
642
Etienne Pierre-doray6d3cd9192020-04-06 21:10:37643See [`base/task/job_perftest.cc`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/job_perftest.cc)
644for a complete example.
645
Etienne Pierre-dorayd3882992020-01-14 20:34:11646```cpp
647// A canonical implementation of |worker_task|.
648void WorkerTask(base::JobDelegate* job_delegate) {
649 while (!job_delegate->ShouldYield()) {
650 auto work_item = TakeWorkItem(); // Smallest unit of work.
651 if (!work_item)
652 return:
653 ProcessWork(work_item);
654 }
655}
656
657// Returns the latest thread-safe number of incomplete work items.
658void NumIncompleteWorkItems();
659
Gabriel Charette1138d602020-01-29 08:51:52660base::PostJob(FROM_HERE, {},
Etienne Pierre-dorayd3882992020-01-14 20:34:11661 base::BindRepeating(&WorkerTask),
662 base::BindRepeating(&NumIncompleteWorkItems));
663```
664
665By doing as much work as possible in a loop when invoked, the worker task avoids
666scheduling overhead. Meanwhile `base::JobDelegate::ShouldYield()` is
667periodically invoked to conditionally exit and let the scheduler prioritize
668other work. This yield-semantic allows, for example, a user-visible job to use
669all cores but get out of the way when a user-blocking task comes in.
670
671### Adding additional work to a running job.
672
673When new work items are added and the API user wants additional threads to
674invoke the worker task concurrently,
675`JobHandle/JobDelegate::NotifyConcurrencyIncrease()` *must* be invoked shortly
676after max concurrency increases.
677
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00678## Testing
679
Gabriel Charette0b20ee62019-09-18 14:06:12680For more details see [Testing Components Which Post
681Tasks](threading_and_tasks_testing.md).
682
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00683To test code that uses `base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle`,
684`base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle` or a function in
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38685[`base/task/post_task.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/post_task.h),
686instantiate a
Gabriel Charette0b20ee62019-09-18 14:06:12687[`base::test::TaskEnvironment`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/test/task_environment.h)
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38688for the scope of the test. If you need BrowserThreads, use
Gabriel Charette798fde72019-08-20 22:24:04689`content::BrowserTaskEnvironment` instead of
Gabriel Charette694c3c332019-08-19 14:53:05690`base::test::TaskEnvironment`.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00691
Gabriel Charette694c3c332019-08-19 14:53:05692Tests can run the `base::test::TaskEnvironment`'s message pump using a
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38693`base::RunLoop`, which can be made to run until `Quit()` (explicitly or via
694`RunLoop::QuitClosure()`), or to `RunUntilIdle()` ready-to-run tasks and
695immediately return.
Wezd9e4cb772019-01-09 03:07:03696
Wez9d5dd282020-02-10 17:21:22697TaskEnvironment configures RunLoop::Run() to GTEST_FAIL() if it hasn't been
Wezd9e4cb772019-01-09 03:07:03698explicitly quit after TestTimeouts::action_timeout(). This is preferable to
699having the test hang if the code under test fails to trigger the RunLoop to
Wez9d5dd282020-02-10 17:21:22700quit. The timeout can be overridden with base::test::ScopedRunLoopTimeout.
Wezd9e4cb772019-01-09 03:07:03701
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00702```cpp
703class MyTest : public testing::Test {
704 public:
705 // ...
706 protected:
Gabriel Charette694c3c332019-08-19 14:53:05707 base::test::TaskEnvironment task_environment_;
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00708};
709
710TEST(MyTest, MyTest) {
711 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&A));
712 base::SequencedTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(FROM_HERE,
713 base::BindOnce(&B));
714 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostDelayedTask(
715 FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&C), base::TimeDelta::Max());
716
717 // This runs the (Thread|Sequenced)TaskRunnerHandle queue until it is empty.
718 // Delayed tasks are not added to the queue until they are ripe for execution.
719 base::RunLoop().RunUntilIdle();
720 // A and B have been executed. C is not ripe for execution yet.
721
722 base::RunLoop run_loop;
723 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&D));
724 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(FROM_HERE, run_loop.QuitClosure());
725 base::ThreadTaskRunnerHandle::Get()->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&E));
726
727 // This runs the (Thread|Sequenced)TaskRunnerHandle queue until QuitClosure is
728 // invoked.
729 run_loop.Run();
730 // D and run_loop.QuitClosure() have been executed. E is still in the queue.
731
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37732 // Tasks posted to thread pool run asynchronously as they are posted.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45733 base::ThreadPool::PostTask(FROM_HERE, {}, base::BindOnce(&F));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00734 auto task_runner =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45735 base::ThreadPool::CreateSequencedTaskRunner({});
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00736 task_runner->PostTask(FROM_HERE, base::BindOnce(&G));
737
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37738 // To block until all tasks posted to thread pool are done running:
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51739 base::ThreadPoolInstance::Get()->FlushForTesting();
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00740 // F and G have been executed.
741
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45742 base::ThreadPool::PostTaskAndReplyWithResult(
743 FROM_HERE, {}, base::BindOnce(&H), base::BindOnce(&I));
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00744
745 // This runs the (Thread|Sequenced)TaskRunnerHandle queue until both the
746 // (Thread|Sequenced)TaskRunnerHandle queue and the TaskSchedule queue are
747 // empty:
Gabriel Charette694c3c332019-08-19 14:53:05748 task_environment_.RunUntilIdle();
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00749 // E, H, I have been executed.
750}
751```
752
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37753## Using ThreadPool in a New Process
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00754
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51755ThreadPoolInstance needs to be initialized in a process before the functions in
Gabriel Charette04b138f2018-08-06 00:03:22756[`base/task/post_task.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/post_task.h)
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51757can be used. Initialization of ThreadPoolInstance in the Chrome browser process
758and child processes (renderer, GPU, utility) has already been taken care of. To
759use ThreadPoolInstance in another process, initialize ThreadPoolInstance early
760in the main function:
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00761
762```cpp
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51763// This initializes and starts ThreadPoolInstance with default params.
764base::ThreadPoolInstance::CreateAndStartWithDefaultParams(“process_name”);
765// The base/task/post_task.h API can now be used with base::ThreadPool trait.
766// Tasks will be // scheduled as they are posted.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00767
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51768// This initializes ThreadPoolInstance.
769base::ThreadPoolInstance::Create(“process_name”);
770// The base/task/post_task.h API can now be used with base::ThreadPool trait. No
771// threads will be created and no tasks will be scheduled until after Start() is
772// called.
773base::ThreadPoolInstance::Get()->Start(params);
Gabriel Charette52fa3ae2019-04-15 21:44:37774// ThreadPool can now create threads and schedule tasks.
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00775```
776
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51777And shutdown ThreadPoolInstance late in the main function:
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00778
779```cpp
Gabriel Charette43fd3702019-05-29 16:36:51780base::ThreadPoolInstance::Get()->Shutdown();
fdoraybacba4a22017-05-10 21:10:00781// Tasks posted with TaskShutdownBehavior::BLOCK_SHUTDOWN and
782// tasks posted with TaskShutdownBehavior::SKIP_ON_SHUTDOWN that
783// have started to run before the Shutdown() call have now completed their
784// execution. Tasks posted with
785// TaskShutdownBehavior::CONTINUE_ON_SHUTDOWN may still be
786// running.
787```
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28788## TaskRunner ownership (encourage no dependency injection)
Sebastien Marchandc95489b2017-05-25 16:39:34789
790TaskRunners shouldn't be passed through several components. Instead, the
791components that uses a TaskRunner should be the one that creates it.
792
793See [this example](https://codereview.chromium.org/2885173002/) of a
794refactoring where a TaskRunner was passed through a lot of components only to be
795used in an eventual leaf. The leaf can and should now obtain its TaskRunner
796directly from
Gabriel Charette04b138f2018-08-06 00:03:22797[`base/task/post_task.h`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/base/task/post_task.h).
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28798
Gabriel Charette694c3c332019-08-19 14:53:05799As mentioned above, `base::test::TaskEnvironment` allows unit tests to
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38800control tasks posted from underlying TaskRunners. In rare cases where a test
801needs to more precisely control task ordering: dependency injection of
802TaskRunners can be useful. For such cases the preferred approach is the
803following:
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28804
805```cpp
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38806class Foo {
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28807 public:
808
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38809 // Overrides |background_task_runner_| in tests.
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28810 void SetBackgroundTaskRunnerForTesting(
Gabriel Charette39db4c62019-04-29 19:52:38811 scoped_refptr<base::SequencedTaskRunner> background_task_runner) {
812 background_task_runner_ = std::move(background_task_runner);
813 }
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28814
815 private:
michaelpg12c04572017-06-26 23:25:06816 scoped_refptr<base::SequencedTaskRunner> background_task_runner_ =
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45817 base::ThreadPool::CreateSequencedTaskRunner(
Gabriel Charetteb10aeeb2018-07-26 20:15:00818 {base::MayBlock(), base::TaskPriority::BEST_EFFORT});
Gabriel Charetteb86e5fe62017-06-08 19:39:28819}
820```
821
822Note that this still allows removing all layers of plumbing between //chrome and
823that component since unit tests will use the leaf layer directly.
Gabriel Charette8917f4c2018-11-22 15:50:28824
825## FAQ
826See [Threading and Tasks FAQ](threading_and_tasks_faq.md) for more examples.
Gabriel Charette43de5c42020-01-27 22:44:45827
828[task APIs v3]: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1tssusPykvx3g0gvbvU4HxGyn3MjJlIylnsH13-Tv6s4/edit?ts=5de99a52#heading=h.ss4tw38hvh3s