Reader small image

You're reading from  Professional JavaScript for Web Developers - Fourth Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2019
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherWiley
ISBN-139781119366447
Edition4th Edition
Languages
Right arrow
Author (1)
Matt Frisbie
Matt Frisbie
author image
Matt Frisbie

Matt Frisbie has worked in web development for over a decade. During that time, he's been a startup co-founder, an engineer at a Big Four tech company, and the first engineer at a Y Combinator startup that would eventually become a billion-dollar company. As a Google software engineer, Matt worked on both the AdSense and Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) platforms; his code contributions run on most of the planet's web browsing devices. Prior to this, Matt was the first engineer at DoorDash, where he helped lay the foundation for a company that has become the leader in online food delivery. Matt has written two books and recorded two video series for O'Reilly and Packt, speaks at frontend meetups and web casts, and is a level 1 sommelier. He majored in Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Matt's Twitter handle is @mattfriz.
Read more about Matt Frisbie

Right arrow

ATOMICS AND SharedArrayBuffer

When a SharedArrayBuffer is accessed by multiple contexts, race conditions can occur when operations on the buffer are performed simultaneously. The Atomics API allows multiple contexts to safely read and write to a single SharedArrayBuffer by forcing buffer operations to occur only one at a time. The Atomics API was defined in the ES2017 specification.

You will notice that the Atomics API in many ways resembles a stripped-down instruction set architecture (ISA)—this is no accident. The nature of atomic operations precludes some optimizations that the operating system or computer hardware would normally perform automatically (such as instruction reordering). Atomic operations also make concurrent memory access impossible, which obviously can slow program execution when improperly applied. Therefore, the Atomics API was designed to enable sophisticated multithreaded JavaScript programs to be architected out of a minimal yet robust collection of atomic...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Professional JavaScript for Web Developers - Fourth Edition
Published in: Nov 2019Publisher: WileyISBN-13: 9781119366447

Author (1)

author image
Matt Frisbie

Matt Frisbie has worked in web development for over a decade. During that time, he's been a startup co-founder, an engineer at a Big Four tech company, and the first engineer at a Y Combinator startup that would eventually become a billion-dollar company. As a Google software engineer, Matt worked on both the AdSense and Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) platforms; his code contributions run on most of the planet's web browsing devices. Prior to this, Matt was the first engineer at DoorDash, where he helped lay the foundation for a company that has become the leader in online food delivery. Matt has written two books and recorded two video series for O'Reilly and Packt, speaks at frontend meetups and web casts, and is a level 1 sommelier. He majored in Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Matt's Twitter handle is @mattfriz.
Read more about Matt Frisbie