Sunday, October 9, 2022

[SOLVED] What's the difference between an exclusive lock and a shared lock?

Issue

According to wikipedia:

Shared locks are sometimes called "read locks" and exclusive locks are sometimes called "write locks".

Can you explain the reasoning behind the terms "shared" and "exclusive"?


Solution

I wrote this answer down because I thought this would be a fun (and fitting) analogy:

Think of a lockable object as a blackboard (lockable) in a class room containing a teacher (writer) and many students (readers).

While a teacher is writing something (exclusive lock) on the board:

  1. Nobody can read it, because it's still being written, and she's blocking your view => If an object is exclusively locked, shared locks cannot be obtained.

  2. Other teachers won't come up and start writing either, or the board becomes unreadable, and confuses students => If an object is exclusively locked, other exclusive locks cannot be obtained.

When the students are reading (shared locks) what is on the board:

  1. They all can read what is on it, together => Multiple shared locks can co-exist.

  2. The teacher waits for them to finish reading before she clears the board to write more => If one or more shared locks already exist, exclusive locks cannot be obtained.



Answered By - ArjunShankar
Answer Checked By - David Marino (WPSolving Volunteer)