You have defined your blocksDispatchQueue
to be a global queue. Updating this for Swift 3, the equivalent is:
private let queue = DispatchQueue.global()
func addBlockToArray(block: @escaping () -> Void) {
queue.async {
self.blocksArray.append(block)
}
}
The problem is that global queues are concurrent queues, so you're not achieving the synchronization you want. But if you created your own serial queue, that would have been fine, e.g. in Swift 3:
private let queue = DispatchQueue(label: "com.domain.app.blocks")
This custom queue is, by default, a serial queue. Thus you will achieve the synchronization you wanted.
Note, if you use this blocksDispatchQueue
to synchronize your interaction with this queue, all interaction with this blocksArray
should be coordinated through this queue, e.g. also dispatch the code to add the operations using the same queue:
func runBlocksInArray() {
queue.async {
for block in self.blocksArray {
let operation = BlockOperation(block: block)
self.blocksQueue.addOperation(operation)
}
self.blocksArray.removeAll()
}
}
Alternatively, you can also employ the reader/writer pattern, creating your own concurrent queue:
private let queue = DispatchQueue(label: "com.domain.app.blocks", attributes: .concurrent)
But in the reader-writer pattern, writes should be performed using barrier (achieving a serial-like behavior for writes):
func addBlockToArray(block: @escaping () -> Void) {
queue.async(flags: .barrier) {
self.blocksArray.append(block)
}
}
But you can now read data, like above:
let foo = queue.sync {
blocksArray[index]
}
The benefit of this pattern is that writes are synchronized, but reads can occur concurrently with respect to each other. That's probably not critical in this case (so a simple serial queue would probably be sufficient), but I include this read-writer pattern for the sake of completeness.
Another approach is NSLock
:
extension NSLocking {
func withCriticalSection<T>(_ closure: () throws -> T) rethrows -> T {
lock()
defer { unlock() }
return try closure()
}
}
And thus:
let lock = NSLock()
func addBlockToArray(block: @escaping () -> Void) {
lock.withCriticalSection {
blocksArray.append(block)
}
}
But you can now read data, like above:
let foo = lock.withCriticalSection {
blocksArray[index]
}
Historically NSLock
was always dismissed as being less performant, but nowadays it is even faster than GCD.
If you're looking for Swift 2 examples, see the previous rendition of this answer.