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AS3-Worker-Compat

ActionScript Worker wrapper for compatibility with all AS3 versions of the Flash Player (9 and later)

NEW: v0.2.1 includes AsyncScheduler and JPEGEncoder demo

About

What it does

The WorkerCompat wrapper simply uses dynamic-lookup to determine if the Worker API is available and supported. This allows SWFs compiled with this code to be playable on all version of the Flash Player, not just those with Worker support (11.4 and later).

As such, it also allows you to use an older compiler (Flash CS6, older version of Flash Builder or Flex, etc) to take advantage of Workers.

Features

  • v0.1
    • WorkerCompat - backward-compatible Worker wrapper
  • v0.2
    • XTSharedObject - dead-simple cross-thread data sharing
  • v0.2.1
    • AsyncSchedule - asynchronous scheduler utility
    • JPEGEncoder - Adobe lib with new pseudo-threaded encodeAsync() method
    • JPEGEncoderTest - Demo showing the use of JPEGEncoder

See Feature Details below for more info.

Demos

The demos showcase various aspects of the AS3-Worker-Compat library. All will run in all versions of the Flash Player, and run via the use of Workers when supported, falling back to pseudo-thread techniques when not.

WorkerCompatTest

The WorkerCompatTest demo shows a red "radar-like" graphic that is generated on-the-fly, while also running a CPU-burning while loop. This demo SWF works in all Flash Player versions.

Try it now in your browser.

If AS3 Workers are supported, the two tasks are run on separate threads and the graphic is a smooth fading radar.

If AS3 Workers are not supported, both tasks are run on the same thread (AS3 is inherently single-threaded) and the radar graphic is choppy - intentionally, for demonstrative purposes. In a real-world application you'd attempt to balance your background logic to leave the UI as smooth as possible even without Workers.

Here's a screenshot of the demo in two browsers, one supporting Workers and the other not.

JPEGEncoderTest

The JPEGEncoderTest demo compares various JPEG encoding schemas:

  • synchronous native encoding (when supported, FP 11.3+)
  • synchronous encoding
  • asynchronous encoding utilizing the AsyncScheduler class
    • Using AsyncScheduler.LOW, MEDIUM, and HIGH priorities

Try it now in your browser.

Here's a screenshot of the demo in two browsers, one supporting Workers and the other not. Noteice that with Worker support, asynchronous JPEG encoding does not reduce UI framerates.

Feature Details

What it doesn't do

There's no magic - if your SWF is running in an environment without Worker support, there will still be UI blocking and pseudo-threading. You'll need to write your application with this in mind to handle either case. However, using this library you'll get the peace of mind that:

  • your SWF will run on all Flash Players (and even compile to AIR for mobile, which also doesn't support Workers), and
  • it'll simply take advantage of Worker threads when they're available.

Also, be aware when using dynamic/runtime class lookup, you don't get compile-time type checking on those classes (Worker, WorkerDomain, etc). However, when building the demos, I found that I didn't use those classes at all but to instantiate my worker. After that, it's all application logic.

What's New in v0.2.1

This release brings a utility, AsyncScheduler, that makes converting synchronous, loop-based algorithms (like JPEG encoding) into asynchronous, pseudo-threadable algorithms easy. Pseudo-threads are a must if you're going to support older, non-threading Flash Players, but it's not a bad idea to write asynchronous code even when utilizing Workers. It allows a single background thread to service many tasks simultaneously.

Consequently, a new demo, JPEGEncoderTest, is new in v0.2.1 showcasing this new functionality. The standard JPEGEncoder library by Adobe was ported to asynchronous code using the AsyncScheduler.async helper function.

In WorkerCompatTest I also updated the code to better reflect that doGuiWork should be responsible for setting up the stage (not necessarily the constructor, since that's shared with the background worker).

Oh, I also changed the library namespace from com.lilcodemonkey to com.jcward - hope that didn't perturb anyone. :)

What's New in v0.2

The major new feature in v0.2 is XTSharedObject. If your first concern is a SWF that plays in all Flash Players, your second concern is how to easily get your threads communicating together.

XTSharedObject is a dead-simple Object that's shared between all threads, again, coded to work the same whether the Flash Player supports Workers or not. There are usage requirements / gotchas at the top of the comments in XTSharedObject.as, and the WorkerCompatTest demo now uses it to pass a count value from the background worker to the foreground.

While being incredibly easy to use, XTSharedObject is not the most performant way to share data between threads - if you're passing around large chunks of data you should use shared ByteArrays (available in FP 11.5+) - maybe I'll add such support later.

What's New in v0.1

The initial release, v0.1 introduced the WorkerCompat wrapper. It contains the dynamic class lookup calls which are the basis of detecting the Worker API regardless of Flash Player version.

This wrapper is an alternative to using static imports, which would cause a runtime-error in Flash Players earlier than 11.4, something like:

 An ActionScript error has occurred:
  ReferenceError: Error #1065: Variable flash.system::Worker is not defined.

Usage / Conversion

Using WorkerCompat is as simple as changing these hard-coded worker references:

  import flash.system.Worker;
  import flash.system.WorkerDomain;

  ...

  if (Worker.isSupported && Worker.current.isPrimordial) {
    var myWorker:Worker = WorkerDomain.current.createWorker(swfbytes);
  }

To this:

  import com.jcward.WorkerCompat;

  ...

  if (WorkerCompat.workersSupported && WorkerCompat.Worker.current.isPrimordial) {
    var myWorker:* = WorkerCompat.WorkerDomain.current.createWorker(swfbytes);
  }

License (FreeBSD)

Copyright (c) 2012, Jeff Ward All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
  2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project.

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ActionScript Worker wrapper for compatibility with pre-and-post Flash Player 11.4

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