Whenever a thread calls the Thread.yield()
method, it gives a hint to the thread scheduler that it is ready to pause its execution. The thread scheduler is free to ignore this hint.
If any thread executes the yield method, the thread scheduler checks if there is any runnable (waiting to be executed) thread with same or high priority than this thread. If the processor finds any thread with higher or same priority then it will switch to a new thread. If not, the current thread keeps executing.
Since, in your example, you have enough processors to service all the Threads (they are running, not waiting in a runnable state); Thread.yield()
will do nothing, and your threads will continue their execution.
A note about Windows, from Microsoft DOTNet:
This method is equivalent to using platform invoke to call the native
Win32 SwitchToThread function.
Yielding is limited to the processor that is executing the calling
thread. The operating system will not switch execution to another
processor, even if that processor is idle or is running a thread of
lower priority. If there are no other threads that are ready to
execute on the current processor, the operating system does not yield
execution
So there may be caveats in some situations.
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