The static Atomics.wake() method wakes up some agents that are sleeping in the wait queue.

Note: This operation works with a shared Int32Array only.

Syntax

Atomics.wake(typedArray, index, count)

Parameters

typedArray
A shared Int32Array.
index
The position in the typedArray to wake up on.
count
The number of sleeping agents to wake. Defaults to +Infinity.

Return value

A number of woken up agents.

Exceptions

Examples

Given a shared Int32Array:

var sab = new SharedArrayBuffer(1024);
var int32 = new Int32Array(sab);

A reading thread is sleeping and waiting on location 0 which is expected to be 0. As long as that is true, it will not go on. However, once the writing thread has stored a new value, it will be woken up by the writing thread and return the new value (123).

Atomics.wait(int32, 0, 0);
console.log(int32[0]); // 123

A writing thread stores a new value and wakes up the waiting thread once it has written:

console.log(int32[0]); // 0;
Atomics.store(int32, 0, 123); 
Atomics.wake(int32, 0, 1);

Specifications

Specification Status Comment
ECMAScript Latest Draft (ECMA-262)
The definition of 'Atomics.wake' in that specification.
Living Standard Initial definition in ES2017.

Browser compatibility

FeatureChromeEdgeFirefoxInternet ExplorerOperaSafari
Basic support60116

55

46 — 542 3

No No10.1
FeatureAndroid webviewChrome for AndroidEdge mobileFirefox for AndroidIE mobileOpera AndroidiOS Safari
Basic support6060 ?

55

46 — 542 3

No No No

1. The count parameter defaults to 0, instead of +Infinity.

2. In versions 46 and 47, this method was named Atomics.futexWake() and the count parameter defaulted to 0.

3. From version 46 until version 54 (exclusive): this feature is behind the javascript.options.shared_memory preference (needs to be set to true). To change preferences in Firefox, visit about:config.

See also

Document Tags and Contributors

 Contributors to this page: fscholz, btzy
 Last updated by: fscholz,