# What is this This file documents high level parts of the sequence manager. The sequence manager provides a set of prioritized FIFO task queues, which allows funneling multiple sequences of immediate and delayed tasks on a single underlying sequence. ## Work Queue and Task selection Both immediate tasks and delayed tasks are posted to a `TaskQueue` via an associated `TaskRunner`. `TaskQueue`s use distinct primitive FIFO queues, called `WorkQueue`s, to manage immediate tasks and delayed tasks. Tasks eventually end up in their assigned `WorkQueue` which is made directly visible to `SequenceManager` through `TaskQueueSelector`. `SequenceManagerImpl::SelectNextTask()` uses `TaskQueueSelector::SelectWorkQueueToService()` to select the next work queue based on various policy e.g. priority, from which 1 task is popped at a time. ## Journey of a Task Task queues have a mechanism to allow efficient cross-thread posting with the use of 2 work queues, `immediate_incoming_queue` which is used when posting, and `immediate_work_queue` used to pop tasks from. An immediate task posted from the main thread is pushed on `immediate_incoming_queue` in `TaskQueueImpl::PostImmediateTaskImpl()`. If the work queue was empty, `SequenceManager` is notified and the `TaskQueue` is registered to do `ReloadEmptyImmediateWorkQueue()` before SequenceManager selects a task, which moves tasks from `immediate_incoming_queue` to `immediate_work_queue` in batch for all registered `TaskQueue`s. The tasks then follow the regular work queue selection mechanism. ## Journey of a WakeUp A `WakeUp` represents a time at which a delayed task wants to run. Each `TaskQueueImpl` maintains its own next wake-up as `main_thread_only().scheduled_wake_up`, associated with the earliest pending delayed task. It communicates its wake up to the WakeUpQueue via `WakeUpQueue::SetNextWakeUpForQueue()`. The `WakeUpQueue` is responsible for determining the single next wake up time for the thread. This is accessed from `SequenceManagerImpl` and may determine the next run time if there's no immediate work, which ultimately gets passed to the MessagePump, typically via `MessagePump::Delegate::NextWorkInfo` (returned by `ThreadControllerWithMessagePumpImpl::DoWork()`) or by `MessagePump::ScheduleDelayedWork()` (on rare occasions where the next WakeUp is scheduled on the main thread from outside a `DoWork()`). When a delayed run time associated with a wake-up is reached, `WakeUpQueue` is notified through `WakeUpQueue::MoveReadyDelayedTasksToWorkQueues()` and in turn notifies all `TaskQueue`s whose wake-up can be resolved. This lets each `TaskQueue`s process ripe delayed tasks. ## Journey of a delayed Task A delayed Task posted cross-thread generates an immediate Task to run `TaskQueueImpl::ScheduleDelayedWorkTask()` which eventually calls `TaskQueueImpl::PushOntoDelayedIncomingQueueFromMainThread()`, so that it can be enqueued on the main thread. A delayed Task posted from the main thread skips this step and calls `TaskQueueImpl::PushOntoDelayedIncomingQueueFromMainThread()` directly. The Task is then pushed on `main_thread_only().delayed_incoming_queue` and possibly updates the next task queue wake-up. Once the delayed run time is reached, possibly because the wake-up is resolved, the delayed task is moved to `main_thread_only().delayed_work_queue` and follows the regular work queue selection mechanism. ## TimeDomain and TickClock `SequenceManager` and related classes use a common `TickClock` that can be injected by specifying a `TimeDomain`. A `TimeDomain` is a specialisation of `TickClock` that gets notified when the `MessagePump` is about to go idle via TimeDomain::MaybeFastForwardToWakeUp(), and can use the signal to fast forward in time. This is used in `TaskEnvironment` to support `MOCK_TIME`, and in devtools to support virtual time.