在Golang中,如何使用通道处理许多goroutine

I'm thinking start 1000 goroutines at the same time using for loop in Golang.
The problem is: I have to make sure that every goroutine has been executed.
Is it possible using channels to help me make sure of that?

The structure is kinda like this:

func main {
    for i ... {
        go ...
        ch?
    ch?
}

Yes, try this:

package main

import (
    "fmt"
)

const max = 1000

func main() {
    for i := 1; i <= max; i++ {
        go f(i)
    }

    s := 0
    for i := 1; i <= max; i++ {
        s += <-ch
    }

    fmt.Println(s)
}

func f(n int) {
    // do a job here
    ch <- n
}

var ch = make(chan int, max)

output:

500500

As @Andy mentioned You can use sync.WaitGroup to achieve this. Below is an example. Hope the code is self-explanatory.

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "sync"
    "time"
)

func dosomething(millisecs int64, wg *sync.WaitGroup) {
    defer wg.Done()
    duration := time.Duration(millisecs) * time.Millisecond
    time.Sleep(duration)
    fmt.Println("Function in background, duration:", duration)
}

func main() {
    arr := []int64{200, 400, 150, 600}
    var wg sync.WaitGroup
    for _, n := range arr {
     wg.Add(1)
     go dosomething(n, &wg)
    }
    wg.Wait()
    fmt.Println("Done")
}

I would suggest that you follow a pattern. Concurrency and Channel is Good but if you use it in a bad way, your program might became even slower than expected. The simple way to handle multiple go-routine and channel is by a worker pool pattern.

Take a close look at the code below

// In this example we'll look at how to implement
// a _worker pool_ using goroutines and channels.

package main

import "fmt"
import "time"

// Here's the worker, of which we'll run several
// concurrent instances. These workers will receive
// work on the `jobs` channel and send the corresponding
// results on `results`. We'll sleep a second per job to
// simulate an expensive task.
func worker(id int, jobs <-chan int, results chan<- int) {
    for j := range jobs {
        fmt.Println("worker", id, "started  job", j)
        time.Sleep(time.Second)
        fmt.Println("worker", id, "finished job", j)
        results <- j * 2
    }
}

func main() {

    // In order to use our pool of workers we need to send
    // them work and collect their results. We make 2
    // channels for this.
    jobs := make(chan int, 100)
    results := make(chan int, 100)

    // This starts up 3 workers, initially blocked
    // because there are no jobs yet.
    for w := 1; w <= 3; w++ {
        go worker(w, jobs, results)
    }

    // Here we send 5 `jobs` and then `close` that
    // channel to indicate that's all the work we have.
    for j := 1; j <= 5; j++ {
        jobs <- j
    }
    close(jobs)

    // Finally we collect all the results of the work.
    for a := 1; a <= 5; a++ {
        <-results
    }
}

This simple example is taken from here . Also the results channel can help you keep track of all the go routines executing the jobs including failure notice.