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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T19:36:53+00:00 2026-05-13T19:36:53+00:00

I read a lot of articles about differences between message queue and shared memory.

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I read a lot of articles about differences between message queue and shared memory.
But still not clear which one is good for achieving good performance.

Like shared memory are suppose to be good over queues but that also has performance issue in case of synchronizing it.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T19:36:53+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:36 pm

    Both shared memory and message queues can be used to exchange information between processes. The difference is in how they are used.

    Shared memory is exactly what you’d think: it’s an area of storage that can be read and written by more than one process. It provides no inherent synchronization; in other words, it’s up to the programmer to ensure that one process doesn’t clobber another’s data. But it’s efficient in terms of throughput: reading and writing are relatively fast operations.

    A message queue is a one-way pipe: one process writes to the queue, and another reads the data in the order it was written until an end-of-data condition occurs. When the queue is created, the message size (bytes per message, usually fairly small) and queue length (maximum number of pending messages) are set. Access is slower than shared memory because each read/write operation is typically a single message. But the queue guarantees that each operation will either processes an entire message successfully or fail without altering the queue. So the writer can never fail after writing only a partial message, and the reader will either retrieve a complete message or nothing at all.

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