Fargate uses ECS (Elastic Container Service) in the background to orchestrate Fargate containers. ECS in turn relies on the compute resources provided by EC2 to host containers. According to AWS Fargate FAQ's:
Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) is a highly scalable, high performance container management service that supports Docker containers and allows you to easily run applications on a managed cluster of Amazon EC2 instances
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ECS uses containers provisioned by Fargate to automatically scale, load balance, and manage scheduling of your containers
This means that a vCPU is essentially the same as an EC2 instance vCPU. From the docs:
Amazon EC2 instances support Intel Hyper-Threading Technology, which enables multiple threads to run concurrently on a single Intel Xeon CPU core. Each vCPU is a hyperthread of an Intel Xeon CPU core, except for T2 instances.
So to answer your questions:
If you allocate 4 vCPUs to a single threaded application - it will only ever use one vCPU, since a vCPU is simply a hyperthread of a single core.
When you select 4 vCPUs you are essentially assigning 4 hyperthreads to a single physical core. So your single threaded application will still only use a single core.
If you want more fine grained control of CPU resources - such as allocating multiple cores (which can be used by a single threaded app) - you will probably have to use the EC2 Launch Type (and manage your own servers) rather than use Fargate.
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