On Sat, 15 Feb 2003, Jamie Lokier wrote:
> Davide Libenzi wrote:
> > > And when that's done you have some nice bonuses:
> > >
> > > - All event types are reported equally fast, and in a single
> > > system call (read()).
> > >
> > > - The order in which events occurred is preserved.
> > > (This is lost when you have to scan multiple queues).
> > >
> > > - Hierarchies of event sets of any kind are possible.
> > > (epoll has solved the logical problems of this already).
> > >
> > > - Less code duplicated.
> > >
> > > - Adding new kinds of kernel events becomes _very_ simple.
> >
> > Hmm ... using read() you'll lose the timeout capability, that IMHO is
> > pretty nice.
>
> Very good point.
>
> Timeouts could be events too - probably a good idea as they can then
> be absolute, relative, attached to different system clocks (monotonic
> vs. timeofday). I think the POSIX timer work is like that.
POSIX timers might work, and events might be captured using the sigfd()
descriptor.
> It seems like a good idea to be able to attach one timeout event in
> the same system call as the event_read call itself - because it is
> _so_ common to vary the expiry time every time.
>
> Then again, it is also extremely common to write this:
>
> gettimeofday(...)
> // calculate time until next application timer expires.
> // Note also race condition here, if we're preempted.
> read_events(..., next_app_time - timeofday)
> // we need to know the current time.
> gettimeofday(...)
>
> So perhaps the current select/poll/epoll timeout method is not
> particularly optimal as it is?
What's bad in epoll_wait() to get events from all pollable descriptors ?
- Davide
-
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Sat Feb 15 2003 - 22:01:00 EST