On Fri, 2006-07-28 at 23:59 +0200, Edgar Toernig wrote:
> Hi,
>
> this is a simple driver which provides interval timers via
> file descriptors.
>
> Everytime I have to write code to do something at regular
> intervals I face the problem that the time routines on Unix
> are pretty archaic. Only a single process wide timer which
> notifies via signals. The single timer asks for a dedicated
> roll-your-own timer infrastructur, usually implemented via
> a lot of gettimeofday calls and appropriate select timeouts.
> But even if the single timer is enough, the delivery via
> signals is error prone and breaks a lot of (i.e. library)
> code, especially when the timer rate is high. One common
> work around is forking a separate task which gets the signals
> and a pipe to notify the main process which may select/poll
> the other and of the pipe. But this is pretty heavy-weight
> and not easy to get right either. Recently, people started
> to use the real time clock driver (/dev/rtc) to get an fd
> to sleep on. But this is even worse as there's (usually)
> only a single one in the whole system and you have to decide
> whether i.e. mplayer, artsd, timidity, or vdr gets it.
Pretty much everything in this paragraph is wrong, except for the part
about the difficulty of making a single unified event loop and the
resulting pipe hack that everybody uses to get around that.
Solaris lets you specify SIGEV_PORT in your struct sigevent which then
queues timer completions (or anything else that takes a struct sigevent,
like POSIX AIO) to a port and then all types of queued events (including
fd polling and user generated events) can be waited on and fetched with
a single function call.
Something similar could probably worked up in Linux which queues timer
completions to an AIO context.
You might also want to look into the event channel / kevent discussion
that's currently in progress.
--
Nicholas Miell <[email protected]>
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