On Fri, Feb 16, 2007 at 01:28:06PM +0100, Ingo Molnar ([email protected]) wrote:
> OTOH, the syslet concept right now already looks very ubiquitous, and
> the main problem with AIO use in applications wasnt just even its broken
> API or its broken performance, but the fundamental lack of all Linux IO
> disciplines supporting AIO, and the lack of significantly parallel
> hardware. We have kaio that is centered around block drivers - then we
> have epoll that works best with networking, and inotify that deals with
> some (but not all) VFS events - but neither supports every IO and event
> disciple well, at once. My feeling is that /this/ is the main
> fundamental problem with AIO in general, not just its programmability
> limitations.
That is quite dissapointing to hear when weekely released kevent can
solve that problem already more than year ago - it was designed specially to
support every possible notification types and does support file
descriptor ones, VFS (dropped in current releases to reduce size) and
tons of other including POSIX times, signals, own high-performance AIO
(which was created as a a bit complex state machine over internals of
page population code) and essentially everything one can ever imagine
with quite a bit of code needed for new type.
I was requested to add waiting for futex through kevent queue - that is
quite simple task, but having complete lack of feedback and ignorance of
the project even from people who asked about its features, it looks like
there is no need for that at all.
--
Evgeniy Polyakov
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