• emersion 2 hours ago

    My go-to small event loop library is https://github.com/any1/aml

    • cryptonector an hour ago

      Nice! I could use this :) (for open source work).

      Though I would prefer to have something not based on coroutines.

      • kevin_thibedeau 4 hours ago

          void *rwtask(param_t v) {
           ...
           a = v->int_ptr;
           ...
           free(a);
        
        It seems architecturally unwise to have a callback responsible for freeing its parameters. At the very least this fossilizes dependency on the stdlib heap.
        • tom_ an hour ago

          I think it makes sense to leave freeing up to the callback, because then management of the object (whatever it is) is up to the caller rather than the library. It might make sense to reuse it for a subsequent request (one way or another), or have it as part of some larger object, or some other thing - etc.

          As for using the stdlib heap rather than some other thing: sure. But the routine allocating the buffer in this case used malloc to allocate it, and therefore freeing it with free seems at least not the worst option. If you want to do some other thing, you should do that instead.

        • mgaunard 5 hours ago

          Why not io_uring? That's the biggest game changer.

          I guess because it's not possible to abstract away as much.

          • foobarian 4 hours ago

            Is this a Windows lib? The tradeoffs are probably completely different than what we're used to then.

            > c-events provides function wrappers to some Linux like functionality, exp. mkfifo for Windows.

            • immibis 5 hours ago

              io_uring works fundamentally differently from polling loops and closer to Windows' IOCP (which is awesome and better than everything that existed on Linux for many years). With a polling loop you wait for data to be available in buffers, and then once you get the ready event, you copy it from the kernel's buffer to yours. With IOCP or io_uring, you submit a long-running read or write event directly into your buffer. You get the event after the read or write call, instead of before. Because of this, it's not possible to make it a drop-in replacement for poll/epoll.

              • cryptonector an hour ago

                From an abstract API perspective it doesn't matter: it's just fire-and-forget where you call a function that will start some I/O and you associate some sort of event completion notice. The details matter only regarding performance.

                • pengaru 4 hours ago

                  didn't prevent libuv from adding support for it when available:

                  https://github.com/libuv/libuv/issues/1947

                  • manwe150 4 hours ago

                    libuv is more nearly designed for adding IOCP-like support to epoll systems than epoll to IOCP (though it can approximate either direction), so adding io_uring was already straightforward, by design

                    Aside: the wepoll mentioned in this repo is a standalone project extracted libuv, for projects that only desire to support Berkeley sockets and don’t care about other events sources (processes or pipes)

              • miguel_martin an hour ago

                See also: Nim's std/selectors API - https://nim-lang.org/docs/selectors.html, it supports: "Supported features: files, sockets, pipes, timers, processes, signals and user events." - here's a HTTP server event loop using it: https://github.com/guzba/mummy/blob/master/src/mummy.nim#L11...