Den 30-08-2011 19:38, Andrei Alexandrescu skrev:
On 8/30/11 12:22 PM, jdrewsen wrote:
Walter suggested that I should write an article about using the wrapper.
I've now taken the first steps on writing such an article. I will have
to get the library API rock stable before I can finish it though.

I have a suggestion for you - write and test an asynchronous copy program.

It is a continuous source of surprise to me that even seasoned
programmers don't realize that this is an inefficient copy routine:

while (read(source, buffer))
write(target, buffer);

If the methods are synchronous and the speeds of source and target are
independent, the net transfer rate of the routine is R1*R1/(R1+R2),
where R1 and R2 are the transfer rates of the source and destination
respectively. In the worst case R1=R2 and the net transfer rate is half
that.

[snip]

I guess that e.g. incoming network buffers in the OS often makes the shown copy routine faster than you would think i most cases. These buffers stores the incoming network data asynchronously by the OS and makes the next read() instantanous. The same can be said about writing to disk. Calling sync() is the real enemy here. This is only true as long as the buffers are not full of course.

If your article discusses this and shows e.g. how to copy data optimally
from one server to another using HTTP, or from one server to a file etc,
and if furthermore you show how your API makes all that a trivial
five-liner, that would be a very instructive piece.

That could be an interesting example.

/Jonas

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