The thread pool optimizes cases where a task currently running on the
pool spawns a new future. However, the optimization did not factor in
cases where two thread pools interacted.
This patch fixes the optimization and includes a test.
Fixes#342
This patch adds a new crate: tokio-fs. This crate provides a wrapper
around `std` functionality that can only be performed using blocking
operations. This primarily includes filesystem operations, but it also
includes standard input, output, and error access as these streams
cannot be safely switched to non-blocking mode in a portable way.
These wrappers call the `std` functions from within a `blocking`
annotation which allows the runtime to compensate for the fact that the
thread will potentially remain blocked in a system call.
Currently, the state of the futures2 integration is pretty broken. This
patch removes the feature flag, preventing users from trying to use it.
In the future, it can be brought back when the implementation is fixed.
This patch adds a `blocking` to `tokio-threadpool`. This function serves
as a way to annotate sections of code that will perform blocking
operations. This informs the thread pool that an additional thread needs
to be spawned to replace the current thread, which will no longer be
able to process the work queue.
Replaces homegrown Arc with std Arc
Is this safer? Unknown. At least we don't have to maintain an arc
implementation anymore. This will also make it easier to filter out tsan
false positives.
Also split task/mod.rs into multiple files.
This patch integrate the new timer implementation with the runtime by
initializing a timer per worker thread. This allows minimizing the
amount of synchronization needed for using timers.
* Allow customizing the threadpool's parker
This patch allows the user of threadpool to customize how the worker
threads park themselves. This allows custom parking logic to be
injected. For example, this allows embedding a timer on each worker
thread.
* Call `park` instance every so often.
Since the `park` is now customizable, it might have logic that must be
called every so often. For example, a timer might have timeouts that it
must expire.
Currently, if a worker is very busy, it won't call into the `park`
instance. This patch changes this so that after every 32 task
invocations, `park` is called with a duration of zero.
* Fix races.
This mostly pulls in changes from rust-lang-nursery/futures-rs#881, but
also updates Registration to be a bit more obvious as to what is going
on.
* Reduce spurious wakeups caused by Reactor
This patch adds an ABA guard on token values before registering them
with Mio. This allows catching token reuse and avoid the notification.
This is needed for OS X as the notification is used to determine that a
TCP connect has completed. A spurious notification can potentially cause
write failures.
If a future panics from within the context of a thread pool, the pool
should not be impacted. To do this, polling the future is wrapped with a
catch_unwind. Extra care is taken to ensure that `thread::panicking()`
is set from within the future's drop handle.
Fixes#209
This patch relicenses the Tokio project exclusively under the MIT
license. Before this, the project was dual licensed under MIT and Apache
2. As such, switching to only MIT is permitted.
Fixes#202
Currently, if a thread pool instance is dropped without being shutdown,
the workers will run indefinitely. This is not ideal as it leaks the
threadpool.
This patch forces the thread pool to shutdown on drop.
Closes#151
Some of the benchhmarks were broken and/or using deprecated APIs. This
patch updates the benches and requires them all to compile without
warnings in order to pass CI.
This allows libraries that require access to reactor related types to
depend on this crate without having to depend on the entirety of Tokio.
For example, libraries that implement their custom I/O resource will
need to access `Registration` or `PollEvented`.
This patch is an intial implementation of the Tokio runtime. The Tokio
runtime provides an out of the box configuration for running I/O heavy
asynchronous applications.
As of now, the Tokio runtime is a combination of a work-stealing thread
pool as well as a background reactor to drive I/O resources.
This patch also includes tokio-executor, a hopefully short lived crate
that is based on the futures 0.2 executor RFC.
* Implement `Park` for `Reactor`
This enables the reactor to be used as the thread parker for executors.
This also adds an `Error` component to `Park`. With this change, a
`Reactor` and a `CurrentThread` can be combined to achieve the
capabilities of tokio-core.