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both now provide the number of running handles back to the calling function.
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301 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Date: January 5, 2006
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Author: Daniel Stenberg
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Status of project Hiper - high performance libcurl modifications
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================================================================
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What is Hiper
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You won't find such a description in this document. See
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http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/hiper/ for further details.
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Live Progress Info
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During my work, I've posted occational updates on the curl-library mailing
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list but more importantly done frequent updates of
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http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/hiper/schedule.html
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Schedule
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I took time off my regular job during Decemember 2005 and the first week of
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January 2006 to work on hiper full-time.
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Step 1 - Measure the Existing Solution
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I started full-time work on project Hiper on December 1st 2005. I began by
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putting together a test application that used the existing API to allow me
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to properly and with accuracy measure execution and transfer speeds when
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doing a large amount of transfers.
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I soon discovered that it was impossible to do any sensible measurements by
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using live and actual URLs since the transfers were too unrelialble and
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uncontrolled. I then enhanced the current HTTP server in the curl test suite
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and made that support a large amount of transfers and some extra magic
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"commands" that would make the server either just sit "idle" or "stream"
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(continuously sending data in a never-ending stream). I then wrote up two
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files using the curl test suite file format and by acessing the properly
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formatted URLs on my localhost the HTTP server would either run "idle" or
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run "stream".
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Having this working, I patched libcurl to always only recv() a single byte
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off the network each time, just to make sure that the time spent on reading
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data is constant and never very long.
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I adjusted the test application (actually called 'hiper') to create Y idle
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transfers and Z stream transfers, had it run for N seconds and then quit and
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produce a summary on stdout. Now I got very solid and repeatable results. I
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started to run repeated tests and save the results when I ran into the
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dreaded 1024 socket maximum limit.
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One side of the problem is that the fd_set type only allows 1024 file
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descriptors (on my Linux), which I had to solve by simply making my own type
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with room for more connections and do ugly typecasts in the code. The other
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side of the problem is that user applications have a limit imposed by the
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system on the maximum amount of file descriptors it can have open and I had
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to work around that by writing a special tool that runs setuid root that
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increases the limit, downgrades to a normal user again and then run the
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command line of your choice. This second approach has to be used for both
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'hiper' and the test HTTP server. (You need to build the HTTP server with
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CURL_SWS_FORK_ENABLED defined to have it do forks since it isn't desirable
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to do so when running the normal curl tests.)
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Now I could run my test program without problems. I decided to run the tests
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with 1 stream connection and a varying amount of idle ones. I did 1001,
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2001, 3001, 5001 and 9001 connections and measured how long select() and
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curl_multi_perform() (including the curl_multi_fdset() call) would take in
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average, over a period of 20 seconds. I ran each test 5-6 times and I used
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the average time of all the runs.
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The times in number of microseconds:
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Connections multi_perform select
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1001 3504 951
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2001 7606 1988
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3001 11045 2715
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5001 16406 4024
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9001 32147 8030
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Test system
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CPU: Athlon XP 2800
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RAM: 1 GB
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Linux: 2.6
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glibc: 2.3.5
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libcurl: 7.15.1
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The only reason I stopped at 9001 connections is that my test machine ran
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out of avaiable memory by then as I ran the test server on the same machine,
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and I didn't want to risk the test result accuracy by having it start using
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the swap during the tests.
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It means that at 9000 connections we spend 40ms for each socket action, even
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when only one socket ever have action.
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With these 32000 microseconds curl_multi_perform() takes for 9000
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connections, it loops 18000 laps which makes less than 2 microseconds per
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lap. (Of course counting time/laps is an oversimplification, but anyway.)
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Hopefully we should achieve less than 10 microseconds for each call to
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curl_multi_socket() for an active connection.
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The timing graph displayed on the libevent site (duplicated on the hiper
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project page) suggests that libevent is pretty much fixed at 50 microseconds
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(although I don't know what test box was used in their testing, we can
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compare the select()-times from my tests and see that they are at least
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resonably close).
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Summing up, the current ~40 ms spent at 9000 connections could then possibly
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be lowered to something around 60 us!
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Step 2 - Implement curl_multi_socket API
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Most of the design decisions and debates about this new API have already
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been held on the curl-library mailing list a long time ago so I had a basic
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idea on what approach to use. The main ideas of the new API are simply:
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1 - The application can use whatever event system it likes as it gets info
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from libcurl about what file descriptors libcurl waits for what action
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on. (The previous API returns fd_sets which is very select()-centric).
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2 - When the application discovers action on a single socket, it calls
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libcurl and informs that there was action on this particular socket and
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libcurl can then act on that socket/transfer only and not care about
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any other transfers. (The previous API always had to scan through all
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the existing transfers.)
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The idea is that curl_multi_socket() calls a given callback with information
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about what socket to wait for what action on, and the callback only gets
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called if the status of that socket has changed.
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In the API draft from before, we have a timeout argument on a per socket
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basis and we also allowed curl_multi_socket() to pass in an 'easy handle'
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instead of socket to allow libcurl to shortcut a lookup and work on the
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affected easy handle right away. Both these turned out to be bad ideas.
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The timeout argument was removed from the socket callback since after much
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thinking I came to the conclusion that we really don't want to handle
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timeouts on a per socket basis. We need it on a per transfer (easy handle)
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basis and thus we can't provide it in the callbacks in a nice way. Instead,
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we have to offer a curl_multi_timeout() that returns the largest amount of
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time we should wait before we call the "timeout action" of libcurl, to
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trigger the proper internal timeout action on the affected transfer. To get
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this to work, I added a struct to each easy handle in which we store an
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"expire time" (if any). The structs are then "splay sorted" so that we can
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add and remove times from the linked list and yet somewhat swiftly figure
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out 1 - how long time there is until the next timer expires and 2 - which
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timer (handle) should we take care of now. Of course, the upside of all this
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is that we get a curl_multi_timeout() that should also work with old-style
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applications that use curl_multi_perform().
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The easy handle argument was removed fom the curl_multi_socket() function
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because having it there would require the application to do a socket to easy
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handle conversion on its own. I find it very unlikely that applications
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would want to do that and since libcurl would need such a lookup on its own
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anyway since we didn't want to force applications to do that translation
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code (it would be optional), it seemed like an unnecessary option. I also
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realized that when we use underlying libraries such as c-ares (for DNS
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asynch resolving) there might in fact be more than one transfer waiting for
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action on the same socket and thus it makes the lookup even tricker and even
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less likely to ever get done by applications. Instead I created an internal
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"socket to easy handles" hash table that given a socket (file descriptor)
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returns a list of easy handles that waits for some action on that socket.
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To make libcurl be able to report plain sockets in the socket callback, I
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had to re-organize the internals of the curl_multi_fdset() etc so that the
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conversion from sockets to fd_sets for that function is only done in the
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last step before the data is returned. I also had to extend c-ares to get a
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function that can return plain sockets, as that library too returned only
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fd_sets and that is no longer good enough. The changes done to c-ares have
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been committed and are available in the c-ares CVS repository destined to be
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included in the upcoming c-ares 1.3.1 release.
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The 'shiper' tool is the test application I wrote that uses the new
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curl_multi_socket() in its current state. It seems to be working and it uses
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the API as it is documented and supposed to work. It is still using
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select(), because I needed that during development (like until I had the
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socket hash implemented etc) and because I haven't yet learned how to use
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libevent or similar.
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The hiper/shiper tools are very simple and initiates lots of connections and
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have them running for the test period and then kills them all.
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Since I wasn't done with the implementation until early January I haven't
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had time to run very many measurements and checks, but I have done a few
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runs with up to a few hundred connections (with a single active one). The
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curl_multi_socket() invoke then takes 3-6 microseconds in average (using the
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read-only-1-byte-at-a-time hack). If this number does increase a lot when we
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add connections, it certainly matches my in my opinion very ambitious goal.
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We are now below the 60 microseconds "per socket action" goal. It is
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destined to be somewhat higher the more connections we have since the hash
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table gets more populated and the splay tree will grow etc.
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Some tests at 7000 and 9000 connections showed that the socket hash lookup
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is somewhat of a bottle neck. Its current implementation may be a bit too
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limiting. It simply has a fixed-size array, and on each entry in the array
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it has a linked list with entries. So the hash only checks which list to
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scan through. The code I had used so for used a list with merely 7 slots (as
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that is what the DNS hash uses) but with 7000 connections that would make an
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average of 1000 nodes in each list to run through. I upped that to 97 slots
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(I believe a prime is suitable) and noticed a significant speed increase. I
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need to reconsider the hash implementation or use a rather large default
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value like this. At 9000 connections I was still below 10us per call.
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Status Right Now
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The curl_multi_socket() API is implemented according to how it is
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documented. The man pages for curl_multi_socket and curl_multi_timeout are
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both committed to CVS and are available online for easy browsing:
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http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_multi_socket.html
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http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_multi_timeout.html
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The hiper-5.patch I made available early morning January 5th, 2006 should
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apply fine on a recent CVS checkout (at the time of this writing curl 7.15.1
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is the latest public curl release but the hiper patch does not apply fine on
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that).
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What is Left for the curl_multi_socket API
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1 - More measuring with more extreme number of connections
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2 - More testing with actual URLs and complete from start to end transfers.
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I'm quite sure we don't set expire times all over in the code properly, so
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there is bound to be some timeout bugs left.
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What it really takes is for me to commit the code and to make an official
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release with it so that we get people "out there" to help out testing it.
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What is Left for project Hiper
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1 - Add HTTP pipelining support
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2 - Add a zero (or at least close to zero) copy interface
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Neither of these points have been planned or detailed exactly how they will
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be implemented.
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Roadmap Ahead
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I plan and hope to return to full-time hiper work later on this spring or
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possibly summer to continue where I pause now. Of course some spare time
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might also be spent until then to get us moving forward.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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April 11, 2006
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While sitting staring on my screen trying to write up a *nice* sample script
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using libevent, it strikes me that since libevent is pretty much based around
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its structs that you setup for each event/file descriptor, my application
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wants to figure out the correct struct that is associted with the file
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descriptor that libcurl provides in the socket callback.
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This feels like an operation most applications will need when using the
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multi_socket API, so it feels like I should better try to figure out a decent
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way to offer this basic functionality already in libcurl - and the fact that
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we already have the file descriptors in a hash we can probably just as well
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extend it somewhat and store some custom pointers as well.
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We need to offer the app a way to set a private pointer to be associated with
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the particular file descriptor, and then be able to provide that pointer on
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subsequent callback calls.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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April 20, 2006
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I was wrong when I previously claimed we could have more than one easy handle
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using the same socket. I've cleaned up and simplified code now to adjust to
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this.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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July 9, 2006
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TODO: We need to alter how we use c-ares for getting info about its sockets,
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as c-ares now provides a callback approach very similar to how libcurl is
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about to work.
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I'm adding a function called curl_multi_assign() that will set a private
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pointer added to the internal libcurl hash table for the particular socket
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passed in to this function:
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CURLMcode curl_multi_assign(CURLM *multi_handle,
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curl_socket_t sockfd,
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void *sockp);
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'sockp' being a custom pointer set by the application to be associated with
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this socket. The socket has to be already existing and in-use by libcurl,
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like having already called the callback telling about its existance.
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The set hashp pointer will then be passed on to the callback in upcoming
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calls when this same socket is used (in the brand new 'socketp' argument).
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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July 30, 2006
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Shockingly stupid (of me not having realized this before), but we really need
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to add a 'running_handles' argument to the curl_multi_socket() and
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curl_multi_socket_all() prototypes so that the caller can get to know when
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all the transfers are actually done!
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