Daniel Eischen wrote: > > > If you are using libkse or > > > libthr, you will get a partial byte count and not zero because > > > the tape driver returns the (partial) bytes written. So exiting > > > the loop in libc_r and returning 0 would only seem to correct > > > the "problem" for libc_r. > > If there is a difference, it could be because libc_r is using non-blocking > IO behind the scenes, and sa(4) may be returning partial byte count > in the non-blocking case and 0 (or -1 and ENOSPC) in the blocking case > (which is what you'd get using libkse/libthr).
I would think that for non-block multiple and/or non-block-aligned writes, there's no way to avoid the fault-in penalty for the need to do read-before-write, so there will always be some unavoidable stalls. -- Terry _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"