Igor Sysoev wrote this message on Sun, Nov 09, 2003 at 15:16 +0300: > On Sat, 8 Nov 2003, John-Mark Gurney wrote: > > > Igor Sysoev wrote this message on Wed, Nov 05, 2003 at 12:31 +0300: > > > I think it can done in the following way - a socket should have flag > > > that says that sendfile() had started the reading a page. > > > > layer violation... > > I do not think that it's layer violation. sendfile() works with > descriptor so it should know its state. It should know wheather > descriptor is non-blocking or has it enough buffer space.
Ugh, yes, you are correct.. it is limited to sockets: if ((error = fgetsock(td, uap->s, &so, NULL)) != 0) goto done; if (so->so_type != SOCK_STREAM) { :( [...] > > If you made this a fd transparent operation then I would agree with > > it. > > The current sendfile() implementation works with sockets only. > Well, I agree that such sendfile() implementation is a hack. > Nowever this implementation is very usefull in the real world - > it allows to minimize a data copy in http and ftp servers. > > I just could not figure to myself where can be usefull the > high perfomance sendfile() to a pipe. It's not so much of how, but optimizing for the general case, not the specific case. I was using pipes as an example, what about for coping one fd to another? Right now cp will try to mmap a 16meg buffer, and use that, if it fails, it falls back to a read/write loop.. why not do something like copyfd that does it more optimally? > I think that it's better to leave sendfile() as a sending to a socket > only hack. I believe that any sendfile() generalization (e.g. sending > data from a socket to a file) is useless. oh? why do you think that is useless? What about all the applications like ftp clients, and wget/fetch/curl that do it on a regular basis? -- John-Mark Gurney Voice: +1 415 225 5579 "All that I will do, has been done, All that I have, has not." _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"