On 5/2/21 8:46 AM, Pól Ua Laoínecháin wrote:
[snip]
Now, I'm not quite sure that I completely comprehend matters: Is there
a difference between Asynchronous I/O and Buffered I/O?

* Asynchronous (a-syn-chron-ous) is an adjective which means "not together with time". * Buffered means "read more than you need at the moment, and then do processing to/from a cache".

They are not mutually exclusive.

Their antonyms are
* Synchronous (syn-chron-ous): together with time.
* Direct, where you read/write only what you need at the moment, directly to/from the IO device.

Thus, *async* IO is where you tell the IO subsystem that you need something, and then *go off and do something else*; the IO system interrupts you when the data has been delivered.
*Sync*hronous IO is where you request IO and then *wait for the data*.

--
Angular momentum makes the world go 'round.

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