X-Git-Url: https://git.llucax.com/software/libev.git/blobdiff_plain/cc75a05531d9d05ac14fdaec7960b1c970c87bbb..96c68b67a0641d167fa6422f2fd1c1f74c25a83e:/README diff --git a/README b/README index 4e8ec2d..0e756fd 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -1,9 +1,72 @@ -libev is modelled after libevent (http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/), but aims -to be faster and more correct, and also more featureful. Examples: - -- multiple watchers can wait for the same event without deregistering others. -- fork() is supported and can be handled. -- timers are handled as a priority queue (faster) -- watchers use less memory (faster) -- less calls to epoll_ctl (faster) +libev is modelled (very losely) after libevent +(http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/), but aims to be faster and more +correct, and also more featureful. Examples: + +(comparisons relative to libevent-1.3e and libev-0.00) + +- multiple watchers can wait for the same event without deregistering others, + both for file descriptors as well as signals. + (registering two read events on fd 10 and unregistering one will not + break the other) + +- fork() is supported and can be handled + (there is no way to recover from a fork when libevent is active) + +- timers are handled as a priority queue (important operations are O(1)) + (libevent uses a much less efficient but more complex red-black tree) + +- supports absolute (wallclock-based) timers in addition to relative ones, + i.e. can schedule timers to occur after n seconds, or at a specific time. + +- timers can be repeating (both absolute and relative ones) + +- detects time jumps and adjusts timers + (works for both forward and backward time jumps and also for absolute timers) + +- can correctly remove timers while executing callbacks + (libevent doesn't handle this reliably and can crash) + +- race-free signal processing + (libevent may delay processing signals till after the next event) + +- less calls to epoll_ctl + (stopping and starting an io watcher between two loop iterations will now + result in spuriois epoll_ctl calls) + +- usually less calls to gettimeofday and clock_gettime + (libevent calls it on every timer event change, libev twice per iteration) + +- watchers use less memory + (libevent on amd64: 152 bytes, libev: <= 56 bytes) + +- library uses less memory + (libevent allocates large data structures wether used or not, libev + scales all its data structures dynamically) + +- no hardcoded arbitrary limits + (libevent contains an off-by-one bug and sometimes hardcodes a limit of + 32000 fds) + +- libev separates timer, signal and io watchers from each other + (libevent combines them, but with libev you can combine them yourself + by reusing the same callback and still save memory) + +- simpler design, backends are potentially much simpler + (in libevent, backends have to deal with watchers, thus the problems) + (epoll backend in libevent: 366 lines, libev: 90 lines, and more features) + +- libev handles EBADF gracefully by removing the offending fds. + +- doesn't rely on nonportable BSD header files. + +whats missing? + +- evdns, evhttp, bufferevent are missing, libev is only an even library at + the moment. + +- no priority support at the moment + +- kqueue, poll (libev currently implements epoll and select) + +- windows support (whats windows?)