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construct/include/ircd/ctx/README.md
2017-12-24 20:25:40 -07:00

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Userspace Context Switching

The ircd::ctx subsystem is a userspace threading library meant to regress the asynchronous callback pattern back to synchronous suspensions. This is essentially a full elaboration of a setjmp() / longjmp() between independent stacks, but justified with modern techniques and comprehensive integration throughout IRCd.

Foundation

This library is based in boost::coroutine / boost::context which wraps the register save/restores in a cross-platform way in addition to providing properly mmap(NOEXEC)'ed etc memory appropriate for stacks on each platform.

boost::asio has then added its own comprehensive integration with the above libraries eliminating the need for us to worry about a lot of boilerplate to de-async the asio networking calls. See: boost::asio::spawn.

This is a nice boost, but that's as far as it goes. The rest is on us here to actually make a threading library.

Interface

We mimic the standard library std::thread suite as much as possible (which mimics the boost::thread library) and offer alternative threading primitives for these userspace contexts rather than those for operating system threads in std:: such as ctx::mutex and ctx::condition_variable and ctx::future among others.

  • The primary user object is ircd::context (or ircd::ctx::context) which has an std::thread interface.

Context Switching

A context switch has the overhead of a heavy function call -- a function with a bunch of arguments (i.e the registers being saved and restored). We consider this fast and our philosophy is to not think about the context switch itself as a bad thing to be avoided for its own sake.

This system is also fully integrated both with the IRCd core boost::asio::io_service event loop and networking systems. There are actually several types of context switches going on here built on two primitives:

  • Direct jump: This is the fastest switch. Context A can yield to context B directly if A knows about B and if it knows that B is in a state ready to resume from a direct jump and that A will also be further resumed somehow. This is not always suitable in practice so other techniques may be used instead.

  • Queued wakeup: This is the common default and safe switch. This is where the context system integrates with the boost::asio::io_service event loop. The execution of a "slice" as we'll call a yield-to-yield run of non-stop computation is analogous to a function posted to the io_service in the asynchronous pattern. Context A can enqueue context B if it knows about B and then choose whether to yield or not to yield. In any case the io_service queue will simply continue to the next task which isn't guaranteed to be B.