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2022-02-03BFD: direct notifications to protocol loopsMaria Matejka
2022-02-03Socket cork fixesMaria Matejka
2021-11-22Adding a generic cork mechanism for eventsMaria Matejka
2021-11-22Converting the former BFD loop to a universal IO loop and protocol loop.Maria Matejka
There is a simple universal IO loop, taking care of events, timers and sockets. Primarily, one instance of a protocol should use exactly one IO loop to do all its work, as is now done in BFD. Contrary to previous versions, the loop is now launched and cleaned by the nest/proto.c code, allowing for a protocol to just request its own loop by setting the loop's lock order in config higher than the_bird. It is not supported nor checked if any protocol changed the requested lock order in reconfigure. No protocol should do it at all.
2021-03-12Rate-limit scheduling of work-eventsOndrej Zajicek (work)
In general, events are code handling some some condition, which is scheduled when such condition happened and executed independently from I/O loop. Work-events are a subgroup of events that are scheduled repeatedly until some (often significant) work is done (e.g. feeding routes to protocol). All scheduled events are executed during each I/O loop iteration. Separate work-events from regular events to a separate queue and rate limit their execution to a fixed number per I/O loop iteration. That should prevent excess latency when many work-events are scheduled at one time (e.g. simultaneous reload of many BGP sessions).
2018-10-01Lib: Add and use ev_new_init()Ondrej Zajicek (work)
2014-11-03Fininshing integrated OSPF.Ondrej Zajicek
2000-04-27Event handlers no longer return re-queue flag. Instead of using it, justMartin Mares
call ev_schedule() on the same handler which should work perfectly now.
1999-11-17ev_run() now returns whether the event has been requeued or not.Martin Mares
ev_run_list() now returns number of events which remain in the list.
1999-10-29Events now return a value. If it's non-zero, the event is re-queuedMartin Mares
for processing in next event cycle. This can be used to prevent background actions (hint: user commands) from hogging the CPU for too long time.
1999-02-11Grrr, forgot to commit the event routines themselves :|Martin Mares