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curl/lib/README.multi_socket
Daniel Stenberg 88fe6557e9 refreshed
2009-11-24 07:40:43 +00:00

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Implementation of the curl_multi_socket API
The main ideas of the new API are simply:
1 - The application can use whatever event system it likes as it gets info
from libcurl about what file descriptors libcurl waits for what action
on. (The previous API returns fd_sets which is very select()-centric).
2 - When the application discovers action on a single socket, it calls
libcurl and informs that there was action on this particular socket and
libcurl can then act on that socket/transfer only and not care about
any other transfers. (The previous API always had to scan through all
the existing transfers.)
The idea is that curl_multi_socket_action() calls a given callback with
information about what socket to wait for what action on, and the callback
only gets called if the status of that socket has changed.
In the API draft from before, we have a timeout argument on a per socket
basis and we also allowed curl_multi_socket_action() to pass in an 'easy
handle' instead of socket to allow libcurl to shortcut a lookup and work on
the affected easy handle right away. Both these turned out to be bad ideas.
The timeout argument was removed from the socket callback since after much
thinking I came to the conclusion that we really don't want to handle
timeouts on a per socket basis. We need it on a per transfer (easy handle)
basis and thus we can't provide it in the callbacks in a nice way. Instead,
we have to offer a curl_multi_timeout() that returns the largest amount of
time we should wait before we call the "timeout action" of libcurl, to
trigger the proper internal timeout action on the affected transfer. To get
this to work, I added a struct to each easy handle in which we store an
"expire time" (if any). The structs are then "splay sorted" so that we can
add and remove times from the linked list and yet somewhat swiftly figure
out 1 - how long time there is until the next timer expires and 2 - which
timer (handle) should we take care of now. Of course, the upside of all this
is that we get a curl_multi_timeout() that should also work with old-style
applications that use curl_multi_perform().
We also added a timer callback that makes libcurl call the application when
the timeout value changes, and you set that with curl_multi_setopt().
We created an internal "socket to easy handles" hash table that given
a socket (file descriptor) return the easy handle that waits for action on
that socket. This hash is made using the already existing hash code
(previously only used for the DNS cache).
To make libcurl able to report plain sockets in the socket callback, we had
to re-organize the internals of the curl_multi_fdset() etc so that the
conversion from sockets to fd_sets for that function is only done in the
last step before the data is returned. I also had to extend c-ares to get a
function that can return plain sockets, as that library too returned only
fd_sets and that is no longer good enough. The changes done to c-ares have
been committed and are available in the c-ares CVS repository destined to be
included in the c-ares 1.3.1 release.
We have done a test runs with up to 9000 connections (with a single active
one). The curl_multi_socket_action() invoke then takes less than 10
microseconds in average (using the read-only-1-byte-at-a-time hack). We are
now below the 60 microseconds "per socket action" goal (the extra 50 is the
time libevent needs).
Documentation
http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_multi_socket_action.html
http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_multi_timeout.html
http://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/curl_multi_setopt.html