Boost.Fiber review January 6-15
Hi all, The review of Boost.Fiber by Oliver Kowalke begins today, Monday January 6th, and closes Wednesday January 15th. ----------------------------------------------------- About the library: Boost.Fiber provides a framework for micro-/userland-threads (fibers) scheduled cooperatively. The API contains classes and functions to manage and synchronize fibers similar to Boost.Thread. Each fiber has its own stack. A fiber can save the current execution state, including all registers and CPU flags, the instruction pointer, and the stack pointer and later restore this state. The idea is to have multiple execution paths running on a single thread using a sort of cooperative scheduling (versus threads, which are preemptively scheduled). The running fiber decides explicitly when it should yield to allow another fiber to run (context switching). Boost.Fiber internally uses coroutines from Boost.Coroutine; the classes in this library manage, schedule and, when needed, synchronize those coroutines. A context switch between threads usually costs thousands of CPU cycles on x86, compared to a fiber switch with a few hundred cycles. A fiber can only run on a single thread at any point in time. docs: http://olk.github.io/libs/fiber/doc/html/ git: https://github.com/olk/boost-fiber src: http://ok73.ok.funpic.de/boost.fiber.zip The documentation has been moved to another site; see the link above. If you have already downloaded the source, please refresh it; Oliver has added some new material. --------------------------------------------------- Please always state in your review whether you think the library should be accepted as a Boost library! Additionally please consider giving feedback on the following general topics: - What is your evaluation of the design? - What is your evaluation of the implementation? - What is your evaluation of the documentation? - What is your evaluation of the potential usefulness of the library? - Did you try to use the library? With what compiler? Did you have any problems? - How much effort did you put into your evaluation? A glance? A quick reading? In-depth study? - Are you knowledgeable about the problem domain? Nat Goodspeed Boost.Fiber Review Manager ________________________________
On Mon, Jan 6, 2014 at 8:07 AM, Nat Goodspeed
The review of Boost.Fiber by Oliver Kowalke begins today, Monday January 6th, and closes Wednesday January 15th.
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Please always state in your review whether you think the library should be accepted as a Boost library!
I'm heartened by the level of interest I've seen so far. I hope those of you who have been participating in the Fiber library discussions will submit actual reviews by Wednesday. (Thank you, Niall, I acknowledge your review.) I'd like to make one more request. I've seen some questions and concerns raised. To help me properly collate results, let me quote from [1]: "If you identify problems along the way, please note if they are minor, serious, or showstoppers." I'm sorry, I should have stated that in my initial review announcement. It seems only fair to help Oliver prioritize. Carry on! [1] http://www.boost.org/community/reviews.html#Comments
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Nat Goodspeed