12 Mar
2010
12 Mar
'10
2:01 a.m.
b) Use threads, either via some library or implement yourself. Each thread of course uses some extra memory. Also enabling >threads causes glibc to start using a thread-safe version of malloc() (I think?), which slows things down (unless that can be avoided, >maybe by using clone() directly instead of pthreads?).
Perhaps libeio (http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libeio.html) is a good starting point? I don't have any experience with it but it's used by node.js (http://nodejs.org/) for the async I/O stuff.
-Sebastian