[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch
From: |
Stefan Monnier |
Subject: |
Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch |
Date: |
Tue, 22 Sep 2009 10:24:15 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/23.1.50 (gnu/linux) |
Stefan> How do you handle objfwd objects? Do you swap them in&out during
Stefan> context switches?
> We have a script to edit the Emacs source. In the end all DEFUN_LISP
> variables are defined like:
> #define Vafter_change_functions *find_variable_location
> (&impl_Vafter_change_functions)
Oh, right, I remember now, sorry.
> This works great as long as the C code follows lispy rules. However, I
> don't think that is always the case -- there are places doing direct
> assignment to some of these variables where, really, a per-thread
> assignment is meant.
I'm not sure what you mean. Are you still talking about objfwd
variables?
> We don't swap anything in and out during a context switch. I've tried
> to make all the decisions with an eye on the long term: preemptive
> threading. Ultimately I'd like to get rid of the global lock and have
> all threads run free.
That was the motivation for my question, indeed.
> Right now when a thread yields it does not release its buffer lock.
I think it should, unless some of the buffer-local variables are
let-bound by the thread.
> One way forward would be to work out the semantics properly, and
> eliminate buffer locking.
Yes, although the result of this may end up requiring some form of
buffer-locking, still.
> Some of the semantics seems tricky.
Oh, yes.
Stefan> You mean "each keyboard", right?
> Yes.
> Locking a keyboard will probably have strange effects. There are some
> things here that I have not thought through; like, what is the right
> behavior of debug-on-error? Under what conditions would the main thread
> ever release the keyboard?
Maybe another way to look at all these problems is to take an "agent"
point of view: rather than threads moving around, we could consider each
keyboard and each buffer as an active object (i.e. with its own thread),
which communicate among each other. I.e. a buffer-thread never leaves
its buffer, instead it does an RPC to another buffer-thread, or to
a keyboard-thread, ...
> Yeah. I just wonder why nobody has done it and whether it would not be
> a better approach.
IIUC people do it all the time, tho not with another Emacs process: with
an hexl process, a shell process, an openssl process, ...
Emacs currently is not very good at using stdin/stdout so running an
inferior Emacs process is poorly supported.
Stefan
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/18
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stephen J. Turnbull, 2009/09/18
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Chong Yidong, 2009/09/18
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stefan Monnier, 2009/09/21
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/21
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch,
Stefan Monnier <=
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Ken Raeburn, 2009/09/22
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stefan Monnier, 2009/09/22
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Chong Yidong, 2009/09/23
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/22
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stefan Monnier, 2009/09/24
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/24
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/27
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stefan Monnier, 2009/09/27
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Tom Tromey, 2009/09/28
- Re: advice needed for multi-threading patch, Stefan Monnier, 2009/09/28