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Full Discussion: select vs poll
Special Forums IP Networking select vs poll Post 302116007 by porter on Monday 30th of April 2007 05:22:46 PM
Old 04-30-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by smanu
Now my question is: shouldn't replacing the synchronous calls with asynchronous ones improve the performance?
What is performance? Speed of handling a single client connection or total system throughput? You may find one is a trade off against the other.

Also, increasing performance may increase the complexity, robustness and maintainability of your application. It's your decision.

Threads are far easier to manage correctly than signals.

Ironically one way to improve system performance is to make applications do nothing as efficiently as possible. (as in what does an application do when it has nothing to do).
 

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cpc_enable(3CPC)				    CPU Performance Counters Library Functions					  cpc_enable(3CPC)

NAME
cpc_enable, cpc_disable - enable and disable performance counters SYNOPSIS
cc [ flag... ] file... -lcpc [ library... ] #include <libcpc.h> int cpc_enable(cpc_t *cpc); int cpc_disable(cpc_t *cpc); DESCRIPTION
In certain applications, it can be useful to explicitly enable and disable performance counters at different times so that the performance of a critical algorithm can be examined. The cpc_enable() and cpc_disable() functions can be used to enable and disable the performance counters without otherwise disturbing the invoking LWP's performance hardware configuration. RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, cpc_enable() and cpc_disable() return 0. Otherwise, they return -1 and set errno to indicate the error. ERRORS
These functions will fail if: EAGAIN The associated performance counter context has been invalidated by another process. EINVAL No performance counter context has been created for the calling LWP. EXAMPLES
Example 1 Use cpc_enable and cpc_disable to minimize code needed by application. In the following example, the cpc_enable() and cpc_disable() functions are used to minimize the amount of code that needs to be added to the application. The cputrack(1) command can be used in conjunction with these functions to provide event programming, sampling, and reporting facilities. If the application is instrumented in this way and then started by cputrack with the nouser flag set in the event specification, counting of user events will only be enabled around the critical code section of interest. If the program is run normally, no harm will ensue. int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { cpc_t *cpc = cpc_open(CPC_VER_CURRENT); /* ... application code ... */ if (cpc != NULL) (void) cpc_enable(cpc); /* ==> Code to be measured goes here <== */ if (cpc != NULL) (void) cpc_disable(cpc); /* ... other application code */ } ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Evolving | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cputrack(1), cpc(3CPC), cpc_open(3CPC), libcpc(3LIB), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 31 Jan 2005 cpc_enable(3CPC)
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