Confusion about node.js internal asynchronous I/O mechanism
First of all,
libuv
has removed thelibeio
from it. But it does perform async file I/O with a thread pool likelibeio
just as you mentioned.libuv
also removeslibev
. It does the async network I/O based on the async I/O interfaces in different platforms, such asepoll
,kqueue
andIOCP
, without a thread pool. There is a event loop which runs on the main thread ofuv
which polls the I/O events and processes them.The thread pool inside
libuv
is a fixed size thread pool (4 in uinx like system). It performs a task queue role and avoids the exhaustion of the system resources by generating threads indefinitely when the requests increase.
Uptil version 0.6 node used libev
to run event-loop and libeio
for asynchronous I/O, (Unix backend sits heavily on these two libraries). But libuv
has started replacing libev
and libeio
in version 0.8. It performs, mantains and manages all the io and events in the event pool. libuv
is the choice in cross-platform asynchronous IO libraries.
- Yes, upto node 0.6, deprecated in 0.8 and uses thread pool
Yes, but
libev
does not use thread pool. See hereClarification : According to the link in the question I posted,
libeio
does support all POSIX functions dealing with I/O (which includes socket). But node author decided to use it for async file I/O only, and useslibev
for network I/O. I dont know where you heard it from but you can use epoll on regular files.libev
uses event loop so no problems here.- Yes IOCP handles async I/O in windows, kernel does use thread pools.
- New linux kernel has epoll, kqueue in new BSD kernel.
libev
andlibeio
were for linux environment and provides event loop/async IO for all kernel (supports select, poll, epoll, kqueue).
Update questions:
- dont know much about
libuv
- maybe enough (dont know)
Here are my findings on Windows 8, checked it via Process Explorer. Showed 4 threads, 1 DLL, 1 File and 1 Section (total 7 entries) for a node application process.
ps -eLf
does show all threads and processes, maybe you are over-filtering it, just look for the node process pid likeps -eLf | grep x
where x is pid for node process.