XNIO Concepts: Difference between revisions
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For details on how to configure worker threads see [[XNIO Configuration#WORKER_TASK_CORE_THREADS|XNIO Configuration - WORKER_TASK_CORE_THREADS]]. | For details on how to configure worker threads see [[XNIO Configuration#WORKER_TASK_CORE_THREADS|XNIO Configuration - WORKER_TASK_CORE_THREADS]]. | ||
=Channel= | =Channel= |
Revision as of 03:42, 19 January 2016
Internal
Overview
XNIO is a simplified low-level I/O layer, built in top of Java NIO. It has an API for combining blocking and non-blocking operations, even on the same channel.
NIO Concepts
XNIO Worker
- https://docs.jboss.org/author/display/XNIO/Workers
- http://docs.jboss.org/xnio/3.1/api/index.html?org/xnio/XnioWorker.html
An XNIO worker is the central point of coordination for a network application. It manages several kind of threads, and the threads created by the worker are tagged with the worker name. A worker has two different types of thread pools:
I/O Thread
The I/O threads run non-blocking handlers. They run in a loop, which does three things:
- runs any tasks that have been scheduled for execution by the I/O thread
- runs any scheduled tasks that have hit their timeout
- call Selector.start() and then invoke any callbacks for the selected keys.
The I/O must never perform blocking operations because they are responsible for multiple connections, so while the operation is blocking, the other connections will essentially hang.
The I/O threads come in two types:
- Read threads that can handle callbacks for read events.
- Write threads that can handle callback for write events.
For details on how to configure I/O Threads see XNIO Configuration - WORKER_IO_THREADS.
Worker Thread
Worker threads are used for blocking tasks (such as servlet invocations). The worker threads are managed by a standard Executor-based thread pool.
For details on how to configure worker threads see XNIO Configuration - WORKER_TASK_CORE_THREADS.
Channel
XNIO provides a channel abstraction that hides the underlying transport. Channels are notified of events using the ChannelListener API. Upon creation, channels are assigned an I/O Thread, which will be used to execute all ChannelListener invocations for the channel.