@Mikhail What aspect of it precisely do you consider as being garbage?
user7659542
@Mikhail Epoll has only 1 issue AFAIK, ie the fact that epoll_wait returns when an event occured on an fd and that you afterwards still need to figure out on which fd the event occured. epoll_wait should ideally return the fd, so you don't have to search
user7659542
But besides that I don't know what issue you re having with epoll
user7659542
@Mgetz I think you typically have multiple threads in the kernel for a driver for instance. Here is a very generic approach which I believe to be widespread: WHen a hardware interrupt occurs, data is copied to a common buffer and a semaphore is incremented. Now that that semaphore has been incremented kernel thread 2 gets unblocked and reads the data in that buffer and it can be obtained in userspace via a syscall.
user7659542
The fact that upon IRQ data got copied and so on, is I believe asynchronous by definition.
user7659542
so Linux is asynchronous right there
user7659542
8:28 PM
Since when does the Linux prohibit DMA usage?
user7659542
@Mikhail static code analysis does have quite some limitations
@traducerad What part did you not understand about the video? For me it is clear. Feel free to ask. How I understand this: It just matters, what has value to the ones, that decide what valuable is. E.g. there are interesting topics, but it matters if you can sell the idea like sell it to a company / market / public. In other words -> money rules.
Crosspost (from C++ Questions and Answers):
Hey, guys, I am new to C++. I know Java and PHP quite well and I have a basic understanding of C also. Now I wonder how hard it is to write a very simple compiler (sounds a little controversial). I guess it would make sense to write it in C++ or C. I know more or less how to do the tokens- and the grammar design. Do I have to write a Lexer and Parser from scratch really or what would you suggest? I don't think I am at the level to write it efficient enough.
Also, I would be interested in sources that show best practices for c++17 onward. I have found a lot of discussions about topics such as "explicit keyword" or whether or not to use "[[nodiscard]]" ... stuff like this is super confusing coming from Java. It is oftentimes controversial - some say "use it" others say don't. Should I implement these, or should I just focus more on the basics?