Thread pools on the JVM should usually be divided into the following three categories:
- CPU-bound
- Blocking IO
- Non-blocking IO polling
Each of these categories has a different optimal configuration and usage pattern.
// Assume we need 32-byte alignment for AVX instructions | |
#define ALIGN 32 | |
void *aligned_malloc(int size) | |
{ | |
// We require whatever user asked for PLUS space for a pointer | |
// PLUS space to align pointer as per alignment requirement | |
void *mem = malloc(size + sizeof(void*) + (ALIGN - 1)); | |
// Location that we will return to user |
; A REPL-based, annotated Seesaw tutorial | |
; Please visit https://github.com/daveray/seesaw for more info | |
; | |
; This is a very basic intro to Seesaw, a Clojure UI toolkit. It covers | |
; Seesaw's basic features and philosophy, but only scratches the surface | |
; of what's available. It only assumes knowledge of Clojure. No Swing or | |
; Java experience is needed. | |
; | |
; This material was first presented in a talk at @CraftsmanGuild in | |
; Ann Arbor, MI. |
# 0 is too far from ` ;) | |
set -g base-index 1 | |
# Automatically set window title | |
set-window-option -g automatic-rename on | |
set-option -g set-titles on | |
#set -g default-terminal screen-256color | |
set -g status-keys vi | |
set -g history-limit 10000 |