On Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 3:20 AM, Andrew Francis <[email protected]> wrote: > A new version of my 2010 EuroPython Talk "Prototyping Go's Select with > stackless.py for Stackless Python" got accepted as a part of the extreme > track. I want to learn from my EuroPython mistakes and make this an > accessable, accurate, and overall great talk that makes folks want to use > Stackless.
It's good to see two Stackless-related talks at PyCon. Congratulations on getting it accepted. > On a different note, I am trying to learn more about that greenlets do under > the hood. In part, I am running the greenlet code in a debugger to get a feel > for what is happening but I am not quite sure what I should be looking for > specifically. My question is I don't see any modifications to the eval > functions in ceval.c. So is this what is meant at a more technical level by > hard-switching? This has been discussed and described multiple times in the past. You really should be able to find out by web searching. Posting to this mostly silent mailing list, will not get you an answer anywhere near as fast as doing research. Searching for "stackless hard switching" yielded this post in the first few results. http://www.stackless.com/pipermail/stackless/2009-September/004268.html It is Kristjan Valur telling you about hard switching and soft switching. Cheers, Richard. _______________________________________________ Stackless mailing list [email protected] http://www.stackless.com/mailman/listinfo/stackless
