Yeah, I saw that and it made me chuckle, especially once I discovered the 
recursive reflection.

It's reasonably easy to program in it. I know that it can handle 16 bit 44.1 
kHz stereo pcm streaming over a network. Does that it "performing?"

Chris

> 
> Reading the description of the go-p9p, it says "A modern, performant 9P 
> library for Go.".  I'm guessing "modern" refers to being implemented in Go.  
> Any pointers on how performance was measured or what it was measured against?
> 
> 
> 
>> On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 11:32 AM Chris McGee <newton...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> If you're interested in Go, this 9p library has worked reasonably well for 
>> my servers.
>> 
>> https://github.com/docker/go-p9p
>> 
>> 
>>> On Oct 18, 2016, at 1:31 PM, Iruatã Souza <iru.mu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> https://github.com/iru-/lua9p
>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Thu, Oct 13, 2016 at 3:47 PM, yy <yiyu....@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>> On 13 October 2016 at 18:03, Steve Simon <st...@quintile.net> wrote:
>>>>> Anyone written or ported a small simple 9p library;
>>>> 
>>>> As part of a GSoC project I wrote
>>>> https://bitbucket.org/yiyus/devwsys-prev/src/tip/libninep/ (man pages
>>>> can be found in the same repo). There is a ninepserver but not a
>>>> ninepclient because the only client I wrote was to be used with p9p,
>>>> so I was using 9pclient(3), but it should be relatively easy to write
>>>> one if you need it.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> - yiyus || JGL .
>>>> 
>>> 

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