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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/THRIFT-311?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12754654#action_12754654
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Bruce Simpson commented on THRIFT-311:
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It appears as of this writing that Boost.Coroutine is still sitting in the
Boostpro vault; it is not yet integrated with mainline Boost.
There has been no major list traffic about it since April, and it seems to have
some performance and scalability issues on Windows.
The original author mentions in the documentation that there are issues with
GCC's implementation of thread-local storage as well.
Boost.Future is not integrated yet either. Futures look syntactically nice, but
tricky to work into an explicitly coroutined I/O model without additional
support from something like CoCo or Boost.Coroutine; kind of rules them out for
shipping product.
It looks like for my application, I may need to take a similar approach to Erik
Bernhardsson's. He posted some patches to the Thrift lists, however, they
haven't shown up on JIRA.
What I may do next is: extract that, play with it on my desktop a bit, and open
a separate JIRA sub-task for THRIFT-1 in parallel with this one.
> ASIO client & server
> --------------------
>
> Key: THRIFT-311
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/THRIFT-311
> Project: Thrift
> Issue Type: Sub-task
> Components: Library (C++)
> Reporter: Esteve Fernandez
> Attachments: MsvcPatchSupportScripts.zip, thrift-808166-Patched.zip,
> thrift_connection.cpp, thrift_connection.hpp, thrift_connection_v2.cpp,
> thrift_handler.cpp, thrift_handler.hpp, thrift_main.cpp, thrift_server.cpp,
> thrift_server.hpp, ThriftCalculatorASIOServer.cpp,
> ThriftMsvcPatchForSvnRev803313.txt,
> ThriftMsvcPatchForSvnRev803313_Rev1.txt.zip,
> ThriftMsvcPatchForSvnRev808166.txt.zip
>
>
> Given the recent discussion on a Windows port and moving to ASIO
> (http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/incubator-thrift-dev/200901.mbox/%[email protected]%3e),
> I decided to hack a little Thrift asynchronous prototype server using ASIO
> and here's the result. It implements the Calculator service that can be found
> in the tutorial and, just like TNonblockingServer, it uses a FramedTransport.
> It's just a quick prototype, but I think it's enough for building a more
> generic server/protocol. I've only tested it in Linux, but I think there's
> nothing platform-dependent and can be compiled "as is" in Windows.
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