Ignite uses async IO for communication. So it just asynchronously send a request message and creates a future which will be completed when response for this request is received. So there is nothing actually happening while we're waiting for response and another thread is not needed.
-Val -- View this message in context: http://apache-ignite-users.70518.x6.nabble.com/How-Asynchronous-support-works-underneath-60-N-put-calls-every-second-tp6482p6549.html Sent from the Apache Ignite Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
