[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Using the C library
I've heard of twisted before. Not certain how it helps to be honest. Anyways, as a general server setup your methods will work great. I'll continue work on the libxcctl in C. :) Any places you can point me to for documentation would be greatly appreciated. On Sun, 20 Jun 2004 21:14:45 +0100 Ian Pratt <Ian.Pratt@xxxxxxxxxxxx> said... > It probably should be under /var/run since it is something that is only good > for the curent xen kernel boot, and if Domain-0 dies, so does the box (I'm > assuming that this is true, and if so, only a temporary situation) Agreed -- it should move before 2.0. We could in principle have a 'hot standby' management domain that takes over if domain 0 dies. It probably makes sense for the two management daemons to replicate their state directly rather than transfer information via the filessytem. > Personally I have a bias against interpreted languages. But that's just me. > :) I have this thing about too many dependancies and unused chunks of bloat > that aren't necessary, but are done in the name of "convenience" in final > products. But this debate of preference is for another time/place. :) It's > your project, you decide what it uses (deference only, no insult/attude > intended). Fair point, but rapid development and stability are our biggest concerns right now. Nothing to stop someone else producing some alternative tools ;-) > Why is it that everyone wants to use HTTP as a network > connectivity base? It seems kind of semi-one-wayish to > me. While it can do 2-way communication, it's stateless, and > has a limit of the amount of "sent" data to the httpd without > the special method of an uploaded "file" which takes you > outside of the protocol itself.... HTTP is a fine for RPC, but I agree it doesn't work well for notifications. One of the good things about using the Twisted framework is that changing transport protocol is trivial. Ian
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