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# Event Framework {#event}
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SPDK provides a framework for writing asynchronous, polled-mode,
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shared-nothing server applications. The event framework is intended to be
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optional; most other SPDK components are designed to be integrated into an
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application without specifically depending on the SPDK event library. The
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framework defines several concepts - reactors, events, and pollers - that are
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described in the following sections. The event framework spawns one thread per
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core (reactor) and connects the threads with lockless queues. Messages
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(events) can then be passed between the threads. On modern CPU architectures,
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message passing is often much faster than traditional locking. For a
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discussion of the theoretical underpinnings of this framework, see @ref
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concurrency.
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The event framework public interface is defined in event.h.
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# Event Framework Design Considerations {#event_design}
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Simple server applications can be written in a single-threaded fashion. This
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allows for straightforward code that can maintain state without any locking or
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other synchronization. However, to scale up (for example, to allow more
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simultaneous connections), the application may need to use multiple threads.
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In the ideal case where each connection is independent from all other
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connections, the application can be scaled by creating additional threads and
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assigning connections to them without introducing cross-thread
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synchronization. Unfortunately, in many real-world cases, the connections are
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not entirely independent and cross-thread shared state is necessary. SPDK
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provides an event framework to help solve this problem.
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# SPDK Event Framework Components {#event_components}
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## Events {#event_component_events}
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To accomplish cross-thread communication while minimizing synchronization
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overhead, the framework provides message passing in the form of events. The
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event framework runs one event loop thread per CPU core. These threads are
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called reactors, and their main responsibility is to process incoming events
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from a queue. Each event consists of a bundled function pointer and its
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arguments, destined for a particular CPU core. Events are created using
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spdk_event_allocate() and executed using spdk_event_call(). Unlike a
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thread-per-connection server design, which achieves concurrency by depending
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on the operating system to schedule many threads issuing blocking I/O onto a
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limited number of cores, the event-driven model requires use of explicitly
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asynchronous operations to achieve concurrency. Asynchronous I/O may be issued
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with a non-blocking function call, and completion is typically signaled using
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a callback function.
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## Reactors {#event_component_reactors}
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Each reactor has a lock-free queue for incoming events to that core, and
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threads from any core may insert events into the queue of any other core. The
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reactor loop running on each core checks for incoming events and executes them
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in first-in, first-out order as they are received. Event functions should
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never block and should preferably execute very quickly, since they are called
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directly from the event loop on the destination core.
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## Pollers {#event_component_pollers}
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The framework also defines another type of function called a poller. Pollers
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may be registered with the spdk_poller_register() function. Pollers, like
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events, are functions with arguments that can be bundled and executed.
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However, unlike events, pollers are executed repeatedly until unregistered and
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are executed on the thread they are registered on. The reactor event loop
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intersperses calls to the pollers with other event processing. Pollers are
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intended to poll hardware as a replacement for interrupts. Normally, pollers
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are executed on every iteration of the main event loop. Pollers may also be
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scheduled to execute periodically on a timer if low latency is not required.
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## Application Framework {#event_component_app}
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The framework itself is bundled into a higher level abstraction called an "app". Once
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spdk_app_start() is called, it will block the current thread until the application
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terminates by calling spdk_app_stop() or an error condition occurs during the
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initialization code within spdk_app_start(), itself, before invoking the caller's
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supplied function.
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