So I'm not entirely convinced, but I guess actual numbers and users
might convince me otherwise.
However, a quick comment:
On Tue, Jan 22, 2019 at 9:15 AM Roman Penyaev <rpenyaev@xxxxxxx> wrote:
+struct epoll_uitem {
+ __poll_t ready_events;
+ struct epoll_event event;
+};
This really ends up being a horrible data structure.
struct epoll_event is declared as
struct epoll_event {
__poll_t events;
__u64 data;
} EPOLL_PACKED;
and __poll_t is "unsigned". So on pretty much all 64-bit architectures
except for x86-64 (which sets that packed attribute), you have a
packing hole there in between the events and the data, and "struct
epoll_event" has 8-byte alignment.
Now, in "struct epoll_uitem", you end up having *another* packing hold
in between "ready_events" and "struct epoll_event".
So this data structure that has 16 bytes of actual data, ends up being
24 bytes in size.
Again, x86-64 happens to be the exception to this, but that's a random
small implementation detail, not a design thing.
I think "struct epoll_event" was badly designed to begin with to have
this issue, but it shouldn't then be an excuse to make things even
worse with this array of "struct epoll_uitem" things.
Hmm?