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stjepang's profile
Stjepan Glavina
Stjepan Glavina
Stjepan Glavina
@stjepang

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Stjepan Glavina

@stjepang

async runtimes and concurrency primitives in @rustlang he/they (available for hire)

Berlin, Germany
stjepang.github.io
Joined October 2009

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    1. Stjepan Glavina‏ @stjepang May 9
      • Report Tweet
      • Report NetzDG Violation

      Published a crate for isolating blocking I/O in async programs! There is just one type, simply named Blocking<T>. This type can convert blocking I/O types like File, Stdin, and Stdout into async I/O types. https://docs.rs/blocking/0.2.0/blocking/ …pic.twitter.com/OUHGkIsdRE

      6 replies 49 retweets 205 likes
    2. neurocrypt‏ @neurocrypt May 10
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      Replying to @stjepang

      How can we think about naming here? I'm looking for a name that makes the code more intuitive, maybe. Right now we have `Blocking::new` which creates a new operation... that's not blocking. It's as if `Unblocking::new` would be a better name? ;) except maybe not exactly that

      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
    3. Stjepan Glavina‏ @stjepang May 10
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      Replying to @neurocrypt

      There were a lot of suggestions here: https://github.com/stjepang/smol/issues/79 … None of the suggested names felt perfect - Blocking<T> was the most obvious one, even though it doesn't make too much sense, but somehow everyone understood what it does at a glance. Or, it was the least hated one :)

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    4. Kevin Bader‏ @KevnBadr May 10
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      Replying to @stjepang @neurocrypt

      probably a dumb question: why a trait and not a make_async function that returns a future?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Stjepan Glavina‏ @stjepang May 10
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      Replying to @KevnBadr @neurocrypt

      Assuming you're asking why Blocking::new() and not make_async() function, it's just an API choice, either would work. :) The cool thing about Blocking type is how it's a one size fits all solution - a single type that makes functions, iterators, readers, and writers asynchronous

      11:40 PM - 10 May 2020
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      • Kevin Bader
      1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
        1. Kevin Bader‏ @KevnBadr May 11
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          Replying to @stjepang @neurocrypt

          ah okay, thought you could do this with a generic function, but I'll play around with this to see why this doesn't work. In that case I'd go with Unblock::this(...) :)

          0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
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