moodycamel
Aeron
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moodycamel | Aeron | |
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11 | 20 | |
8,808 | 7,046 | |
- | 1.0% | |
3.9 | 9.8 | |
10 months ago | 7 days ago | |
C++ | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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moodycamel
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Professional Usernames
Other than that... if your stuff is good, that's a much better signal than a professional username. I've seen a lot of decently unprofessional usernames out there that get taken pretty seriously because of the good work behind them. My recent favorite is "moodycamel" who authored a great concurrent queue library in C++.
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How should you "fix your timestep" for physics?
In c++ the moodycamel ConcurrentQueue is a good choice.
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Efficient asynchronous programming -- search keywords/basic pointers (ha)/examples?
Here's a decent concurrent queue: moodycamel::ConcurrentQueue.
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moodycamel VS lockfree_mpmc_queue - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 21 Apr 2022
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Lockless Queue Not Working
Lock free programming is hard, and probably harder than you think. I would not even try something like that myself. I would look for existing solutions, something like https://github.com/cameron314/concurrentqueue for example.
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Simple Blocking/Nonblocking Concurrent (thread-safe) Queue Adapter, header only library
I needed a concurrent queue that would block when attempting to pop an empty queue, which allows the consuming thread to suspend while it's waiting for work. I found that using mutexes allowed me to develop a simple template adapter had several advantages with few drawbacks when compared to non-blocking queues: it can use a variety of containers, the code can be reviewed and verified as to its correctness (very hard to do with fancy concurrent programming that avoids mutexes), and it is only slightly slower than fancier solutions (when I benchmarked it originally, it was 4x slower than Moody Camel's concurrent queue, which to me is fine performance).
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Matthias Killat - Lock-free programming for real-time systems - Meeting C++ 2021
Not literatue but an example. This is a lock-free (not wait-free!) multi-producer multi-consumer queue, not a FIFO, but access patterns should be similar - if not the same: https://github.com/cameron314/concurrentqueue
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Learning Clojure made me return back to C/C++
If I do implement it, the most likely route I'd take is make a compiler in Clojure/clojurescript that uses Instaparse (I have a more-or-less-clojure grammar written that I was tinkering with) and generate C++ code that uses Immer for its data structures and Zug for transducers and what my not-quite-clojure would support would be heavily dependent on what the C++ code and libraries I use can do. I'd use Taskflow to implement a core.async style system (not sure how to implement channels, maybe this but I'm unsure if its a good fit, but I also haven't looked). I would ultimately want to be able to interact with C++ code, so having some way to call C++ classes (even templated ones) would be a must. I'm unsure if I would just copy (and extend as needed) Clojure's host interop functionality or not. I had toyed with the idea that you can define the native types (including templates) as part of the type annotations and then the user-level code basically just looks like a normal function. But I didn't take it very far yet, haven't had the time. The reason I'd take this approach is that I'm writing a good bit of C++ again and I'd love to do that in this not-quite-clojure language, if I did make it. A bunch of languages, like Haxe and Nim compile to C or C++, so I think its a perfectly reasonable approach, and if interop works well enough, then just like Clojure was able to leverage the Java ecosystem, not-quite-clojure could be bootstrapped by leveraging the C++ ecosystem. But its mostly just a vague dream right now.
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Recommendations for C++ library for shared memory (multiple producers/single consumer)
I would recommend https://github.com/cameron314/concurrentqueue as it's very battle tested and fast.
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fmtlog: fastest C++ logging library using fmtlib syntax
This was explicitly considered for spdlog (using the moodycamel::ConcurrentQueue) but rejected for the above reason. I'm not involved in the development of spdlog but personally I agree, for me it's important that log output is not all mixed up.
Aeron
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LMAX Disruptor – High Performance Inter-Thread Messaging Library
Semi-related is the Aeron project: https://github.com/real-logic/aeron
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Nálatok mi a helyzet?
- ez itt most egy izgalmasabb product (trading/matching engine, low latency code, aeron alapokon)
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How do you do UDP Flow control?
Look into Aeron for examples of high performance UDP message sending. We use it for high performance audio messaging, and I previously used it in high frequency trading https://github.com/real-logic/aeron. It is written in Java/C, but the general concepts of back pressure and reliable delivery over UDP are well documented.
- Aeron: Efficient reliable UDP unicast, UDP multicast, and IPC message transport
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Experience taking the training offer from real-logic Aeron framework creators?
They mention their training offer on the Aeron GitHub page here: https://github.com/real-logic/aeron
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Low Latency C++ programs for High Frequency Trading (HFT)
Yup the Disruptor paper actually shocked the industry a bit, b/c it was so out of place. BTW, Martin Thompson went on improving the Disruptor, and the result is the Aeron Protocol: https://github.com/real-logic/aeron
- What network messaging library do you recommend?
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Possibly stupid question, is java the right language for low latency and high throughput web servers?
I was about to suggest Chronicle, but it looks like they have gone closed-source. The older version is still interesting to look through though. Aeron / Disruptor / SBE are good projects for inspiration as well.
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Looking similar framework with Aeron ( Java) to do benchmark test
We are using this Java Aeron (https://github.com/real-logic/aeron) to build our production distributed messaging cluster. As a Rust lover, Is there any similar lib or framework in our ecosystem to test benchmark with it?
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if you had to restart at 0 knowledge what would you do?
Java: In the past years C++ in finance has been rapidly supplanted by Java thanks to breakthrough technologies in the past decade like LMAX Disruptor, Chronicle Queue, Azul JVM, and Aeron (not the ergonomic chair, but this one, the transport protocol that breaks kafka performance records out of the park - not really a full kafka replacement, as Kafka enforces subscriber GD and aeron is more of an OSI layer 4 better than TCP; google "Best-effort delivery vs reliable delivery"). There's plenty more but thanks to these technologies, they allowed a Java based stack to perform the latency and throughput requirements needed for high frequency trading/HFT. From top trading firms like Two Sigma to the New York Stock Exchange, they're in Java. For banks, large modern western banks worth their salt and have modernized their systems are dominated by Java, especially thanks to Azul. To list a few banks, ING, Wells Fargo, Credit Suisse, and Barclays are all in Azul. Even at work Java still dominates.
What are some alternatives?
Boost.Compute - A C++ GPU Computing Library for OpenCL
Apache Kafka - Mirror of Apache Kafka
MPMCQueue.h - A bounded multi-producer multi-consumer concurrent queue written in C++11
Embedded RabbitMQ - A JVM library to use RabbitMQ as an embedded service
Taskflow - A General-purpose Parallel and Heterogeneous Task Programming System
Apache Pulsar - Apache Pulsar - distributed pub-sub messaging system
readerwriterqueue - A fast single-producer, single-consumer lock-free queue for C++
Apache ActiveMQ - Mirror of Apache ActiveMQ
RaftLib - The RaftLib C++ library, streaming/dataflow concurrency via C++ iostream-like operators
JeroMQ - Pure Java ZeroMQ
libcds - A C++ library of Concurrent Data Structures
Apache Camel - Apache Camel is an open source integration framework that empowers you to quickly and easily integrate various systems consuming or producing data.