Reputation: 83
I am learning Node Js, I understand the heart of node js is the reactor pattern which is based on the event loop.
When any event occurs it goes to the event queue and then gets picked up by the stack once it's running tasks get over, this happens if the event is a non- blocking one but if it is a blocking request then event loop passes it to a thread from a thread pool of libuv.
Now my doubts are:
Once the execution is over does libuv thread passes the request back to event queue or event loop? , different tutorial has a different scenario.
Thread pool in libuv has 3 threads more, now suppose 10 users tries to login and everyone at the same time (some app like facebook or so), how only, and the threads are blocked as they want to connect to DB, so how only three threads will handle so much load?
I am really confused and did not get a good explanation of these doubts anywhere, any help will be appreciated.
Upvotes: 5
Views: 5707
Reputation: 49180
When any event occurs it goes to the event queue and then gets picked up by the stack
event does not get picked up by the stack. it is passed to call stack by event loop.
if it is a blocking request then event loop passes it to a thread from a thread pool of libuv.
There are ONLY FOUR things that use the thread pool - DNS lookup, fs, crypto and zlib. Everything else execute in the main thread irrespective or blocking or not.
So logging is a network request and threadpool does not handle this. Neither libuv nor node has any code to handle this low level operations that are involved with a network request. Instead libuv delegates the request making to the underlying operating system then it just waits on the operating system to emit a signal that some response has come back to the request. OS keeps track of connections in the network stack. But network i/o is handled by your network hardware and your ISP.
Upvotes: 11
Reputation: 892
Once the execution is over does libuv thread passes the request back to event queue or event loop?
From the node.js point of view does it make a difference?
2) Thread pool in libuv has 3 threads more , now suppose 10 users tries to login and everyone at the same time (some app like facebook or so), how only , and the threads are blocked as they want to connect to DB, so how only three threads will handle so much load ?
libuv uses threat pool but not in a "naive" way. Most asynchronous requests are filesystem/tcp interaction which are handled via select()
. You have to worry about the thread pool only when you create a custom C++ module and manually dispatch a CPU/IO blocking task.
Upvotes: 2