The short answer to my question is using epoll. According to wikipedia, epoll is a scalable I/O event notification mechanism for Linux, first introduced in Linux kernel 2.5.44.
select(2) can monitor up to FD_SETSIZE number of descriptors at a time, typically a small number determined at libc's compile time. Instead, epoll has no such fixed limits, and does not perform any linear scans. Hence it is able to perform better and handle a larger number of events.
For a tutorial on how to use epoll go at banu.com/blog/2/how-to-use-epoll-a-complete-example-in-c/
As for Boost, on many platforms, Boost.Asio implements the Proactor design pattern in terms of a Reactor, such as select(kernel 2.4), epoll(kernel 2.6) or kqueue(Mac OS).
On Windows NT, 2000 and XP, Boost.Asio takes advantage of overlapped I/O to provide an efficient implementation of the Proactor design pattern.
More on Boost:
www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_52_0/doc/html/boost_asio/overview/core/async.html
www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_35_0/doc/html/boost_asio/design/implementation.html