1

I test the code

///create the web server
http.createServer(app).listen(app.get('port'), function(){
  console.log('Express server listening on port ' + app.get('port'));
});
///
function compute() {
var x = 1111111112;
    while (x > 0) x--;//about 6 seconds
   setImmediate(compute);//then do it again
}
compute();

Let's say we have a task compute() which needs to run almost continuously, and does some CPU intensive calculations. If we wanted to also handle other events, like serving HTTP requests in the same Node process, I find it impossible to use process.nextTick() adjust CPU time on the JS Thread because process.nextTick's oberver in event loop is idle observer . The observer priority is listed:

  1. idle observer //process.nextTick has the most highest priority
  2. I/O observer // The second is I/O observer includes web request and other I/O operations
  3. check observer // setImmediate() function's observer is check observer

So I use setImmediate to make the whole compute cut into pieces of work so that other Observer(idle and I/O) could deal their events like a request before Javascript continue running compute() function.

The result is strange : When a request comes , it's dealed but not at one time.Since I set the compute()'s computing time at about 6 seconds, why my browser won't get the result until so many seconds pass(larger than 6 sec.) So I start to decrease the computing time at about 50 ms which is much more smaller than before.

///create the web server
http.createServer(app).listen(app.get('port'), function(){
  console.log('Express server listening on port ' + app.get('port'));
});
///
function compute() {
var x = 11111112;//I decrease this number for reducing the running time of compute(); 
    while (x > 0) x--;//about 50 ms
   setImmediate(compute);//then do it again
}
compute();

Then everything works quickly.

What I worry is: the request should be dealed after 6 seconds in a whole operation and why it last for a long time? I always think the running model is like below:

  1. Compute 6 seconds
  2. If Event loop find a I/O observer ( a web request) waiting, deal the request and response to the client browser

  3. then event loop continue to do his work like compute()

  4. Loop above again

But it seems node.js cut the request operation into many pieces which result in dealing the request with such a long time?

And am I wrong? Any help will be appreciated.

2
  • OK I think I find the possible reason.inside the request opeartion,there are also many Function like process.nextTick,setImmediate which will last till next tick.So compute() run again and again Aug 16, 2014 at 0:47
  • It is a bad practice - don't do this again. If you need to postpone something, use setTimeout Aug 16, 2014 at 2:58

1 Answer 1

0

This is the fundamental concept of node.js. Node.js is event based. Why is this so important? Because it explains how Node can be asynchronous and have non-blocking I/O.

Whenever task starts, it goes to the event loop queue then node.js interpreter sends the request to the event loop, event loop checks whether the task is I/O or non I/O blocking. If its I/O blocking request then event loop sends it to the thread pool which is managed by node.js library (libuv). A thread pool manages a bunch of tasks like networking, DB operation, filesystem, and others. Event loop always runs on the main thread because node.js is a single thread. All the I/O operations run on the thread pool. When task is completed in the thread poll it calls the callback and passes it to the queue again main thread pulls the request from the queue and process it at the same.

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