show/hide this revision's text 2 Stressed the importance of a better architecture.

Without knowing more about your particular circumstances, I can only offer the following guesses:

Try using fsync()/sync() to force the kernel to flush data to the storage device more frequently. It sounds like the kernel buffers all your writes and then ties up the bus or otherwise stalls your system while performing the actual write. With careful calls to fsync() you can try to schedule writes over the system bus in a more fine grained way.

It might make sense to structure the application in such a way that the encoding/capture (you didn't mention video capture, so I'm making an assumption here - you might want to add more information) task runs in its own thread and buffers its output in userland - then, a second thread can handle writing to the device. This will give you a smoothing buffer to allow the encoder to always finish its writes without blocking.

One thing that sounds suspicious is that you only see this problem at a certain data rate - if this really was a buffering issue, I'd expect the problem to happen less frequently at lower data rates, but I'd still expect to see this issue.

In any case, more information might prove useful. What's your system's architecture? (In very general terms.)

Given the additional information you provided, it sounds like the device's throughput is rather poor for small writes and frequent flushes. If you're sure that for larger writes you can get sufficient throughput (and I'm not sure that's the case, but the file system might be doing something stupid, like updating the FAT after every write) then having an encoding thread piping data to a writing thread with sufficient buffering in the writing thread to avoid stalls. I've used shared memory ring buffers in the past to implement this kind of scheme, but any IPC mechanism that would allow the writer to write to the I/O process without stalling unless the buffer is full should do the trick.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Without knowing more about your particular circumstances, I can only offer the following guesses:

Try using fsync()/sync() to force the kernel to flush data to the storage device more frequently. It sounds like the kernel buffers all your writes and then ties up the bus or otherwise stalls your system while performing the actual write. With careful calls to fsync() you can try to schedule writes over the system bus in a more fine grained way.

It might make sense to structure the application in such a way that the encoding/capture (you didn't mention video capture, so I'm making an assumption here - you might want to add more information) task runs in its own thread and buffers its output in userland - then, a second thread can handle writing to the device. This will give you a smoothing buffer to allow the encoder to always finish its writes without blocking.

One thing that sounds suspicious is that you only see this problem at a certain data rate - if this really was a buffering issue, I'd expect the problem to happen less frequently at lower data rates, but I'd still expect to see this issue.

In any case, more information might prove useful. What's your system's architecture? (In very general terms.)