The following two diagrams are my understanding on how threads work in a event-driven web server (like Node.js + JavaScript) compared to a non-event driven web server (like IIS + C#)
From the diagram is easy to tell that on a traditional web server the number of threads used to perform 3 long running operations is larger than on a event-driven web server (3 vs 1.)
I think I got the "traditional web server" counts correct (3) but I wonder about the event-driven one (1). Here are my questions:
Is it correct to assume that only one thread was used in the event-driven scenario? That can't be correct, something must have been created to handle the I/O tasks. Right?
How did the evented server handled the I/O? Let's say that the I/O was to read from a database. I suspect that the web server had to create a thread to hand off the job of connecting to the database? Right?
If the event-driven web server indeed created threads to handle the I/O where is the gain?
A possible explanation for my confusion could be that on both scenarios, traditional and event-driven, three separate threads were indeed created to handle the I/O (not shown in the pictures) but the difference is really on the number of threads on the web server per-se, not on the I/O threads. Is that accurate?