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From: | Rogelio Serrano |
Subject: | Re: Excellent technical overview of D-BUS |
Date: | Wed, 01 Sep 2004 15:20:06 +0800 |
On 1 Sep 2004, at 06:59, Rogelio Serrano wrote:
I agree. I think it is better to extend gdomap so it becomes D-BUS daemon like .That's not what I meant. I don't see any reason to extend gdomap to be like the d-bus daemon. The two daemons do different jobs, and if we want to use somethinglike d-bus, we should probably just use d-bus.
I see. I think the idea of D-BUS as a 'bus' is beginning to lose appeal for me.
[snip]
While the organizational simplicity of that is appealing, I'm not sure it's a good idea.The gdomap server is just used to look up ports by service name ... it's needed in order to locate a service on the network, but plays no role in the actual messaging.
I see. What about starting services on demand? No more message bus. Just a service monitoring and lookup hub. But still split into local and network parts.
Currently we have host-local DO via unix domain sockets (NSMessagePort) except on windows, and this does not require/use gdomap ... since we don't need to look up the service on the network. We know it's local and can look it up via a local database of some sort (eg. the local filesystem).If you dont want network DO then dont run the network ipc part.Yes.
Now I need to start reading gdomap code. -- Blood is thicker then water... And much tastier John Davidorff Pell
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