I need to call "waitformultipleobjects" (windows equivalent of "select" call in linux) from julia using ccall. As this is a blocking function, I would like to call it within another coroutine (task).
The problem is that the “Taks” in Julia only function effectively if all the blocking calls within it emanates from julia's own I/O interface. It cannot deal with any blocking call to native C-functions.
As far as I can see julia is based on Libuv. I guess every time a blocking call (from defined I/O interface) is issued, julia internally calls a corresponding function from the asynchronous libuv and then waits() for a notify() from the libuv. I guess the entire scheduler of julia is based on this paradigm so that It can deal with asynch operation within a single thread.
My question is, is it possible to extent this wait() - notify() paradigm for any arbitrary blocking ccall call?
I have tried the following solution, but it fails miserably:
2) Provide a Julia callback function to the dll which is called at the finalizing step of the thread by the dll.
3) (In Julia) the callback function calls the notify() function.
However, it turned out that notify() function itself is not thread safe and Julia’s respond to notify() from another thread (created in C) is totally random.
(PS: I was previously advised a solution based on parallel processes. However, for several reasons, multi-process paradigm is not a suitable option for me right now.)