From dfb0c1845a8937dbb1e669c16a2ed36547a8a00f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ulf Lilleengen Date: Sat, 18 Jul 2009 12:21:39 +0200 Subject: - Remove pnotify library again as the API is a bit messy and handles things in a different way than musicfs requires. --- pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README | 123 --------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 123 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README (limited to 'pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README') diff --git a/pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README b/pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README deleted file mode 100644 index 23d5a55..0000000 --- a/pnotify/pnotify-0.2/README +++ /dev/null @@ -1,123 +0,0 @@ - - pnotify - - pnotify is an event notification framework for monitoring files and - directories. It is designed to be portable across different Unix-like - operating systems, and currently supports Linux and BSD. The - [1]pnotify API is very similar to the [2]inotify API under Linux. - ___________________________________ - - [3]Download | [4]Documentation | [5]Mailing list - ___________________________________ - -Rationale - - Kernel-based filesystem event notification is a relatively new - phenonemon, and several different approaches have been taken by - various operating systems. Linux uses inotify, BSD uses kqueue, Apple - has kqueue and it's own Spotlight system calls, Solaris has FEM, - Windows has the NTFS Change Journal and the ReadDirectoryChangesW - function, and so forth. - - The goal of pnotify is to provide a simple, cross-platform API for - monitoring filesystem events. The library will conceal all of the - messy implementation-specific details from the user and help them to - write more portable programs. - -History - - pnotify was born out of an effort to port the inotify API from Linux - to BSD. This initial effort took the form of a userspace library that - would translate inotify requests into their kqueue(4) equivalent. - After some time, it became clear that kqueue was not sophisticated - enough to support all of the functionality of inotify. There was also - the problem of threadsafety; inotify relies on shared global data - structures, which is normal within the kernel but complicates the - design of a userspace library. - - Eventually, it became clear that a new API was needed to address these - portability and threadsafety issues. This new API became 'pnotify', to - indicate that it is a portable subset of the inotify API. - -Supported Platforms - - pnotify has been ported to the following platforms: - * Linux 2.6 - * OpenBSD 4.0 - * NetBSD 3.0 - * MacOS/X 10.4 - - There are platforms that are not supported due to lack of developer - resources. Interested parties with access to these platforms are - encouraged to port the library to their platform. For example: - - * Sun OpenSolaris will soon get a similar API called FEM that could - be supported. - * Microsoft Windows has a filesystem event notification mechanism - - At the current time, there is no generic polling mechanism to use as a - fallback for systems that don't have a kernel event mechanism like - inotify or kqueue. - -Usage - - When you run './configure && make && make install', pnotify is built - as a shared library and installed under the /usr/local prefix. - - Even though pnotify is built as a shared library by default, it is - easier for application developers to include pnotify.c and pnotify.h - in their source tree and not depend on the existence of a shared - library. - -Download - - The source code may be downloaded from the [6]download page. You may - also check out a working copy of the latest development sources by - issuing the following command: - - svn checkout http://pnotify.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ pnotify - - If you just want a quick peek at the source code, you can browse the - [7]webSVN repository - -Documentation - - * The pnotify(3) manpage in [8]HTML or [9]PostScript format. - * Doxygen-generated API reference manual (coming soon) - -Mailing List - - There is a mailing list for discussion about the pnotify library. - Click [10]here to sign up, post a question or comment, or browse - through the archives. - -Contact the Author - - For more information, contact Mark Heily at [11]devel@heily.com - -Related Links - - * [12]FAM - the original, unmaintained monitoring utility from SGI. - * [13]gamin - the modern FAM replacement. Part of the GNOME project. - * [14]libevent - a library for building event-driven servers. - Supports socket events, but not filesystem events. - _________________________________________________________________ - - (C) 2007 Mark Heily. - -References - - 1. file://localhost/pnotify/manpage.html - 2. http://linux.die.net/man/7/inotify - 3. file://localhost/pnotify/index.html#download - 4. file://localhost/pnotify/index.html#docs - 5. file://localhost/pnotify/index.html#mlist - 6. http://code.google.com/p/pnotify/downloads/list - 7. http://pnotify.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ - 8. file://localhost/pnotify/manpage.html - 9. file://localhost/pnotify/manpage.ps - 10. http://groups.google.com/group/pnotify/topics - 11. mailto:devel@heily.com - 12. http://oss.sgi.com/projects/fam/ - 13. http://www.gnome.org/~veillard/gamin/ - 14. http://monkey.org/~provos/libevent/ -- cgit v1.2.3