Yeah, I saw that and it made me chuckle, especially once I discovered the recursive reflection.

It's reasonably easy to program in it. I know that it can handle 16 bit 44.1 kHz stereo pcm streaming over a network. Does that it "performing?"

Chris


Reading the description of the go-p9p, it says "A modern, performant 9P library for Go.".  I'm guessing "modern" refers to being implemented in Go.  Any pointers on how performance was measured or what it was measured against?



On Tue, Oct 18, 2016 at 11:32 AM Chris McGee <newton688@gmail.com> wrote:
If you're interested in Go, this 9p library has worked reasonably well for my servers.


On Oct 18, 2016, at 1:31 PM, Iruatã Souza <iru.muzgo@gmail.com> wrote:



On Thu, Oct 13, 2016 at 3:47 PM, yy <yiyu.jgl@gmail.com> wrote:
On 13 October 2016 at 18:03, Steve Simon <steve@quintile.net> wrote:
Anyone written or ported a small simple 9p library;

As part of a GSoC project I wrote
https://bitbucket.org/yiyus/devwsys-prev/src/tip/libninep/ (man pages
can be found in the same repo). There is a ninepserver but not a
ninepclient because the only client I wrote was to be used with p9p,
so I was using 9pclient(3), but it should be relatively easy to write
one if you need it.


--
- yiyus || JGL .