lh | 9ed821d | 2023-04-07 01:36:19 -0700 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | @node Low-Level I/O, File System Interface, I/O on Streams, Top |
| 2 | @c %MENU% Low-level, less portable I/O |
| 3 | @chapter Low-Level Input/Output |
| 4 | |
| 5 | This chapter describes functions for performing low-level input/output |
| 6 | operations on file descriptors. These functions include the primitives |
| 7 | for the higher-level I/O functions described in @ref{I/O on Streams}, as |
| 8 | well as functions for performing low-level control operations for which |
| 9 | there are no equivalents on streams. |
| 10 | |
| 11 | Stream-level I/O is more flexible and usually more convenient; |
| 12 | therefore, programmers generally use the descriptor-level functions only |
| 13 | when necessary. These are some of the usual reasons: |
| 14 | |
| 15 | @itemize @bullet |
| 16 | @item |
| 17 | For reading binary files in large chunks. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | @item |
| 20 | For reading an entire file into core before parsing it. |
| 21 | |
| 22 | @item |
| 23 | To perform operations other than data transfer, which can only be done |
| 24 | with a descriptor. (You can use @code{fileno} to get the descriptor |
| 25 | corresponding to a stream.) |
| 26 | |
| 27 | @item |
| 28 | To pass descriptors to a child process. (The child can create its own |
| 29 | stream to use a descriptor that it inherits, but cannot inherit a stream |
| 30 | directly.) |
| 31 | @end itemize |
| 32 | |
| 33 | @menu |
| 34 | * Opening and Closing Files:: How to open and close file |
| 35 | descriptors. |
| 36 | * I/O Primitives:: Reading and writing data. |
| 37 | * File Position Primitive:: Setting a descriptor's file |
| 38 | position. |
| 39 | * Descriptors and Streams:: Converting descriptor to stream |
| 40 | or vice-versa. |
| 41 | * Stream/Descriptor Precautions:: Precautions needed if you use both |
| 42 | descriptors and streams. |
| 43 | * Scatter-Gather:: Fast I/O to discontinuous buffers. |
| 44 | * Memory-mapped I/O:: Using files like memory. |
| 45 | * Waiting for I/O:: How to check for input or output |
| 46 | on multiple file descriptors. |
| 47 | * Synchronizing I/O:: Making sure all I/O actions completed. |
| 48 | * Asynchronous I/O:: Perform I/O in parallel. |
| 49 | * Control Operations:: Various other operations on file |
| 50 | descriptors. |
| 51 | * Duplicating Descriptors:: Fcntl commands for duplicating |
| 52 | file descriptors. |
| 53 | * Descriptor Flags:: Fcntl commands for manipulating |
| 54 | flags associated with file |
| 55 | descriptors. |
| 56 | * File Status Flags:: Fcntl commands for manipulating |
| 57 | flags associated with open files. |
| 58 | * File Locks:: Fcntl commands for implementing |
| 59 | file locking. |
| 60 | * Open File Description Locks:: Fcntl commands for implementing |
| 61 | open file description locking. |
| 62 | * Open File Description Locks Example:: An example of open file description lock |
| 63 | usage |
| 64 | * Interrupt Input:: Getting an asynchronous signal when |
| 65 | input arrives. |
| 66 | * IOCTLs:: Generic I/O Control operations. |
| 67 | @end menu |
| 68 | |
| 69 | |
| 70 | @node Opening and Closing Files |
| 71 | @section Opening and Closing Files |
| 72 | |
| 73 | @cindex opening a file descriptor |
| 74 | @cindex closing a file descriptor |
| 75 | This section describes the primitives for opening and closing files |
| 76 | using file descriptors. The @code{open} and @code{creat} functions are |
| 77 | declared in the header file @file{fcntl.h}, while @code{close} is |
| 78 | declared in @file{unistd.h}. |
| 79 | @pindex unistd.h |
| 80 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 81 | |
| 82 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 83 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 84 | @deftypefun int open (const char *@var{filename}, int @var{flags}[, mode_t @var{mode}]) |
| 85 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{@acsfd{}}} |
| 86 | The @code{open} function creates and returns a new file descriptor for |
| 87 | the file named by @var{filename}. Initially, the file position |
| 88 | indicator for the file is at the beginning of the file. The argument |
| 89 | @var{mode} (@pxref{Permission Bits}) is used only when a file is |
| 90 | created, but it doesn't hurt to supply the argument in any case. |
| 91 | |
| 92 | The @var{flags} argument controls how the file is to be opened. This is |
| 93 | a bit mask; you create the value by the bitwise OR of the appropriate |
| 94 | parameters (using the @samp{|} operator in C). |
| 95 | @xref{File Status Flags}, for the parameters available. |
| 96 | |
| 97 | The normal return value from @code{open} is a non-negative integer file |
| 98 | descriptor. In the case of an error, a value of @math{-1} is returned |
| 99 | instead. In addition to the usual file name errors (@pxref{File |
| 100 | Name Errors}), the following @code{errno} error conditions are defined |
| 101 | for this function: |
| 102 | |
| 103 | @table @code |
| 104 | @item EACCES |
| 105 | The file exists but is not readable/writable as requested by the @var{flags} |
| 106 | argument, the file does not exist and the directory is unwritable so |
| 107 | it cannot be created. |
| 108 | |
| 109 | @item EEXIST |
| 110 | Both @code{O_CREAT} and @code{O_EXCL} are set, and the named file already |
| 111 | exists. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | @item EINTR |
| 114 | The @code{open} operation was interrupted by a signal. |
| 115 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 116 | |
| 117 | @item EISDIR |
| 118 | The @var{flags} argument specified write access, and the file is a directory. |
| 119 | |
| 120 | @item EMFILE |
| 121 | The process has too many files open. |
| 122 | The maximum number of file descriptors is controlled by the |
| 123 | @code{RLIMIT_NOFILE} resource limit; @pxref{Limits on Resources}. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | @item ENFILE |
| 126 | The entire system, or perhaps the file system which contains the |
| 127 | directory, cannot support any additional open files at the moment. |
| 128 | (This problem cannot happen on @gnuhurdsystems{}.) |
| 129 | |
| 130 | @item ENOENT |
| 131 | The named file does not exist, and @code{O_CREAT} is not specified. |
| 132 | |
| 133 | @item ENOSPC |
| 134 | The directory or file system that would contain the new file cannot be |
| 135 | extended, because there is no disk space left. |
| 136 | |
| 137 | @item ENXIO |
| 138 | @code{O_NONBLOCK} and @code{O_WRONLY} are both set in the @var{flags} |
| 139 | argument, the file named by @var{filename} is a FIFO (@pxref{Pipes and |
| 140 | FIFOs}), and no process has the file open for reading. |
| 141 | |
| 142 | @item EROFS |
| 143 | The file resides on a read-only file system and any of @w{@code{O_WRONLY}}, |
| 144 | @code{O_RDWR}, and @code{O_TRUNC} are set in the @var{flags} argument, |
| 145 | or @code{O_CREAT} is set and the file does not already exist. |
| 146 | @end table |
| 147 | |
| 148 | @c !!! umask |
| 149 | |
| 150 | If on a 32 bit machine the sources are translated with |
| 151 | @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the function @code{open} returns a file |
| 152 | descriptor opened in the large file mode which enables the file handling |
| 153 | functions to use files up to @math{2^63} bytes in size and offset from |
| 154 | @math{-2^63} to @math{2^63}. This happens transparently for the user |
| 155 | since all of the lowlevel file handling functions are equally replaced. |
| 156 | |
| 157 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 158 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 159 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{open} is |
| 160 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 161 | until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{open} should be |
| 162 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 163 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 164 | |
| 165 | The @code{open} function is the underlying primitive for the @code{fopen} |
| 166 | and @code{freopen} functions, that create streams. |
| 167 | @end deftypefun |
| 168 | |
| 169 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 170 | @comment Unix98 |
| 171 | @deftypefun int open64 (const char *@var{filename}, int @var{flags}[, mode_t @var{mode}]) |
| 172 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{@acsfd{}}} |
| 173 | This function is similar to @code{open}. It returns a file descriptor |
| 174 | which can be used to access the file named by @var{filename}. The only |
| 175 | difference is that on 32 bit systems the file is opened in the |
| 176 | large file mode. I.e., file length and file offsets can exceed 31 bits. |
| 177 | |
| 178 | When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 179 | function is actually available under the name @code{open}. I.e., the |
| 180 | new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently |
| 181 | replaces the old API. |
| 182 | @end deftypefun |
| 183 | |
| 184 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 185 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 186 | @deftypefn {Obsolete function} int creat (const char *@var{filename}, mode_t @var{mode}) |
| 187 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{@acsfd{}}} |
| 188 | This function is obsolete. The call: |
| 189 | |
| 190 | @smallexample |
| 191 | creat (@var{filename}, @var{mode}) |
| 192 | @end smallexample |
| 193 | |
| 194 | @noindent |
| 195 | is equivalent to: |
| 196 | |
| 197 | @smallexample |
| 198 | open (@var{filename}, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, @var{mode}) |
| 199 | @end smallexample |
| 200 | |
| 201 | If on a 32 bit machine the sources are translated with |
| 202 | @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the function @code{creat} returns a file |
| 203 | descriptor opened in the large file mode which enables the file handling |
| 204 | functions to use files up to @math{2^63} in size and offset from |
| 205 | @math{-2^63} to @math{2^63}. This happens transparently for the user |
| 206 | since all of the lowlevel file handling functions are equally replaced. |
| 207 | @end deftypefn |
| 208 | |
| 209 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 210 | @comment Unix98 |
| 211 | @deftypefn {Obsolete function} int creat64 (const char *@var{filename}, mode_t @var{mode}) |
| 212 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{@acsfd{}}} |
| 213 | This function is similar to @code{creat}. It returns a file descriptor |
| 214 | which can be used to access the file named by @var{filename}. The only |
| 215 | the difference is that on 32 bit systems the file is opened in the |
| 216 | large file mode. I.e., file length and file offsets can exceed 31 bits. |
| 217 | |
| 218 | To use this file descriptor one must not use the normal operations but |
| 219 | instead the counterparts named @code{*64}, e.g., @code{read64}. |
| 220 | |
| 221 | When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 222 | function is actually available under the name @code{open}. I.e., the |
| 223 | new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently |
| 224 | replaces the old API. |
| 225 | @end deftypefn |
| 226 | |
| 227 | @comment unistd.h |
| 228 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 229 | @deftypefun int close (int @var{filedes}) |
| 230 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{@acsfd{}}} |
| 231 | The function @code{close} closes the file descriptor @var{filedes}. |
| 232 | Closing a file has the following consequences: |
| 233 | |
| 234 | @itemize @bullet |
| 235 | @item |
| 236 | The file descriptor is deallocated. |
| 237 | |
| 238 | @item |
| 239 | Any record locks owned by the process on the file are unlocked. |
| 240 | |
| 241 | @item |
| 242 | When all file descriptors associated with a pipe or FIFO have been closed, |
| 243 | any unread data is discarded. |
| 244 | @end itemize |
| 245 | |
| 246 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 247 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 248 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{close} is |
| 249 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 250 | until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{close} should be |
| 251 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 252 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 253 | |
| 254 | The normal return value from @code{close} is @math{0}; a value of @math{-1} |
| 255 | is returned in case of failure. The following @code{errno} error |
| 256 | conditions are defined for this function: |
| 257 | |
| 258 | @table @code |
| 259 | @item EBADF |
| 260 | The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor. |
| 261 | |
| 262 | @item EINTR |
| 263 | The @code{close} call was interrupted by a signal. |
| 264 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 265 | Here is an example of how to handle @code{EINTR} properly: |
| 266 | |
| 267 | @smallexample |
| 268 | TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (close (desc)); |
| 269 | @end smallexample |
| 270 | |
| 271 | @item ENOSPC |
| 272 | @itemx EIO |
| 273 | @itemx EDQUOT |
| 274 | When the file is accessed by NFS, these errors from @code{write} can sometimes |
| 275 | not be detected until @code{close}. @xref{I/O Primitives}, for details |
| 276 | on their meaning. |
| 277 | @end table |
| 278 | |
| 279 | Please note that there is @emph{no} separate @code{close64} function. |
| 280 | This is not necessary since this function does not determine nor depend |
| 281 | on the mode of the file. The kernel which performs the @code{close} |
| 282 | operation knows which mode the descriptor is used for and can handle |
| 283 | this situation. |
| 284 | @end deftypefun |
| 285 | |
| 286 | To close a stream, call @code{fclose} (@pxref{Closing Streams}) instead |
| 287 | of trying to close its underlying file descriptor with @code{close}. |
| 288 | This flushes any buffered output and updates the stream object to |
| 289 | indicate that it is closed. |
| 290 | |
| 291 | @node I/O Primitives |
| 292 | @section Input and Output Primitives |
| 293 | |
| 294 | This section describes the functions for performing primitive input and |
| 295 | output operations on file descriptors: @code{read}, @code{write}, and |
| 296 | @code{lseek}. These functions are declared in the header file |
| 297 | @file{unistd.h}. |
| 298 | @pindex unistd.h |
| 299 | |
| 300 | @comment unistd.h |
| 301 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 302 | @deftp {Data Type} ssize_t |
| 303 | This data type is used to represent the sizes of blocks that can be |
| 304 | read or written in a single operation. It is similar to @code{size_t}, |
| 305 | but must be a signed type. |
| 306 | @end deftp |
| 307 | |
| 308 | @cindex reading from a file descriptor |
| 309 | @comment unistd.h |
| 310 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 311 | @deftypefun ssize_t read (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}) |
| 312 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 313 | The @code{read} function reads up to @var{size} bytes from the file |
| 314 | with descriptor @var{filedes}, storing the results in the @var{buffer}. |
| 315 | (This is not necessarily a character string, and no terminating null |
| 316 | character is added.) |
| 317 | |
| 318 | @cindex end-of-file, on a file descriptor |
| 319 | The return value is the number of bytes actually read. This might be |
| 320 | less than @var{size}; for example, if there aren't that many bytes left |
| 321 | in the file or if there aren't that many bytes immediately available. |
| 322 | The exact behavior depends on what kind of file it is. Note that |
| 323 | reading less than @var{size} bytes is not an error. |
| 324 | |
| 325 | A value of zero indicates end-of-file (except if the value of the |
| 326 | @var{size} argument is also zero). This is not considered an error. |
| 327 | If you keep calling @code{read} while at end-of-file, it will keep |
| 328 | returning zero and doing nothing else. |
| 329 | |
| 330 | If @code{read} returns at least one character, there is no way you can |
| 331 | tell whether end-of-file was reached. But if you did reach the end, the |
| 332 | next read will return zero. |
| 333 | |
| 334 | In case of an error, @code{read} returns @math{-1}. The following |
| 335 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function: |
| 336 | |
| 337 | @table @code |
| 338 | @item EAGAIN |
| 339 | Normally, when no input is immediately available, @code{read} waits for |
| 340 | some input. But if the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is set for the file |
| 341 | (@pxref{File Status Flags}), @code{read} returns immediately without |
| 342 | reading any data, and reports this error. |
| 343 | |
| 344 | @strong{Compatibility Note:} Most versions of BSD Unix use a different |
| 345 | error code for this: @code{EWOULDBLOCK}. In @theglibc{}, |
| 346 | @code{EWOULDBLOCK} is an alias for @code{EAGAIN}, so it doesn't matter |
| 347 | which name you use. |
| 348 | |
| 349 | On some systems, reading a large amount of data from a character special |
| 350 | file can also fail with @code{EAGAIN} if the kernel cannot find enough |
| 351 | physical memory to lock down the user's pages. This is limited to |
| 352 | devices that transfer with direct memory access into the user's memory, |
| 353 | which means it does not include terminals, since they always use |
| 354 | separate buffers inside the kernel. This problem never happens on |
| 355 | @gnuhurdsystems{}. |
| 356 | |
| 357 | Any condition that could result in @code{EAGAIN} can instead result in a |
| 358 | successful @code{read} which returns fewer bytes than requested. |
| 359 | Calling @code{read} again immediately would result in @code{EAGAIN}. |
| 360 | |
| 361 | @item EBADF |
| 362 | The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor, |
| 363 | or is not open for reading. |
| 364 | |
| 365 | @item EINTR |
| 366 | @code{read} was interrupted by a signal while it was waiting for input. |
| 367 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. A signal will not necessary cause |
| 368 | @code{read} to return @code{EINTR}; it may instead result in a |
| 369 | successful @code{read} which returns fewer bytes than requested. |
| 370 | |
| 371 | @item EIO |
| 372 | For many devices, and for disk files, this error code indicates |
| 373 | a hardware error. |
| 374 | |
| 375 | @code{EIO} also occurs when a background process tries to read from the |
| 376 | controlling terminal, and the normal action of stopping the process by |
| 377 | sending it a @code{SIGTTIN} signal isn't working. This might happen if |
| 378 | the signal is being blocked or ignored, or because the process group is |
| 379 | orphaned. @xref{Job Control}, for more information about job control, |
| 380 | and @ref{Signal Handling}, for information about signals. |
| 381 | |
| 382 | @item EINVAL |
| 383 | In some systems, when reading from a character or block device, position |
| 384 | and size offsets must be aligned to a particular block size. This error |
| 385 | indicates that the offsets were not properly aligned. |
| 386 | @end table |
| 387 | |
| 388 | Please note that there is no function named @code{read64}. This is not |
| 389 | necessary since this function does not directly modify or handle the |
| 390 | possibly wide file offset. Since the kernel handles this state |
| 391 | internally, the @code{read} function can be used for all cases. |
| 392 | |
| 393 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 394 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 395 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{read} is |
| 396 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 397 | until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{read} should be |
| 398 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 399 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 400 | |
| 401 | The @code{read} function is the underlying primitive for all of the |
| 402 | functions that read from streams, such as @code{fgetc}. |
| 403 | @end deftypefun |
| 404 | |
| 405 | @comment unistd.h |
| 406 | @comment Unix98 |
| 407 | @deftypefun ssize_t pread (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off_t @var{offset}) |
| 408 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 409 | @c This is usually a safe syscall. The sysdeps/posix fallback emulation |
| 410 | @c is not MT-Safe because it uses lseek, read and lseek back, but is it |
| 411 | @c used anywhere? |
| 412 | The @code{pread} function is similar to the @code{read} function. The |
| 413 | first three arguments are identical, and the return values and error |
| 414 | codes also correspond. |
| 415 | |
| 416 | The difference is the fourth argument and its handling. The data block |
| 417 | is not read from the current position of the file descriptor |
| 418 | @code{filedes}. Instead the data is read from the file starting at |
| 419 | position @var{offset}. The position of the file descriptor itself is |
| 420 | not affected by the operation. The value is the same as before the call. |
| 421 | |
| 422 | When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the |
| 423 | @code{pread} function is in fact @code{pread64} and the type |
| 424 | @code{off_t} has 64 bits, which makes it possible to handle files up to |
| 425 | @math{2^63} bytes in length. |
| 426 | |
| 427 | The return value of @code{pread} describes the number of bytes read. |
| 428 | In the error case it returns @math{-1} like @code{read} does and the |
| 429 | error codes are also the same, with these additions: |
| 430 | |
| 431 | @table @code |
| 432 | @item EINVAL |
| 433 | The value given for @var{offset} is negative and therefore illegal. |
| 434 | |
| 435 | @item ESPIPE |
| 436 | The file descriptor @var{filedes} is associate with a pipe or a FIFO and |
| 437 | this device does not allow positioning of the file pointer. |
| 438 | @end table |
| 439 | |
| 440 | The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification |
| 441 | version 2. |
| 442 | @end deftypefun |
| 443 | |
| 444 | @comment unistd.h |
| 445 | @comment Unix98 |
| 446 | @deftypefun ssize_t pread64 (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off64_t @var{offset}) |
| 447 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 448 | @c This is usually a safe syscall. The sysdeps/posix fallback emulation |
| 449 | @c is not MT-Safe because it uses lseek64, read and lseek64 back, but is |
| 450 | @c it used anywhere? |
| 451 | This function is similar to the @code{pread} function. The difference |
| 452 | is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of |
| 453 | @code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address |
| 454 | files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The |
| 455 | file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since |
| 456 | otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to |
| 457 | errors with a descriptor in small file mode. |
| 458 | |
| 459 | When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a |
| 460 | 32 bit machine this function is actually available under the name |
| 461 | @code{pread} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface. |
| 462 | @end deftypefun |
| 463 | |
| 464 | @cindex writing to a file descriptor |
| 465 | @comment unistd.h |
| 466 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 467 | @deftypefun ssize_t write (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}) |
| 468 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 469 | @c Some say write is thread-unsafe on Linux without O_APPEND. In the VFS layer |
| 470 | @c the vfs_write() does no locking around the acquisition of a file offset and |
| 471 | @c therefore multiple threads / kernel tasks may race and get the same offset |
| 472 | @c resulting in data loss. |
| 473 | @c |
| 474 | @c See: |
| 475 | @c http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.kernel/397980 |
| 476 | @c http://lwn.net/Articles/180387/ |
| 477 | @c |
| 478 | @c The counter argument is that POSIX only says that the write starts at the |
| 479 | @c file position and that the file position is updated *before* the function |
| 480 | @c returns. What that really means is that any expectation of atomic writes is |
| 481 | @c strictly an invention of the interpretation of the reader. Data loss could |
| 482 | @c happen if two threads start the write at the same time. Only writes that |
| 483 | @c come after the return of another write are guaranteed to follow the other |
| 484 | @c write. |
| 485 | @c |
| 486 | @c The other side of the coin is that POSIX goes on further to say in |
| 487 | @c "2.9.7 Thread Interactions with Regular File Operations" that threads |
| 488 | @c should never see interleaving sets of file operations, but it is insane |
| 489 | @c to do anything like that because it kills performance, so you don't get |
| 490 | @c those guarantees in Linux. |
| 491 | @c |
| 492 | @c So we mark it thread safe, it doesn't blow up, but you might loose |
| 493 | @c data, and we don't strictly meet the POSIX requirements. |
| 494 | @c |
| 495 | @c The fix for file offsets racing was merged in 3.14, the commits were: |
| 496 | @c 9c225f2655e36a470c4f58dbbc99244c5fc7f2d4, and |
| 497 | @c d7a15f8d0777955986a2ab00ab181795cab14b01. Therefore after Linux 3.14 you |
| 498 | @c should get mostly MT-safe writes. |
| 499 | The @code{write} function writes up to @var{size} bytes from |
| 500 | @var{buffer} to the file with descriptor @var{filedes}. The data in |
| 501 | @var{buffer} is not necessarily a character string and a null character is |
| 502 | output like any other character. |
| 503 | |
| 504 | The return value is the number of bytes actually written. This may be |
| 505 | @var{size}, but can always be smaller. Your program should always call |
| 506 | @code{write} in a loop, iterating until all the data is written. |
| 507 | |
| 508 | Once @code{write} returns, the data is enqueued to be written and can be |
| 509 | read back right away, but it is not necessarily written out to permanent |
| 510 | storage immediately. You can use @code{fsync} when you need to be sure |
| 511 | your data has been permanently stored before continuing. (It is more |
| 512 | efficient for the system to batch up consecutive writes and do them all |
| 513 | at once when convenient. Normally they will always be written to disk |
| 514 | within a minute or less.) Modern systems provide another function |
| 515 | @code{fdatasync} which guarantees integrity only for the file data and |
| 516 | is therefore faster. |
| 517 | @c !!! xref fsync, fdatasync |
| 518 | You can use the @code{O_FSYNC} open mode to make @code{write} always |
| 519 | store the data to disk before returning; @pxref{Operating Modes}. |
| 520 | |
| 521 | In the case of an error, @code{write} returns @math{-1}. The following |
| 522 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function: |
| 523 | |
| 524 | @table @code |
| 525 | @item EAGAIN |
| 526 | Normally, @code{write} blocks until the write operation is complete. |
| 527 | But if the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is set for the file (@pxref{Control |
| 528 | Operations}), it returns immediately without writing any data and |
| 529 | reports this error. An example of a situation that might cause the |
| 530 | process to block on output is writing to a terminal device that supports |
| 531 | flow control, where output has been suspended by receipt of a STOP |
| 532 | character. |
| 533 | |
| 534 | @strong{Compatibility Note:} Most versions of BSD Unix use a different |
| 535 | error code for this: @code{EWOULDBLOCK}. In @theglibc{}, |
| 536 | @code{EWOULDBLOCK} is an alias for @code{EAGAIN}, so it doesn't matter |
| 537 | which name you use. |
| 538 | |
| 539 | On some systems, writing a large amount of data from a character special |
| 540 | file can also fail with @code{EAGAIN} if the kernel cannot find enough |
| 541 | physical memory to lock down the user's pages. This is limited to |
| 542 | devices that transfer with direct memory access into the user's memory, |
| 543 | which means it does not include terminals, since they always use |
| 544 | separate buffers inside the kernel. This problem does not arise on |
| 545 | @gnuhurdsystems{}. |
| 546 | |
| 547 | @item EBADF |
| 548 | The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor, |
| 549 | or is not open for writing. |
| 550 | |
| 551 | @item EFBIG |
| 552 | The size of the file would become larger than the implementation can support. |
| 553 | |
| 554 | @item EINTR |
| 555 | The @code{write} operation was interrupted by a signal while it was |
| 556 | blocked waiting for completion. A signal will not necessarily cause |
| 557 | @code{write} to return @code{EINTR}; it may instead result in a |
| 558 | successful @code{write} which writes fewer bytes than requested. |
| 559 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 560 | |
| 561 | @item EIO |
| 562 | For many devices, and for disk files, this error code indicates |
| 563 | a hardware error. |
| 564 | |
| 565 | @item ENOSPC |
| 566 | The device containing the file is full. |
| 567 | |
| 568 | @item EPIPE |
| 569 | This error is returned when you try to write to a pipe or FIFO that |
| 570 | isn't open for reading by any process. When this happens, a @code{SIGPIPE} |
| 571 | signal is also sent to the process; see @ref{Signal Handling}. |
| 572 | |
| 573 | @item EINVAL |
| 574 | In some systems, when writing to a character or block device, position |
| 575 | and size offsets must be aligned to a particular block size. This error |
| 576 | indicates that the offsets were not properly aligned. |
| 577 | @end table |
| 578 | |
| 579 | Unless you have arranged to prevent @code{EINTR} failures, you should |
| 580 | check @code{errno} after each failing call to @code{write}, and if the |
| 581 | error was @code{EINTR}, you should simply repeat the call. |
| 582 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. The easy way to do this is with the |
| 583 | macro @code{TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY}, as follows: |
| 584 | |
| 585 | @smallexample |
| 586 | nbytes = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (write (desc, buffer, count)); |
| 587 | @end smallexample |
| 588 | |
| 589 | Please note that there is no function named @code{write64}. This is not |
| 590 | necessary since this function does not directly modify or handle the |
| 591 | possibly wide file offset. Since the kernel handles this state |
| 592 | internally the @code{write} function can be used for all cases. |
| 593 | |
| 594 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 595 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 596 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{write} is |
| 597 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 598 | until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{write} should be |
| 599 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 600 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 601 | |
| 602 | The @code{write} function is the underlying primitive for all of the |
| 603 | functions that write to streams, such as @code{fputc}. |
| 604 | @end deftypefun |
| 605 | |
| 606 | @comment unistd.h |
| 607 | @comment Unix98 |
| 608 | @deftypefun ssize_t pwrite (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off_t @var{offset}) |
| 609 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 610 | @c This is usually a safe syscall. The sysdeps/posix fallback emulation |
| 611 | @c is not MT-Safe because it uses lseek, write and lseek back, but is it |
| 612 | @c used anywhere? |
| 613 | The @code{pwrite} function is similar to the @code{write} function. The |
| 614 | first three arguments are identical, and the return values and error codes |
| 615 | also correspond. |
| 616 | |
| 617 | The difference is the fourth argument and its handling. The data block |
| 618 | is not written to the current position of the file descriptor |
| 619 | @code{filedes}. Instead the data is written to the file starting at |
| 620 | position @var{offset}. The position of the file descriptor itself is |
| 621 | not affected by the operation. The value is the same as before the call. |
| 622 | |
| 623 | When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the |
| 624 | @code{pwrite} function is in fact @code{pwrite64} and the type |
| 625 | @code{off_t} has 64 bits, which makes it possible to handle files up to |
| 626 | @math{2^63} bytes in length. |
| 627 | |
| 628 | The return value of @code{pwrite} describes the number of written bytes. |
| 629 | In the error case it returns @math{-1} like @code{write} does and the |
| 630 | error codes are also the same, with these additions: |
| 631 | |
| 632 | @table @code |
| 633 | @item EINVAL |
| 634 | The value given for @var{offset} is negative and therefore illegal. |
| 635 | |
| 636 | @item ESPIPE |
| 637 | The file descriptor @var{filedes} is associated with a pipe or a FIFO and |
| 638 | this device does not allow positioning of the file pointer. |
| 639 | @end table |
| 640 | |
| 641 | The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification |
| 642 | version 2. |
| 643 | @end deftypefun |
| 644 | |
| 645 | @comment unistd.h |
| 646 | @comment Unix98 |
| 647 | @deftypefun ssize_t pwrite64 (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off64_t @var{offset}) |
| 648 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 649 | @c This is usually a safe syscall. The sysdeps/posix fallback emulation |
| 650 | @c is not MT-Safe because it uses lseek64, write and lseek64 back, but |
| 651 | @c is it used anywhere? |
| 652 | This function is similar to the @code{pwrite} function. The difference |
| 653 | is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of |
| 654 | @code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address |
| 655 | files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The |
| 656 | file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since |
| 657 | otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to |
| 658 | errors with a descriptor in small file mode. |
| 659 | |
| 660 | When the source file is compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a |
| 661 | 32 bit machine this function is actually available under the name |
| 662 | @code{pwrite} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface. |
| 663 | @end deftypefun |
| 664 | |
| 665 | |
| 666 | @node File Position Primitive |
| 667 | @section Setting the File Position of a Descriptor |
| 668 | |
| 669 | Just as you can set the file position of a stream with @code{fseek}, you |
| 670 | can set the file position of a descriptor with @code{lseek}. This |
| 671 | specifies the position in the file for the next @code{read} or |
| 672 | @code{write} operation. @xref{File Positioning}, for more information |
| 673 | on the file position and what it means. |
| 674 | |
| 675 | To read the current file position value from a descriptor, use |
| 676 | @code{lseek (@var{desc}, 0, SEEK_CUR)}. |
| 677 | |
| 678 | @cindex file positioning on a file descriptor |
| 679 | @cindex positioning a file descriptor |
| 680 | @cindex seeking on a file descriptor |
| 681 | @comment unistd.h |
| 682 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 683 | @deftypefun off_t lseek (int @var{filedes}, off_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence}) |
| 684 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 685 | The @code{lseek} function is used to change the file position of the |
| 686 | file with descriptor @var{filedes}. |
| 687 | |
| 688 | The @var{whence} argument specifies how the @var{offset} should be |
| 689 | interpreted, in the same way as for the @code{fseek} function, and it must |
| 690 | be one of the symbolic constants @code{SEEK_SET}, @code{SEEK_CUR}, or |
| 691 | @code{SEEK_END}. |
| 692 | |
| 693 | @table @code |
| 694 | @item SEEK_SET |
| 695 | Specifies that @var{offset} is a count of characters from the beginning |
| 696 | of the file. |
| 697 | |
| 698 | @item SEEK_CUR |
| 699 | Specifies that @var{offset} is a count of characters from the current |
| 700 | file position. This count may be positive or negative. |
| 701 | |
| 702 | @item SEEK_END |
| 703 | Specifies that @var{offset} is a count of characters from the end of |
| 704 | the file. A negative count specifies a position within the current |
| 705 | extent of the file; a positive count specifies a position past the |
| 706 | current end. If you set the position past the current end, and |
| 707 | actually write data, you will extend the file with zeros up to that |
| 708 | position. |
| 709 | @end table |
| 710 | |
| 711 | The return value from @code{lseek} is normally the resulting file |
| 712 | position, measured in bytes from the beginning of the file. |
| 713 | You can use this feature together with @code{SEEK_CUR} to read the |
| 714 | current file position. |
| 715 | |
| 716 | If you want to append to the file, setting the file position to the |
| 717 | current end of file with @code{SEEK_END} is not sufficient. Another |
| 718 | process may write more data after you seek but before you write, |
| 719 | extending the file so the position you write onto clobbers their data. |
| 720 | Instead, use the @code{O_APPEND} operating mode; @pxref{Operating Modes}. |
| 721 | |
| 722 | You can set the file position past the current end of the file. This |
| 723 | does not by itself make the file longer; @code{lseek} never changes the |
| 724 | file. But subsequent output at that position will extend the file. |
| 725 | Characters between the previous end of file and the new position are |
| 726 | filled with zeros. Extending the file in this way can create a |
| 727 | ``hole'': the blocks of zeros are not actually allocated on disk, so the |
| 728 | file takes up less space than it appears to; it is then called a |
| 729 | ``sparse file''. |
| 730 | @cindex sparse files |
| 731 | @cindex holes in files |
| 732 | |
| 733 | If the file position cannot be changed, or the operation is in some way |
| 734 | invalid, @code{lseek} returns a value of @math{-1}. The following |
| 735 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function: |
| 736 | |
| 737 | @table @code |
| 738 | @item EBADF |
| 739 | The @var{filedes} is not a valid file descriptor. |
| 740 | |
| 741 | @item EINVAL |
| 742 | The @var{whence} argument value is not valid, or the resulting |
| 743 | file offset is not valid. A file offset is invalid. |
| 744 | |
| 745 | @item ESPIPE |
| 746 | The @var{filedes} corresponds to an object that cannot be positioned, |
| 747 | such as a pipe, FIFO or terminal device. (POSIX.1 specifies this error |
| 748 | only for pipes and FIFOs, but on @gnusystems{}, you always get |
| 749 | @code{ESPIPE} if the object is not seekable.) |
| 750 | @end table |
| 751 | |
| 752 | When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the |
| 753 | @code{lseek} function is in fact @code{lseek64} and the type |
| 754 | @code{off_t} has 64 bits which makes it possible to handle files up to |
| 755 | @math{2^63} bytes in length. |
| 756 | |
| 757 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 758 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 759 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{lseek} is |
| 760 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 761 | until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{lseek} should be |
| 762 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 763 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 764 | |
| 765 | The @code{lseek} function is the underlying primitive for the |
| 766 | @code{fseek}, @code{fseeko}, @code{ftell}, @code{ftello} and |
| 767 | @code{rewind} functions, which operate on streams instead of file |
| 768 | descriptors. |
| 769 | @end deftypefun |
| 770 | |
| 771 | @comment unistd.h |
| 772 | @comment Unix98 |
| 773 | @deftypefun off64_t lseek64 (int @var{filedes}, off64_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence}) |
| 774 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 775 | This function is similar to the @code{lseek} function. The difference |
| 776 | is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of |
| 777 | @code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address |
| 778 | files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The |
| 779 | file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since |
| 780 | otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to |
| 781 | errors with a descriptor in small file mode. |
| 782 | |
| 783 | When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a |
| 784 | 32 bits machine this function is actually available under the name |
| 785 | @code{lseek} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface. |
| 786 | @end deftypefun |
| 787 | |
| 788 | You can have multiple descriptors for the same file if you open the file |
| 789 | more than once, or if you duplicate a descriptor with @code{dup}. |
| 790 | Descriptors that come from separate calls to @code{open} have independent |
| 791 | file positions; using @code{lseek} on one descriptor has no effect on the |
| 792 | other. For example, |
| 793 | |
| 794 | @smallexample |
| 795 | @group |
| 796 | @{ |
| 797 | int d1, d2; |
| 798 | char buf[4]; |
| 799 | d1 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY); |
| 800 | d2 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY); |
| 801 | lseek (d1, 1024, SEEK_SET); |
| 802 | read (d2, buf, 4); |
| 803 | @} |
| 804 | @end group |
| 805 | @end smallexample |
| 806 | |
| 807 | @noindent |
| 808 | will read the first four characters of the file @file{foo}. (The |
| 809 | error-checking code necessary for a real program has been omitted here |
| 810 | for brevity.) |
| 811 | |
| 812 | By contrast, descriptors made by duplication share a common file |
| 813 | position with the original descriptor that was duplicated. Anything |
| 814 | which alters the file position of one of the duplicates, including |
| 815 | reading or writing data, affects all of them alike. Thus, for example, |
| 816 | |
| 817 | @smallexample |
| 818 | @{ |
| 819 | int d1, d2, d3; |
| 820 | char buf1[4], buf2[4]; |
| 821 | d1 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY); |
| 822 | d2 = dup (d1); |
| 823 | d3 = dup (d2); |
| 824 | lseek (d3, 1024, SEEK_SET); |
| 825 | read (d1, buf1, 4); |
| 826 | read (d2, buf2, 4); |
| 827 | @} |
| 828 | @end smallexample |
| 829 | |
| 830 | @noindent |
| 831 | will read four characters starting with the 1024'th character of |
| 832 | @file{foo}, and then four more characters starting with the 1028'th |
| 833 | character. |
| 834 | |
| 835 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 836 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 837 | @deftp {Data Type} off_t |
| 838 | This is a signed integer type used to represent file sizes. In |
| 839 | @theglibc{}, this type is no narrower than @code{int}. |
| 840 | |
| 841 | If the source is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this type |
| 842 | is transparently replaced by @code{off64_t}. |
| 843 | @end deftp |
| 844 | |
| 845 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 846 | @comment Unix98 |
| 847 | @deftp {Data Type} off64_t |
| 848 | This type is used similar to @code{off_t}. The difference is that even |
| 849 | on 32 bit machines, where the @code{off_t} type would have 32 bits, |
| 850 | @code{off64_t} has 64 bits and so is able to address files up to |
| 851 | @math{2^63} bytes in length. |
| 852 | |
| 853 | When compiling with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this type is |
| 854 | available under the name @code{off_t}. |
| 855 | @end deftp |
| 856 | |
| 857 | These aliases for the @samp{SEEK_@dots{}} constants exist for the sake |
| 858 | of compatibility with older BSD systems. They are defined in two |
| 859 | different header files: @file{fcntl.h} and @file{sys/file.h}. |
| 860 | |
| 861 | @table @code |
| 862 | @item L_SET |
| 863 | An alias for @code{SEEK_SET}. |
| 864 | |
| 865 | @item L_INCR |
| 866 | An alias for @code{SEEK_CUR}. |
| 867 | |
| 868 | @item L_XTND |
| 869 | An alias for @code{SEEK_END}. |
| 870 | @end table |
| 871 | |
| 872 | @node Descriptors and Streams |
| 873 | @section Descriptors and Streams |
| 874 | @cindex streams, and file descriptors |
| 875 | @cindex converting file descriptor to stream |
| 876 | @cindex extracting file descriptor from stream |
| 877 | |
| 878 | Given an open file descriptor, you can create a stream for it with the |
| 879 | @code{fdopen} function. You can get the underlying file descriptor for |
| 880 | an existing stream with the @code{fileno} function. These functions are |
| 881 | declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}. |
| 882 | @pindex stdio.h |
| 883 | |
| 884 | @comment stdio.h |
| 885 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 886 | @deftypefun {FILE *} fdopen (int @var{filedes}, const char *@var{opentype}) |
| 887 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{} @asulock{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{} @aculock{}}} |
| 888 | The @code{fdopen} function returns a new stream for the file descriptor |
| 889 | @var{filedes}. |
| 890 | |
| 891 | The @var{opentype} argument is interpreted in the same way as for the |
| 892 | @code{fopen} function (@pxref{Opening Streams}), except that |
| 893 | the @samp{b} option is not permitted; this is because @gnusystems{} make no |
| 894 | distinction between text and binary files. Also, @code{"w"} and |
| 895 | @code{"w+"} do not cause truncation of the file; these have an effect only |
| 896 | when opening a file, and in this case the file has already been opened. |
| 897 | You must make sure that the @var{opentype} argument matches the actual |
| 898 | mode of the open file descriptor. |
| 899 | |
| 900 | The return value is the new stream. If the stream cannot be created |
| 901 | (for example, if the modes for the file indicated by the file descriptor |
| 902 | do not permit the access specified by the @var{opentype} argument), a |
| 903 | null pointer is returned instead. |
| 904 | |
| 905 | In some other systems, @code{fdopen} may fail to detect that the modes |
| 906 | for file descriptor do not permit the access specified by |
| 907 | @code{opentype}. @Theglibc{} always checks for this. |
| 908 | @end deftypefun |
| 909 | |
| 910 | For an example showing the use of the @code{fdopen} function, |
| 911 | see @ref{Creating a Pipe}. |
| 912 | |
| 913 | @comment stdio.h |
| 914 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 915 | @deftypefun int fileno (FILE *@var{stream}) |
| 916 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 917 | This function returns the file descriptor associated with the stream |
| 918 | @var{stream}. If an error is detected (for example, if the @var{stream} |
| 919 | is not valid) or if @var{stream} does not do I/O to a file, |
| 920 | @code{fileno} returns @math{-1}. |
| 921 | @end deftypefun |
| 922 | |
| 923 | @comment stdio.h |
| 924 | @comment GNU |
| 925 | @deftypefun int fileno_unlocked (FILE *@var{stream}) |
| 926 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 927 | The @code{fileno_unlocked} function is equivalent to the @code{fileno} |
| 928 | function except that it does not implicitly lock the stream if the state |
| 929 | is @code{FSETLOCKING_INTERNAL}. |
| 930 | |
| 931 | This function is a GNU extension. |
| 932 | @end deftypefun |
| 933 | |
| 934 | @cindex standard file descriptors |
| 935 | @cindex file descriptors, standard |
| 936 | There are also symbolic constants defined in @file{unistd.h} for the |
| 937 | file descriptors belonging to the standard streams @code{stdin}, |
| 938 | @code{stdout}, and @code{stderr}; see @ref{Standard Streams}. |
| 939 | @pindex unistd.h |
| 940 | |
| 941 | @comment unistd.h |
| 942 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 943 | @table @code |
| 944 | @item STDIN_FILENO |
| 945 | @vindex STDIN_FILENO |
| 946 | This macro has value @code{0}, which is the file descriptor for |
| 947 | standard input. |
| 948 | @cindex standard input file descriptor |
| 949 | |
| 950 | @comment unistd.h |
| 951 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 952 | @item STDOUT_FILENO |
| 953 | @vindex STDOUT_FILENO |
| 954 | This macro has value @code{1}, which is the file descriptor for |
| 955 | standard output. |
| 956 | @cindex standard output file descriptor |
| 957 | |
| 958 | @comment unistd.h |
| 959 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 960 | @item STDERR_FILENO |
| 961 | @vindex STDERR_FILENO |
| 962 | This macro has value @code{2}, which is the file descriptor for |
| 963 | standard error output. |
| 964 | @end table |
| 965 | @cindex standard error file descriptor |
| 966 | |
| 967 | @node Stream/Descriptor Precautions |
| 968 | @section Dangers of Mixing Streams and Descriptors |
| 969 | @cindex channels |
| 970 | @cindex streams and descriptors |
| 971 | @cindex descriptors and streams |
| 972 | @cindex mixing descriptors and streams |
| 973 | |
| 974 | You can have multiple file descriptors and streams (let's call both |
| 975 | streams and descriptors ``channels'' for short) connected to the same |
| 976 | file, but you must take care to avoid confusion between channels. There |
| 977 | are two cases to consider: @dfn{linked} channels that share a single |
| 978 | file position value, and @dfn{independent} channels that have their own |
| 979 | file positions. |
| 980 | |
| 981 | It's best to use just one channel in your program for actual data |
| 982 | transfer to any given file, except when all the access is for input. |
| 983 | For example, if you open a pipe (something you can only do at the file |
| 984 | descriptor level), either do all I/O with the descriptor, or construct a |
| 985 | stream from the descriptor with @code{fdopen} and then do all I/O with |
| 986 | the stream. |
| 987 | |
| 988 | @menu |
| 989 | * Linked Channels:: Dealing with channels sharing a file position. |
| 990 | * Independent Channels:: Dealing with separately opened, unlinked channels. |
| 991 | * Cleaning Streams:: Cleaning a stream makes it safe to use |
| 992 | another channel. |
| 993 | @end menu |
| 994 | |
| 995 | @node Linked Channels |
| 996 | @subsection Linked Channels |
| 997 | @cindex linked channels |
| 998 | |
| 999 | Channels that come from a single opening share the same file position; |
| 1000 | we call them @dfn{linked} channels. Linked channels result when you |
| 1001 | make a stream from a descriptor using @code{fdopen}, when you get a |
| 1002 | descriptor from a stream with @code{fileno}, when you copy a descriptor |
| 1003 | with @code{dup} or @code{dup2}, and when descriptors are inherited |
| 1004 | during @code{fork}. For files that don't support random access, such as |
| 1005 | terminals and pipes, @emph{all} channels are effectively linked. On |
| 1006 | random-access files, all append-type output streams are effectively |
| 1007 | linked to each other. |
| 1008 | |
| 1009 | @cindex cleaning up a stream |
| 1010 | If you have been using a stream for I/O (or have just opened the stream), |
| 1011 | and you want to do I/O using |
| 1012 | another channel (either a stream or a descriptor) that is linked to it, |
| 1013 | you must first @dfn{clean up} the stream that you have been using. |
| 1014 | @xref{Cleaning Streams}. |
| 1015 | |
| 1016 | Terminating a process, or executing a new program in the process, |
| 1017 | destroys all the streams in the process. If descriptors linked to these |
| 1018 | streams persist in other processes, their file positions become |
| 1019 | undefined as a result. To prevent this, you must clean up the streams |
| 1020 | before destroying them. |
| 1021 | |
| 1022 | @node Independent Channels |
| 1023 | @subsection Independent Channels |
| 1024 | @cindex independent channels |
| 1025 | |
| 1026 | When you open channels (streams or descriptors) separately on a seekable |
| 1027 | file, each channel has its own file position. These are called |
| 1028 | @dfn{independent channels}. |
| 1029 | |
| 1030 | The system handles each channel independently. Most of the time, this |
| 1031 | is quite predictable and natural (especially for input): each channel |
| 1032 | can read or write sequentially at its own place in the file. However, |
| 1033 | if some of the channels are streams, you must take these precautions: |
| 1034 | |
| 1035 | @itemize @bullet |
| 1036 | @item |
| 1037 | You should clean an output stream after use, before doing anything else |
| 1038 | that might read or write from the same part of the file. |
| 1039 | |
| 1040 | @item |
| 1041 | You should clean an input stream before reading data that may have been |
| 1042 | modified using an independent channel. Otherwise, you might read |
| 1043 | obsolete data that had been in the stream's buffer. |
| 1044 | @end itemize |
| 1045 | |
| 1046 | If you do output to one channel at the end of the file, this will |
| 1047 | certainly leave the other independent channels positioned somewhere |
| 1048 | before the new end. You cannot reliably set their file positions to the |
| 1049 | new end of file before writing, because the file can always be extended |
| 1050 | by another process between when you set the file position and when you |
| 1051 | write the data. Instead, use an append-type descriptor or stream; they |
| 1052 | always output at the current end of the file. In order to make the |
| 1053 | end-of-file position accurate, you must clean the output channel you |
| 1054 | were using, if it is a stream. |
| 1055 | |
| 1056 | It's impossible for two channels to have separate file pointers for a |
| 1057 | file that doesn't support random access. Thus, channels for reading or |
| 1058 | writing such files are always linked, never independent. Append-type |
| 1059 | channels are also always linked. For these channels, follow the rules |
| 1060 | for linked channels; see @ref{Linked Channels}. |
| 1061 | |
| 1062 | @node Cleaning Streams |
| 1063 | @subsection Cleaning Streams |
| 1064 | |
| 1065 | You can use @code{fflush} to clean a stream in most |
| 1066 | cases. |
| 1067 | |
| 1068 | You can skip the @code{fflush} if you know the stream |
| 1069 | is already clean. A stream is clean whenever its buffer is empty. For |
| 1070 | example, an unbuffered stream is always clean. An input stream that is |
| 1071 | at end-of-file is clean. A line-buffered stream is clean when the last |
| 1072 | character output was a newline. However, a just-opened input stream |
| 1073 | might not be clean, as its input buffer might not be empty. |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | There is one case in which cleaning a stream is impossible on most |
| 1076 | systems. This is when the stream is doing input from a file that is not |
| 1077 | random-access. Such streams typically read ahead, and when the file is |
| 1078 | not random access, there is no way to give back the excess data already |
| 1079 | read. When an input stream reads from a random-access file, |
| 1080 | @code{fflush} does clean the stream, but leaves the file pointer at an |
| 1081 | unpredictable place; you must set the file pointer before doing any |
| 1082 | further I/O. |
| 1083 | |
| 1084 | Closing an output-only stream also does @code{fflush}, so this is a |
| 1085 | valid way of cleaning an output stream. |
| 1086 | |
| 1087 | You need not clean a stream before using its descriptor for control |
| 1088 | operations such as setting terminal modes; these operations don't affect |
| 1089 | the file position and are not affected by it. You can use any |
| 1090 | descriptor for these operations, and all channels are affected |
| 1091 | simultaneously. However, text already ``output'' to a stream but still |
| 1092 | buffered by the stream will be subject to the new terminal modes when |
| 1093 | subsequently flushed. To make sure ``past'' output is covered by the |
| 1094 | terminal settings that were in effect at the time, flush the output |
| 1095 | streams for that terminal before setting the modes. @xref{Terminal |
| 1096 | Modes}. |
| 1097 | |
| 1098 | @node Scatter-Gather |
| 1099 | @section Fast Scatter-Gather I/O |
| 1100 | @cindex scatter-gather |
| 1101 | |
| 1102 | Some applications may need to read or write data to multiple buffers, |
| 1103 | which are separated in memory. Although this can be done easily enough |
| 1104 | with multiple calls to @code{read} and @code{write}, it is inefficient |
| 1105 | because there is overhead associated with each kernel call. |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 | Instead, many platforms provide special high-speed primitives to perform |
| 1108 | these @dfn{scatter-gather} operations in a single kernel call. @Theglibc{} |
| 1109 | will provide an emulation on any system that lacks these |
| 1110 | primitives, so they are not a portability threat. They are defined in |
| 1111 | @code{sys/uio.h}. |
| 1112 | |
| 1113 | These functions are controlled with arrays of @code{iovec} structures, |
| 1114 | which describe the location and size of each buffer. |
| 1115 | |
| 1116 | @comment sys/uio.h |
| 1117 | @comment BSD |
| 1118 | @deftp {Data Type} {struct iovec} |
| 1119 | |
| 1120 | The @code{iovec} structure describes a buffer. It contains two fields: |
| 1121 | |
| 1122 | @table @code |
| 1123 | |
| 1124 | @item void *iov_base |
| 1125 | Contains the address of a buffer. |
| 1126 | |
| 1127 | @item size_t iov_len |
| 1128 | Contains the length of the buffer. |
| 1129 | |
| 1130 | @end table |
| 1131 | @end deftp |
| 1132 | |
| 1133 | @comment sys/uio.h |
| 1134 | @comment BSD |
| 1135 | @deftypefun ssize_t readv (int @var{filedes}, const struct iovec *@var{vector}, int @var{count}) |
| 1136 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}} |
| 1137 | @c The fallback sysdeps/posix implementation, used even on GNU/Linux |
| 1138 | @c with old kernels that lack a full readv/writev implementation, may |
| 1139 | @c malloc the buffer into which data is read, if the total read size is |
| 1140 | @c too large for alloca. |
| 1141 | |
| 1142 | The @code{readv} function reads data from @var{filedes} and scatters it |
| 1143 | into the buffers described in @var{vector}, which is taken to be |
| 1144 | @var{count} structures long. As each buffer is filled, data is sent to the |
| 1145 | next. |
| 1146 | |
| 1147 | Note that @code{readv} is not guaranteed to fill all the buffers. |
| 1148 | It may stop at any point, for the same reasons @code{read} would. |
| 1149 | |
| 1150 | The return value is a count of bytes (@emph{not} buffers) read, @math{0} |
| 1151 | indicating end-of-file, or @math{-1} indicating an error. The possible |
| 1152 | errors are the same as in @code{read}. |
| 1153 | |
| 1154 | @end deftypefun |
| 1155 | |
| 1156 | @comment sys/uio.h |
| 1157 | @comment BSD |
| 1158 | @deftypefun ssize_t writev (int @var{filedes}, const struct iovec *@var{vector}, int @var{count}) |
| 1159 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@acsmem{}}} |
| 1160 | @c The fallback sysdeps/posix implementation, used even on GNU/Linux |
| 1161 | @c with old kernels that lack a full readv/writev implementation, may |
| 1162 | @c malloc the buffer from which data is written, if the total write size |
| 1163 | @c is too large for alloca. |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 | The @code{writev} function gathers data from the buffers described in |
| 1166 | @var{vector}, which is taken to be @var{count} structures long, and writes |
| 1167 | them to @code{filedes}. As each buffer is written, it moves on to the |
| 1168 | next. |
| 1169 | |
| 1170 | Like @code{readv}, @code{writev} may stop midstream under the same |
| 1171 | conditions @code{write} would. |
| 1172 | |
| 1173 | The return value is a count of bytes written, or @math{-1} indicating an |
| 1174 | error. The possible errors are the same as in @code{write}. |
| 1175 | |
| 1176 | @end deftypefun |
| 1177 | |
| 1178 | @c Note - I haven't read this anywhere. I surmised it from my knowledge |
| 1179 | @c of computer science. Thus, there could be subtleties I'm missing. |
| 1180 | |
| 1181 | Note that if the buffers are small (under about 1kB), high-level streams |
| 1182 | may be easier to use than these functions. However, @code{readv} and |
| 1183 | @code{writev} are more efficient when the individual buffers themselves |
| 1184 | (as opposed to the total output), are large. In that case, a high-level |
| 1185 | stream would not be able to cache the data effectively. |
| 1186 | |
| 1187 | @node Memory-mapped I/O |
| 1188 | @section Memory-mapped I/O |
| 1189 | |
| 1190 | On modern operating systems, it is possible to @dfn{mmap} (pronounced |
| 1191 | ``em-map'') a file to a region of memory. When this is done, the file can |
| 1192 | be accessed just like an array in the program. |
| 1193 | |
| 1194 | This is more efficient than @code{read} or @code{write}, as only the regions |
| 1195 | of the file that a program actually accesses are loaded. Accesses to |
| 1196 | not-yet-loaded parts of the mmapped region are handled in the same way as |
| 1197 | swapped out pages. |
| 1198 | |
| 1199 | Since mmapped pages can be stored back to their file when physical |
| 1200 | memory is low, it is possible to mmap files orders of magnitude larger |
| 1201 | than both the physical memory @emph{and} swap space. The only limit is |
| 1202 | address space. The theoretical limit is 4GB on a 32-bit machine - |
| 1203 | however, the actual limit will be smaller since some areas will be |
| 1204 | reserved for other purposes. If the LFS interface is used the file size |
| 1205 | on 32-bit systems is not limited to 2GB (offsets are signed which |
| 1206 | reduces the addressable area of 4GB by half); the full 64-bit are |
| 1207 | available. |
| 1208 | |
| 1209 | Memory mapping only works on entire pages of memory. Thus, addresses |
| 1210 | for mapping must be page-aligned, and length values will be rounded up. |
| 1211 | To determine the size of a page the machine uses one should use |
| 1212 | |
| 1213 | @vindex _SC_PAGESIZE |
| 1214 | @smallexample |
| 1215 | size_t page_size = (size_t) sysconf (_SC_PAGESIZE); |
| 1216 | @end smallexample |
| 1217 | |
| 1218 | @noindent |
| 1219 | These functions are declared in @file{sys/mman.h}. |
| 1220 | |
| 1221 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1222 | @comment POSIX |
| 1223 | @deftypefun {void *} mmap (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{protect}, int @var{flags}, int @var{filedes}, off_t @var{offset}) |
| 1224 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1225 | |
| 1226 | The @code{mmap} function creates a new mapping, connected to bytes |
| 1227 | (@var{offset}) to (@var{offset} + @var{length} - 1) in the file open on |
| 1228 | @var{filedes}. A new reference for the file specified by @var{filedes} |
| 1229 | is created, which is not removed by closing the file. |
| 1230 | |
| 1231 | @var{address} gives a preferred starting address for the mapping. |
| 1232 | @code{NULL} expresses no preference. Any previous mapping at that |
| 1233 | address is automatically removed. The address you give may still be |
| 1234 | changed, unless you use the @code{MAP_FIXED} flag. |
| 1235 | |
| 1236 | @vindex PROT_READ |
| 1237 | @vindex PROT_WRITE |
| 1238 | @vindex PROT_EXEC |
| 1239 | @var{protect} contains flags that control what kind of access is |
| 1240 | permitted. They include @code{PROT_READ}, @code{PROT_WRITE}, and |
| 1241 | @code{PROT_EXEC}, which permit reading, writing, and execution, |
| 1242 | respectively. Inappropriate access will cause a segfault (@pxref{Program |
| 1243 | Error Signals}). |
| 1244 | |
| 1245 | Note that most hardware designs cannot support write permission without |
| 1246 | read permission, and many do not distinguish read and execute permission. |
| 1247 | Thus, you may receive wider permissions than you ask for, and mappings of |
| 1248 | write-only files may be denied even if you do not use @code{PROT_READ}. |
| 1249 | |
| 1250 | @var{flags} contains flags that control the nature of the map. |
| 1251 | One of @code{MAP_SHARED} or @code{MAP_PRIVATE} must be specified. |
| 1252 | |
| 1253 | They include: |
| 1254 | |
| 1255 | @vtable @code |
| 1256 | @item MAP_PRIVATE |
| 1257 | This specifies that writes to the region should never be written back |
| 1258 | to the attached file. Instead, a copy is made for the process, and the |
| 1259 | region will be swapped normally if memory runs low. No other process will |
| 1260 | see the changes. |
| 1261 | |
| 1262 | Since private mappings effectively revert to ordinary memory |
| 1263 | when written to, you must have enough virtual memory for a copy of |
| 1264 | the entire mmapped region if you use this mode with @code{PROT_WRITE}. |
| 1265 | |
| 1266 | @item MAP_SHARED |
| 1267 | This specifies that writes to the region will be written back to the |
| 1268 | file. Changes made will be shared immediately with other processes |
| 1269 | mmaping the same file. |
| 1270 | |
| 1271 | Note that actual writing may take place at any time. You need to use |
| 1272 | @code{msync}, described below, if it is important that other processes |
| 1273 | using conventional I/O get a consistent view of the file. |
| 1274 | |
| 1275 | @item MAP_FIXED |
| 1276 | This forces the system to use the exact mapping address specified in |
| 1277 | @var{address} and fail if it can't. |
| 1278 | |
| 1279 | @c One of these is official - the other is obviously an obsolete synonym |
| 1280 | @c Which is which? |
| 1281 | @item MAP_ANONYMOUS |
| 1282 | @itemx MAP_ANON |
| 1283 | This flag tells the system to create an anonymous mapping, not connected |
| 1284 | to a file. @var{filedes} and @var{off} are ignored, and the region is |
| 1285 | initialized with zeros. |
| 1286 | |
| 1287 | Anonymous maps are used as the basic primitive to extend the heap on some |
| 1288 | systems. They are also useful to share data between multiple tasks |
| 1289 | without creating a file. |
| 1290 | |
| 1291 | On some systems using private anonymous mmaps is more efficient than using |
| 1292 | @code{malloc} for large blocks. This is not an issue with @theglibc{}, |
| 1293 | as the included @code{malloc} automatically uses @code{mmap} where appropriate. |
| 1294 | |
| 1295 | @c Linux has some other MAP_ options, which I have not discussed here. |
| 1296 | @c MAP_DENYWRITE, MAP_EXECUTABLE and MAP_GROWSDOWN don't seem applicable to |
| 1297 | @c user programs (and I don't understand the last two). MAP_LOCKED does |
| 1298 | @c not appear to be implemented. |
| 1299 | |
| 1300 | @end vtable |
| 1301 | |
| 1302 | @code{mmap} returns the address of the new mapping, or |
| 1303 | @code{MAP_FAILED} for an error. |
| 1304 | |
| 1305 | Possible errors include: |
| 1306 | |
| 1307 | @table @code |
| 1308 | |
| 1309 | @item EINVAL |
| 1310 | |
| 1311 | Either @var{address} was unusable, or inconsistent @var{flags} were |
| 1312 | given. |
| 1313 | |
| 1314 | @item EACCES |
| 1315 | |
| 1316 | @var{filedes} was not open for the type of access specified in @var{protect}. |
| 1317 | |
| 1318 | @item ENOMEM |
| 1319 | |
| 1320 | Either there is not enough memory for the operation, or the process is |
| 1321 | out of address space. |
| 1322 | |
| 1323 | @item ENODEV |
| 1324 | |
| 1325 | This file is of a type that doesn't support mapping. |
| 1326 | |
| 1327 | @item ENOEXEC |
| 1328 | |
| 1329 | The file is on a filesystem that doesn't support mapping. |
| 1330 | |
| 1331 | @c On Linux, EAGAIN will appear if the file has a conflicting mandatory lock. |
| 1332 | @c However mandatory locks are not discussed in this manual. |
| 1333 | @c |
| 1334 | @c Similarly, ETXTBSY will occur if the MAP_DENYWRITE flag (not documented |
| 1335 | @c here) is used and the file is already open for writing. |
| 1336 | |
| 1337 | @end table |
| 1338 | |
| 1339 | @end deftypefun |
| 1340 | |
| 1341 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1342 | @comment LFS |
| 1343 | @deftypefun {void *} mmap64 (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{protect}, int @var{flags}, int @var{filedes}, off64_t @var{offset}) |
| 1344 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1345 | @c The page_shift auto detection when MMAP2_PAGE_SHIFT is -1 (it never |
| 1346 | @c is) would be thread-unsafe. |
| 1347 | The @code{mmap64} function is equivalent to the @code{mmap} function but |
| 1348 | the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t}. On 32-bit systems |
| 1349 | this allows the file associated with the @var{filedes} descriptor to be |
| 1350 | larger than 2GB. @var{filedes} must be a descriptor returned from a |
| 1351 | call to @code{open64} or @code{fopen64} and @code{freopen64} where the |
| 1352 | descriptor is retrieved with @code{fileno}. |
| 1353 | |
| 1354 | When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 1355 | function is actually available under the name @code{mmap}. I.e., the |
| 1356 | new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently |
| 1357 | replaces the old API. |
| 1358 | @end deftypefun |
| 1359 | |
| 1360 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1361 | @comment POSIX |
| 1362 | @deftypefun int munmap (void *@var{addr}, size_t @var{length}) |
| 1363 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1364 | |
| 1365 | @code{munmap} removes any memory maps from (@var{addr}) to (@var{addr} + |
| 1366 | @var{length}). @var{length} should be the length of the mapping. |
| 1367 | |
| 1368 | It is safe to unmap multiple mappings in one command, or include unmapped |
| 1369 | space in the range. It is also possible to unmap only part of an existing |
| 1370 | mapping. However, only entire pages can be removed. If @var{length} is not |
| 1371 | an even number of pages, it will be rounded up. |
| 1372 | |
| 1373 | It returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for an error. |
| 1374 | |
| 1375 | One error is possible: |
| 1376 | |
| 1377 | @table @code |
| 1378 | |
| 1379 | @item EINVAL |
| 1380 | The memory range given was outside the user mmap range or wasn't page |
| 1381 | aligned. |
| 1382 | |
| 1383 | @end table |
| 1384 | |
| 1385 | @end deftypefun |
| 1386 | |
| 1387 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1388 | @comment POSIX |
| 1389 | @deftypefun int msync (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{flags}) |
| 1390 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1391 | |
| 1392 | When using shared mappings, the kernel can write the file at any time |
| 1393 | before the mapping is removed. To be certain data has actually been |
| 1394 | written to the file and will be accessible to non-memory-mapped I/O, it |
| 1395 | is necessary to use this function. |
| 1396 | |
| 1397 | It operates on the region @var{address} to (@var{address} + @var{length}). |
| 1398 | It may be used on part of a mapping or multiple mappings, however the |
| 1399 | region given should not contain any unmapped space. |
| 1400 | |
| 1401 | @var{flags} can contain some options: |
| 1402 | |
| 1403 | @vtable @code |
| 1404 | |
| 1405 | @item MS_SYNC |
| 1406 | |
| 1407 | This flag makes sure the data is actually written @emph{to disk}. |
| 1408 | Normally @code{msync} only makes sure that accesses to a file with |
| 1409 | conventional I/O reflect the recent changes. |
| 1410 | |
| 1411 | @item MS_ASYNC |
| 1412 | |
| 1413 | This tells @code{msync} to begin the synchronization, but not to wait for |
| 1414 | it to complete. |
| 1415 | |
| 1416 | @c Linux also has MS_INVALIDATE, which I don't understand. |
| 1417 | |
| 1418 | @end vtable |
| 1419 | |
| 1420 | @code{msync} returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for |
| 1421 | error. Errors include: |
| 1422 | |
| 1423 | @table @code |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 | @item EINVAL |
| 1426 | An invalid region was given, or the @var{flags} were invalid. |
| 1427 | |
| 1428 | @item EFAULT |
| 1429 | There is no existing mapping in at least part of the given region. |
| 1430 | |
| 1431 | @end table |
| 1432 | |
| 1433 | @end deftypefun |
| 1434 | |
| 1435 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1436 | @comment GNU |
| 1437 | @deftypefun {void *} mremap (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, size_t @var{new_length}, int @var{flag}) |
| 1438 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1439 | |
| 1440 | This function can be used to change the size of an existing memory |
| 1441 | area. @var{address} and @var{length} must cover a region entirely mapped |
| 1442 | in the same @code{mmap} statement. A new mapping with the same |
| 1443 | characteristics will be returned with the length @var{new_length}. |
| 1444 | |
| 1445 | One option is possible, @code{MREMAP_MAYMOVE}. If it is given in |
| 1446 | @var{flags}, the system may remove the existing mapping and create a new |
| 1447 | one of the desired length in another location. |
| 1448 | |
| 1449 | The address of the resulting mapping is returned, or @math{-1}. Possible |
| 1450 | error codes include: |
| 1451 | |
| 1452 | @table @code |
| 1453 | |
| 1454 | @item EFAULT |
| 1455 | There is no existing mapping in at least part of the original region, or |
| 1456 | the region covers two or more distinct mappings. |
| 1457 | |
| 1458 | @item EINVAL |
| 1459 | The address given is misaligned or inappropriate. |
| 1460 | |
| 1461 | @item EAGAIN |
| 1462 | The region has pages locked, and if extended it would exceed the |
| 1463 | process's resource limit for locked pages. @xref{Limits on Resources}. |
| 1464 | |
| 1465 | @item ENOMEM |
| 1466 | The region is private writable, and insufficient virtual memory is |
| 1467 | available to extend it. Also, this error will occur if |
| 1468 | @code{MREMAP_MAYMOVE} is not given and the extension would collide with |
| 1469 | another mapped region. |
| 1470 | |
| 1471 | @end table |
| 1472 | @end deftypefun |
| 1473 | |
| 1474 | This function is only available on a few systems. Except for performing |
| 1475 | optional optimizations one should not rely on this function. |
| 1476 | |
| 1477 | Not all file descriptors may be mapped. Sockets, pipes, and most devices |
| 1478 | only allow sequential access and do not fit into the mapping abstraction. |
| 1479 | In addition, some regular files may not be mmapable, and older kernels may |
| 1480 | not support mapping at all. Thus, programs using @code{mmap} should |
| 1481 | have a fallback method to use should it fail. @xref{Mmap,,,standards,GNU |
| 1482 | Coding Standards}. |
| 1483 | |
| 1484 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1485 | @comment POSIX |
| 1486 | @deftypefun int madvise (void *@var{addr}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{advice}) |
| 1487 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1488 | |
| 1489 | This function can be used to provide the system with @var{advice} about |
| 1490 | the intended usage patterns of the memory region starting at @var{addr} |
| 1491 | and extending @var{length} bytes. |
| 1492 | |
| 1493 | The valid BSD values for @var{advice} are: |
| 1494 | |
| 1495 | @table @code |
| 1496 | |
| 1497 | @item MADV_NORMAL |
| 1498 | The region should receive no further special treatment. |
| 1499 | |
| 1500 | @item MADV_RANDOM |
| 1501 | The region will be accessed via random page references. The kernel |
| 1502 | should page-in the minimal number of pages for each page fault. |
| 1503 | |
| 1504 | @item MADV_SEQUENTIAL |
| 1505 | The region will be accessed via sequential page references. This |
| 1506 | may cause the kernel to aggressively read-ahead, expecting further |
| 1507 | sequential references after any page fault within this region. |
| 1508 | |
| 1509 | @item MADV_WILLNEED |
| 1510 | The region will be needed. The pages within this region may |
| 1511 | be pre-faulted in by the kernel. |
| 1512 | |
| 1513 | @item MADV_DONTNEED |
| 1514 | The region is no longer needed. The kernel may free these pages, |
| 1515 | causing any changes to the pages to be lost, as well as swapped |
| 1516 | out pages to be discarded. |
| 1517 | |
| 1518 | @end table |
| 1519 | |
| 1520 | The POSIX names are slightly different, but with the same meanings: |
| 1521 | |
| 1522 | @table @code |
| 1523 | |
| 1524 | @item POSIX_MADV_NORMAL |
| 1525 | This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_NORMAL}. |
| 1526 | |
| 1527 | @item POSIX_MADV_RANDOM |
| 1528 | This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_RANDOM}. |
| 1529 | |
| 1530 | @item POSIX_MADV_SEQUENTIAL |
| 1531 | This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_SEQUENTIAL}. |
| 1532 | |
| 1533 | @item POSIX_MADV_WILLNEED |
| 1534 | This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_WILLNEED}. |
| 1535 | |
| 1536 | @item POSIX_MADV_DONTNEED |
| 1537 | This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_DONTNEED}. |
| 1538 | |
| 1539 | @end table |
| 1540 | |
| 1541 | @code{madvise} returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for |
| 1542 | error. Errors include: |
| 1543 | @table @code |
| 1544 | |
| 1545 | @item EINVAL |
| 1546 | An invalid region was given, or the @var{advice} was invalid. |
| 1547 | |
| 1548 | @item EFAULT |
| 1549 | There is no existing mapping in at least part of the given region. |
| 1550 | |
| 1551 | @end table |
| 1552 | @end deftypefun |
| 1553 | |
| 1554 | @comment sys/mman.h |
| 1555 | @comment POSIX |
| 1556 | @deftypefn Function int shm_open (const char *@var{name}, int @var{oflag}, mode_t @var{mode}) |
| 1557 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@asuinit{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}} |
| 1558 | @c shm_open @mtslocale @asuinit @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1559 | @c libc_once(where_is_shmfs) @mtslocale @asuinit @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1560 | @c where_is_shmfs @mtslocale @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1561 | @c statfs dup ok |
| 1562 | @c setmntent dup @ascuheap @asulock @acsmem @acsfd @aculock |
| 1563 | @c getmntent_r dup @mtslocale @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem [no @asucorrupt @acucorrupt; exclusive stream] |
| 1564 | @c strcmp dup ok |
| 1565 | @c strlen dup ok |
| 1566 | @c malloc dup @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 1567 | @c mempcpy dup ok |
| 1568 | @c endmntent dup @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1569 | @c strlen dup ok |
| 1570 | @c strchr dup ok |
| 1571 | @c mempcpy dup ok |
| 1572 | @c open dup @acsfd |
| 1573 | @c fcntl dup ok |
| 1574 | @c close dup @acsfd |
| 1575 | |
| 1576 | This function returns a file descriptor that can be used to allocate shared |
| 1577 | memory via mmap. Unrelated processes can use same @var{name} to create or |
| 1578 | open existing shared memory objects. |
| 1579 | |
| 1580 | A @var{name} argument specifies the shared memory object to be opened. |
| 1581 | In @theglibc{} it must be a string smaller than @code{NAME_MAX} bytes starting |
| 1582 | with an optional slash but containing no other slashes. |
| 1583 | |
| 1584 | The semantics of @var{oflag} and @var{mode} arguments is same as in @code{open}. |
| 1585 | |
| 1586 | @code{shm_open} returns the file descriptor on success or @math{-1} on error. |
| 1587 | On failure @code{errno} is set. |
| 1588 | @end deftypefn |
| 1589 | |
| 1590 | @deftypefn Function int shm_unlink (const char *@var{name}) |
| 1591 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtslocale{}}@asunsafe{@asuinit{} @ascuheap{} @asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{} @acsfd{}}} |
| 1592 | @c shm_unlink @mtslocale @asuinit @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1593 | @c libc_once(where_is_shmfs) dup @mtslocale @asuinit @ascuheap @asulock @aculock @acsmem @acsfd |
| 1594 | @c strlen dup ok |
| 1595 | @c strchr dup ok |
| 1596 | @c mempcpy dup ok |
| 1597 | @c unlink dup ok |
| 1598 | |
| 1599 | This function is inverse of @code{shm_open} and removes the object with |
| 1600 | the given @var{name} previously created by @code{shm_open}. |
| 1601 | |
| 1602 | @code{shm_unlink} returns @math{0} on success or @math{-1} on error. |
| 1603 | On failure @code{errno} is set. |
| 1604 | @end deftypefn |
| 1605 | |
| 1606 | @node Waiting for I/O |
| 1607 | @section Waiting for Input or Output |
| 1608 | @cindex waiting for input or output |
| 1609 | @cindex multiplexing input |
| 1610 | @cindex input from multiple files |
| 1611 | |
| 1612 | Sometimes a program needs to accept input on multiple input channels |
| 1613 | whenever input arrives. For example, some workstations may have devices |
| 1614 | such as a digitizing tablet, function button box, or dial box that are |
| 1615 | connected via normal asynchronous serial interfaces; good user interface |
| 1616 | style requires responding immediately to input on any device. Another |
| 1617 | example is a program that acts as a server to several other processes |
| 1618 | via pipes or sockets. |
| 1619 | |
| 1620 | You cannot normally use @code{read} for this purpose, because this |
| 1621 | blocks the program until input is available on one particular file |
| 1622 | descriptor; input on other channels won't wake it up. You could set |
| 1623 | nonblocking mode and poll each file descriptor in turn, but this is very |
| 1624 | inefficient. |
| 1625 | |
| 1626 | A better solution is to use the @code{select} function. This blocks the |
| 1627 | program until input or output is ready on a specified set of file |
| 1628 | descriptors, or until a timer expires, whichever comes first. This |
| 1629 | facility is declared in the header file @file{sys/types.h}. |
| 1630 | @pindex sys/types.h |
| 1631 | |
| 1632 | In the case of a server socket (@pxref{Listening}), we say that |
| 1633 | ``input'' is available when there are pending connections that could be |
| 1634 | accepted (@pxref{Accepting Connections}). @code{accept} for server |
| 1635 | sockets blocks and interacts with @code{select} just as @code{read} does |
| 1636 | for normal input. |
| 1637 | |
| 1638 | @cindex file descriptor sets, for @code{select} |
| 1639 | The file descriptor sets for the @code{select} function are specified |
| 1640 | as @code{fd_set} objects. Here is the description of the data type |
| 1641 | and some macros for manipulating these objects. |
| 1642 | |
| 1643 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1644 | @comment BSD |
| 1645 | @deftp {Data Type} fd_set |
| 1646 | The @code{fd_set} data type represents file descriptor sets for the |
| 1647 | @code{select} function. It is actually a bit array. |
| 1648 | @end deftp |
| 1649 | |
| 1650 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1651 | @comment BSD |
| 1652 | @deftypevr Macro int FD_SETSIZE |
| 1653 | The value of this macro is the maximum number of file descriptors that a |
| 1654 | @code{fd_set} object can hold information about. On systems with a |
| 1655 | fixed maximum number, @code{FD_SETSIZE} is at least that number. On |
| 1656 | some systems, including GNU, there is no absolute limit on the number of |
| 1657 | descriptors open, but this macro still has a constant value which |
| 1658 | controls the number of bits in an @code{fd_set}; if you get a file |
| 1659 | descriptor with a value as high as @code{FD_SETSIZE}, you cannot put |
| 1660 | that descriptor into an @code{fd_set}. |
| 1661 | @end deftypevr |
| 1662 | |
| 1663 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1664 | @comment BSD |
| 1665 | @deftypefn Macro void FD_ZERO (fd_set *@var{set}) |
| 1666 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:set}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1667 | This macro initializes the file descriptor set @var{set} to be the |
| 1668 | empty set. |
| 1669 | @end deftypefn |
| 1670 | |
| 1671 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1672 | @comment BSD |
| 1673 | @deftypefn Macro void FD_SET (int @var{filedes}, fd_set *@var{set}) |
| 1674 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:set}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1675 | @c Setting a bit isn't necessarily atomic, so there's a potential race |
| 1676 | @c here if set is not used exclusively. |
| 1677 | This macro adds @var{filedes} to the file descriptor set @var{set}. |
| 1678 | |
| 1679 | The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is |
| 1680 | evaluated more than once. |
| 1681 | @end deftypefn |
| 1682 | |
| 1683 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1684 | @comment BSD |
| 1685 | @deftypefn Macro void FD_CLR (int @var{filedes}, fd_set *@var{set}) |
| 1686 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:set}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1687 | @c Setting a bit isn't necessarily atomic, so there's a potential race |
| 1688 | @c here if set is not used exclusively. |
| 1689 | This macro removes @var{filedes} from the file descriptor set @var{set}. |
| 1690 | |
| 1691 | The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is |
| 1692 | evaluated more than once. |
| 1693 | @end deftypefn |
| 1694 | |
| 1695 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1696 | @comment BSD |
| 1697 | @deftypefn Macro int FD_ISSET (int @var{filedes}, const fd_set *@var{set}) |
| 1698 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:set}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1699 | This macro returns a nonzero value (true) if @var{filedes} is a member |
| 1700 | of the file descriptor set @var{set}, and zero (false) otherwise. |
| 1701 | |
| 1702 | The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is |
| 1703 | evaluated more than once. |
| 1704 | @end deftypefn |
| 1705 | |
| 1706 | Next, here is the description of the @code{select} function itself. |
| 1707 | |
| 1708 | @comment sys/types.h |
| 1709 | @comment BSD |
| 1710 | @deftypefun int select (int @var{nfds}, fd_set *@var{read-fds}, fd_set *@var{write-fds}, fd_set *@var{except-fds}, struct timeval *@var{timeout}) |
| 1711 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{@mtsrace{:read-fds} @mtsrace{:write-fds} @mtsrace{:except-fds}}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1712 | @c The select syscall is preferred, but pselect6 may be used instead, |
| 1713 | @c which requires converting timeout to a timespec and back. The |
| 1714 | @c conversions are not atomic. |
| 1715 | The @code{select} function blocks the calling process until there is |
| 1716 | activity on any of the specified sets of file descriptors, or until the |
| 1717 | timeout period has expired. |
| 1718 | |
| 1719 | The file descriptors specified by the @var{read-fds} argument are |
| 1720 | checked to see if they are ready for reading; the @var{write-fds} file |
| 1721 | descriptors are checked to see if they are ready for writing; and the |
| 1722 | @var{except-fds} file descriptors are checked for exceptional |
| 1723 | conditions. You can pass a null pointer for any of these arguments if |
| 1724 | you are not interested in checking for that kind of condition. |
| 1725 | |
| 1726 | A file descriptor is considered ready for reading if a @code{read} |
| 1727 | call will not block. This usually includes the read offset being at |
| 1728 | the end of the file or there is an error to report. A server socket |
| 1729 | is considered ready for reading if there is a pending connection which |
| 1730 | can be accepted with @code{accept}; @pxref{Accepting Connections}. A |
| 1731 | client socket is ready for writing when its connection is fully |
| 1732 | established; @pxref{Connecting}. |
| 1733 | |
| 1734 | ``Exceptional conditions'' does not mean errors---errors are reported |
| 1735 | immediately when an erroneous system call is executed, and do not |
| 1736 | constitute a state of the descriptor. Rather, they include conditions |
| 1737 | such as the presence of an urgent message on a socket. (@xref{Sockets}, |
| 1738 | for information on urgent messages.) |
| 1739 | |
| 1740 | The @code{select} function checks only the first @var{nfds} file |
| 1741 | descriptors. The usual thing is to pass @code{FD_SETSIZE} as the value |
| 1742 | of this argument. |
| 1743 | |
| 1744 | The @var{timeout} specifies the maximum time to wait. If you pass a |
| 1745 | null pointer for this argument, it means to block indefinitely until one |
| 1746 | of the file descriptors is ready. Otherwise, you should provide the |
| 1747 | time in @code{struct timeval} format; see @ref{High-Resolution |
| 1748 | Calendar}. Specify zero as the time (a @code{struct timeval} containing |
| 1749 | all zeros) if you want to find out which descriptors are ready without |
| 1750 | waiting if none are ready. |
| 1751 | |
| 1752 | The normal return value from @code{select} is the total number of ready file |
| 1753 | descriptors in all of the sets. Each of the argument sets is overwritten |
| 1754 | with information about the descriptors that are ready for the corresponding |
| 1755 | operation. Thus, to see if a particular descriptor @var{desc} has input, |
| 1756 | use @code{FD_ISSET (@var{desc}, @var{read-fds})} after @code{select} returns. |
| 1757 | |
| 1758 | If @code{select} returns because the timeout period expires, it returns |
| 1759 | a value of zero. |
| 1760 | |
| 1761 | Any signal will cause @code{select} to return immediately. So if your |
| 1762 | program uses signals, you can't rely on @code{select} to keep waiting |
| 1763 | for the full time specified. If you want to be sure of waiting for a |
| 1764 | particular amount of time, you must check for @code{EINTR} and repeat |
| 1765 | the @code{select} with a newly calculated timeout based on the current |
| 1766 | time. See the example below. See also @ref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 1767 | |
| 1768 | If an error occurs, @code{select} returns @code{-1} and does not modify |
| 1769 | the argument file descriptor sets. The following @code{errno} error |
| 1770 | conditions are defined for this function: |
| 1771 | |
| 1772 | @table @code |
| 1773 | @item EBADF |
| 1774 | One of the file descriptor sets specified an invalid file descriptor. |
| 1775 | |
| 1776 | @item EINTR |
| 1777 | The operation was interrupted by a signal. @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 1778 | |
| 1779 | @item EINVAL |
| 1780 | The @var{timeout} argument is invalid; one of the components is negative |
| 1781 | or too large. |
| 1782 | @end table |
| 1783 | @end deftypefun |
| 1784 | |
| 1785 | @strong{Portability Note:} The @code{select} function is a BSD Unix |
| 1786 | feature. |
| 1787 | |
| 1788 | Here is an example showing how you can use @code{select} to establish a |
| 1789 | timeout period for reading from a file descriptor. The @code{input_timeout} |
| 1790 | function blocks the calling process until input is available on the |
| 1791 | file descriptor, or until the timeout period expires. |
| 1792 | |
| 1793 | @smallexample |
| 1794 | @include select.c.texi |
| 1795 | @end smallexample |
| 1796 | |
| 1797 | There is another example showing the use of @code{select} to multiplex |
| 1798 | input from multiple sockets in @ref{Server Example}. |
| 1799 | |
| 1800 | |
| 1801 | @node Synchronizing I/O |
| 1802 | @section Synchronizing I/O operations |
| 1803 | |
| 1804 | @cindex synchronizing |
| 1805 | In most modern operating systems, the normal I/O operations are not |
| 1806 | executed synchronously. I.e., even if a @code{write} system call |
| 1807 | returns, this does not mean the data is actually written to the media, |
| 1808 | e.g., the disk. |
| 1809 | |
| 1810 | In situations where synchronization points are necessary, you can use |
| 1811 | special functions which ensure that all operations finish before |
| 1812 | they return. |
| 1813 | |
| 1814 | @comment unistd.h |
| 1815 | @comment X/Open |
| 1816 | @deftypefun void sync (void) |
| 1817 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1818 | A call to this function will not return as long as there is data which |
| 1819 | has not been written to the device. All dirty buffers in the kernel will |
| 1820 | be written and so an overall consistent system can be achieved (if no |
| 1821 | other process in parallel writes data). |
| 1822 | |
| 1823 | A prototype for @code{sync} can be found in @file{unistd.h}. |
| 1824 | @end deftypefun |
| 1825 | |
| 1826 | Programs more often want to ensure that data written to a given file is |
| 1827 | committed, rather than all data in the system. For this, @code{sync} is overkill. |
| 1828 | |
| 1829 | |
| 1830 | @comment unistd.h |
| 1831 | @comment POSIX |
| 1832 | @deftypefun int fsync (int @var{fildes}) |
| 1833 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1834 | The @code{fsync} function can be used to make sure all data associated with |
| 1835 | the open file @var{fildes} is written to the device associated with the |
| 1836 | descriptor. The function call does not return unless all actions have |
| 1837 | finished. |
| 1838 | |
| 1839 | A prototype for @code{fsync} can be found in @file{unistd.h}. |
| 1840 | |
| 1841 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 1842 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 1843 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{fsync} is |
| 1844 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 1845 | until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{fsync} should be |
| 1846 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 1847 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 1848 | |
| 1849 | The return value of the function is zero if no error occurred. Otherwise |
| 1850 | it is @math{-1} and the global variable @var{errno} is set to the |
| 1851 | following values: |
| 1852 | @table @code |
| 1853 | @item EBADF |
| 1854 | The descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid. |
| 1855 | |
| 1856 | @item EINVAL |
| 1857 | No synchronization is possible since the system does not implement this. |
| 1858 | @end table |
| 1859 | @end deftypefun |
| 1860 | |
| 1861 | Sometimes it is not even necessary to write all data associated with a |
| 1862 | file descriptor. E.g., in database files which do not change in size it |
| 1863 | is enough to write all the file content data to the device. |
| 1864 | Meta-information, like the modification time etc., are not that important |
| 1865 | and leaving such information uncommitted does not prevent a successful |
| 1866 | recovering of the file in case of a problem. |
| 1867 | |
| 1868 | @comment unistd.h |
| 1869 | @comment POSIX |
| 1870 | @deftypefun int fdatasync (int @var{fildes}) |
| 1871 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 1872 | When a call to the @code{fdatasync} function returns, it is ensured |
| 1873 | that all of the file data is written to the device. For all pending I/O |
| 1874 | operations, the parts guaranteeing data integrity finished. |
| 1875 | |
| 1876 | Not all systems implement the @code{fdatasync} operation. On systems |
| 1877 | missing this functionality @code{fdatasync} is emulated by a call to |
| 1878 | @code{fsync} since the performed actions are a superset of those |
| 1879 | required by @code{fdatasync}. |
| 1880 | |
| 1881 | The prototype for @code{fdatasync} is in @file{unistd.h}. |
| 1882 | |
| 1883 | The return value of the function is zero if no error occurred. Otherwise |
| 1884 | it is @math{-1} and the global variable @var{errno} is set to the |
| 1885 | following values: |
| 1886 | @table @code |
| 1887 | @item EBADF |
| 1888 | The descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid. |
| 1889 | |
| 1890 | @item EINVAL |
| 1891 | No synchronization is possible since the system does not implement this. |
| 1892 | @end table |
| 1893 | @end deftypefun |
| 1894 | |
| 1895 | |
| 1896 | @node Asynchronous I/O |
| 1897 | @section Perform I/O Operations in Parallel |
| 1898 | |
| 1899 | The POSIX.1b standard defines a new set of I/O operations which can |
| 1900 | significantly reduce the time an application spends waiting at I/O. The |
| 1901 | new functions allow a program to initiate one or more I/O operations and |
| 1902 | then immediately resume normal work while the I/O operations are |
| 1903 | executed in parallel. This functionality is available if the |
| 1904 | @file{unistd.h} file defines the symbol @code{_POSIX_ASYNCHRONOUS_IO}. |
| 1905 | |
| 1906 | These functions are part of the library with realtime functions named |
| 1907 | @file{librt}. They are not actually part of the @file{libc} binary. |
| 1908 | The implementation of these functions can be done using support in the |
| 1909 | kernel (if available) or using an implementation based on threads at |
| 1910 | userlevel. In the latter case it might be necessary to link applications |
| 1911 | with the thread library @file{libpthread} in addition to @file{librt}. |
| 1912 | |
| 1913 | All AIO operations operate on files which were opened previously. There |
| 1914 | might be arbitrarily many operations running for one file. The |
| 1915 | asynchronous I/O operations are controlled using a data structure named |
| 1916 | @code{struct aiocb} (@dfn{AIO control block}). It is defined in |
| 1917 | @file{aio.h} as follows. |
| 1918 | |
| 1919 | @comment aio.h |
| 1920 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 1921 | @deftp {Data Type} {struct aiocb} |
| 1922 | The POSIX.1b standard mandates that the @code{struct aiocb} structure |
| 1923 | contains at least the members described in the following table. There |
| 1924 | might be more elements which are used by the implementation, but |
| 1925 | depending upon these elements is not portable and is highly deprecated. |
| 1926 | |
| 1927 | @table @code |
| 1928 | @item int aio_fildes |
| 1929 | This element specifies the file descriptor to be used for the |
| 1930 | operation. It must be a legal descriptor, otherwise the operation will |
| 1931 | fail. |
| 1932 | |
| 1933 | The device on which the file is opened must allow the seek operation. |
| 1934 | I.e., it is not possible to use any of the AIO operations on devices |
| 1935 | like terminals where an @code{lseek} call would lead to an error. |
| 1936 | |
| 1937 | @item off_t aio_offset |
| 1938 | This element specifies the offset in the file at which the operation (input |
| 1939 | or output) is performed. Since the operations are carried out in arbitrary |
| 1940 | order and more than one operation for one file descriptor can be |
| 1941 | started, one cannot expect a current read/write position of the file |
| 1942 | descriptor. |
| 1943 | |
| 1944 | @item volatile void *aio_buf |
| 1945 | This is a pointer to the buffer with the data to be written or the place |
| 1946 | where the read data is stored. |
| 1947 | |
| 1948 | @item size_t aio_nbytes |
| 1949 | This element specifies the length of the buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}. |
| 1950 | |
| 1951 | @item int aio_reqprio |
| 1952 | If the platform has defined @code{_POSIX_PRIORITIZED_IO} and |
| 1953 | @code{_POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING}, the AIO requests are |
| 1954 | processed based on the current scheduling priority. The |
| 1955 | @code{aio_reqprio} element can then be used to lower the priority of the |
| 1956 | AIO operation. |
| 1957 | |
| 1958 | @item struct sigevent aio_sigevent |
| 1959 | This element specifies how the calling process is notified once the |
| 1960 | operation terminates. If the @code{sigev_notify} element is |
| 1961 | @code{SIGEV_NONE}, no notification is sent. If it is @code{SIGEV_SIGNAL}, |
| 1962 | the signal determined by @code{sigev_signo} is sent. Otherwise, |
| 1963 | @code{sigev_notify} must be @code{SIGEV_THREAD}. In this case, a thread |
| 1964 | is created which starts executing the function pointed to by |
| 1965 | @code{sigev_notify_function}. |
| 1966 | |
| 1967 | @item int aio_lio_opcode |
| 1968 | This element is only used by the @code{lio_listio} and |
| 1969 | @code{lio_listio64} functions. Since these functions allow an |
| 1970 | arbitrary number of operations to start at once, and each operation can be |
| 1971 | input or output (or nothing), the information must be stored in the |
| 1972 | control block. The possible values are: |
| 1973 | |
| 1974 | @vtable @code |
| 1975 | @item LIO_READ |
| 1976 | Start a read operation. Read from the file at position |
| 1977 | @code{aio_offset} and store the next @code{aio_nbytes} bytes in the |
| 1978 | buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}. |
| 1979 | |
| 1980 | @item LIO_WRITE |
| 1981 | Start a write operation. Write @code{aio_nbytes} bytes starting at |
| 1982 | @code{aio_buf} into the file starting at position @code{aio_offset}. |
| 1983 | |
| 1984 | @item LIO_NOP |
| 1985 | Do nothing for this control block. This value is useful sometimes when |
| 1986 | an array of @code{struct aiocb} values contains holes, i.e., some of the |
| 1987 | values must not be handled although the whole array is presented to the |
| 1988 | @code{lio_listio} function. |
| 1989 | @end vtable |
| 1990 | @end table |
| 1991 | |
| 1992 | When the sources are compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a |
| 1993 | 32 bit machine, this type is in fact @code{struct aiocb64}, since the LFS |
| 1994 | interface transparently replaces the @code{struct aiocb} definition. |
| 1995 | @end deftp |
| 1996 | |
| 1997 | For use with the AIO functions defined in the LFS, there is a similar type |
| 1998 | defined which replaces the types of the appropriate members with larger |
| 1999 | types but otherwise is equivalent to @code{struct aiocb}. Particularly, |
| 2000 | all member names are the same. |
| 2001 | |
| 2002 | @comment aio.h |
| 2003 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2004 | @deftp {Data Type} {struct aiocb64} |
| 2005 | @table @code |
| 2006 | @item int aio_fildes |
| 2007 | This element specifies the file descriptor which is used for the |
| 2008 | operation. It must be a legal descriptor since otherwise the operation |
| 2009 | fails for obvious reasons. |
| 2010 | |
| 2011 | The device on which the file is opened must allow the seek operation. |
| 2012 | I.e., it is not possible to use any of the AIO operations on devices |
| 2013 | like terminals where an @code{lseek} call would lead to an error. |
| 2014 | |
| 2015 | @item off64_t aio_offset |
| 2016 | This element specifies at which offset in the file the operation (input |
| 2017 | or output) is performed. Since the operation are carried in arbitrary |
| 2018 | order and more than one operation for one file descriptor can be |
| 2019 | started, one cannot expect a current read/write position of the file |
| 2020 | descriptor. |
| 2021 | |
| 2022 | @item volatile void *aio_buf |
| 2023 | This is a pointer to the buffer with the data to be written or the place |
| 2024 | where the read data is stored. |
| 2025 | |
| 2026 | @item size_t aio_nbytes |
| 2027 | This element specifies the length of the buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}. |
| 2028 | |
| 2029 | @item int aio_reqprio |
| 2030 | If for the platform @code{_POSIX_PRIORITIZED_IO} and |
| 2031 | @code{_POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING} are defined the AIO requests are |
| 2032 | processed based on the current scheduling priority. The |
| 2033 | @code{aio_reqprio} element can then be used to lower the priority of the |
| 2034 | AIO operation. |
| 2035 | |
| 2036 | @item struct sigevent aio_sigevent |
| 2037 | This element specifies how the calling process is notified once the |
| 2038 | operation terminates. If the @code{sigev_notify}, element is |
| 2039 | @code{SIGEV_NONE} no notification is sent. If it is @code{SIGEV_SIGNAL}, |
| 2040 | the signal determined by @code{sigev_signo} is sent. Otherwise, |
| 2041 | @code{sigev_notify} must be @code{SIGEV_THREAD} in which case a thread |
| 2042 | which starts executing the function pointed to by |
| 2043 | @code{sigev_notify_function}. |
| 2044 | |
| 2045 | @item int aio_lio_opcode |
| 2046 | This element is only used by the @code{lio_listio} and |
| 2047 | @code{[lio_listio64} functions. Since these functions allow an |
| 2048 | arbitrary number of operations to start at once, and since each operation can be |
| 2049 | input or output (or nothing), the information must be stored in the |
| 2050 | control block. See the description of @code{struct aiocb} for a description |
| 2051 | of the possible values. |
| 2052 | @end table |
| 2053 | |
| 2054 | When the sources are compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a |
| 2055 | 32 bit machine, this type is available under the name @code{struct |
| 2056 | aiocb64}, since the LFS transparently replaces the old interface. |
| 2057 | @end deftp |
| 2058 | |
| 2059 | @menu |
| 2060 | * Asynchronous Reads/Writes:: Asynchronous Read and Write Operations. |
| 2061 | * Status of AIO Operations:: Getting the Status of AIO Operations. |
| 2062 | * Synchronizing AIO Operations:: Getting into a consistent state. |
| 2063 | * Cancel AIO Operations:: Cancellation of AIO Operations. |
| 2064 | * Configuration of AIO:: How to optimize the AIO implementation. |
| 2065 | @end menu |
| 2066 | |
| 2067 | @node Asynchronous Reads/Writes |
| 2068 | @subsection Asynchronous Read and Write Operations |
| 2069 | |
| 2070 | @comment aio.h |
| 2071 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2072 | @deftypefun int aio_read (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2073 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2074 | @c Calls aio_enqueue_request. |
| 2075 | @c aio_enqueue_request @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2076 | @c pthread_self ok |
| 2077 | @c pthread_getschedparam @asulock @aculock |
| 2078 | @c lll_lock (pthread descriptor's lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2079 | @c sched_getparam ok |
| 2080 | @c sched_getscheduler ok |
| 2081 | @c lll_unlock @aculock |
| 2082 | @c pthread_mutex_lock (aio_requests_mutex) @asulock @aculock |
| 2083 | @c get_elem @ascuheap @acsmem [@asucorrupt @acucorrupt] |
| 2084 | @c realloc @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2085 | @c calloc @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2086 | @c aio_create_helper_thread @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2087 | @c pthread_attr_init ok |
| 2088 | @c pthread_attr_setdetachstate ok |
| 2089 | @c pthread_get_minstack ok |
| 2090 | @c pthread_attr_setstacksize ok |
| 2091 | @c sigfillset ok |
| 2092 | @c memset ok |
| 2093 | @c sigdelset ok |
| 2094 | @c SYSCALL rt_sigprocmask ok |
| 2095 | @c pthread_create @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2096 | @c lll_lock (default_pthread_attr_lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2097 | @c alloca/malloc @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2098 | @c lll_unlock @aculock |
| 2099 | @c allocate_stack @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2100 | @c getpagesize dup |
| 2101 | @c lll_lock (default_pthread_attr_lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2102 | @c lll_unlock @aculock |
| 2103 | @c _dl_allocate_tls @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2104 | @c _dl_allocate_tls_storage @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2105 | @c memalign @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2106 | @c memset ok |
| 2107 | @c allocate_dtv dup |
| 2108 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2109 | @c allocate_dtv @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2110 | @c calloc @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2111 | @c INSTALL_DTV ok |
| 2112 | @c list_add dup |
| 2113 | @c get_cached_stack |
| 2114 | @c lll_lock (stack_cache_lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2115 | @c list_for_each ok |
| 2116 | @c list_entry dup |
| 2117 | @c FREE_P dup |
| 2118 | @c stack_list_del dup |
| 2119 | @c stack_list_add dup |
| 2120 | @c lll_unlock @aculock |
| 2121 | @c _dl_allocate_tls_init ok |
| 2122 | @c GET_DTV ok |
| 2123 | @c mmap ok |
| 2124 | @c atomic_increment_val ok |
| 2125 | @c munmap ok |
| 2126 | @c change_stack_perm ok |
| 2127 | @c mprotect ok |
| 2128 | @c mprotect ok |
| 2129 | @c stack_list_del dup |
| 2130 | @c _dl_deallocate_tls dup |
| 2131 | @c munmap ok |
| 2132 | @c THREAD_COPY_STACK_GUARD ok |
| 2133 | @c THREAD_COPY_POINTER_GUARD ok |
| 2134 | @c atomic_exchange_acq ok |
| 2135 | @c lll_futex_wake ok |
| 2136 | @c deallocate_stack @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2137 | @c lll_lock (state_cache_lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2138 | @c stack_list_del ok |
| 2139 | @c atomic_write_barrier ok |
| 2140 | @c list_del ok |
| 2141 | @c atomic_write_barrier ok |
| 2142 | @c queue_stack @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2143 | @c stack_list_add ok |
| 2144 | @c atomic_write_barrier ok |
| 2145 | @c list_add ok |
| 2146 | @c atomic_write_barrier ok |
| 2147 | @c free_stacks @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2148 | @c list_for_each_prev_safe ok |
| 2149 | @c list_entry ok |
| 2150 | @c FREE_P ok |
| 2151 | @c stack_list_del dup |
| 2152 | @c _dl_deallocate_tls dup |
| 2153 | @c munmap ok |
| 2154 | @c _dl_deallocate_tls @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2155 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2156 | @c lll_unlock @aculock |
| 2157 | @c create_thread @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2158 | @c td_eventword |
| 2159 | @c td_eventmask |
| 2160 | @c do_clone @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2161 | @c PREPARE_CREATE ok |
| 2162 | @c lll_lock (pd->lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2163 | @c atomic_increment ok |
| 2164 | @c clone ok |
| 2165 | @c atomic_decrement ok |
| 2166 | @c atomic_exchange_acq ok |
| 2167 | @c lll_futex_wake ok |
| 2168 | @c deallocate_stack dup |
| 2169 | @c sched_setaffinity ok |
| 2170 | @c tgkill ok |
| 2171 | @c sched_setscheduler ok |
| 2172 | @c atomic_compare_and_exchange_bool_acq ok |
| 2173 | @c nptl_create_event ok |
| 2174 | @c lll_unlock (pd->lock) @aculock |
| 2175 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2176 | @c pthread_attr_destroy ok (cpuset won't be set, so free isn't called) |
| 2177 | @c add_request_to_runlist ok |
| 2178 | @c pthread_cond_signal ok |
| 2179 | @c aio_free_request ok |
| 2180 | @c pthread_mutex_unlock @aculock |
| 2181 | |
| 2182 | @c (in the new thread, initiated with clone) |
| 2183 | @c start_thread ok |
| 2184 | @c HP_TIMING_NOW ok |
| 2185 | @c ctype_init @mtslocale |
| 2186 | @c atomic_exchange_acq ok |
| 2187 | @c lll_futex_wake ok |
| 2188 | @c sigemptyset ok |
| 2189 | @c sigaddset ok |
| 2190 | @c setjmp ok |
| 2191 | @c CANCEL_ASYNC -> pthread_enable_asynccancel ok |
| 2192 | @c do_cancel ok |
| 2193 | @c pthread_unwind ok |
| 2194 | @c Unwind_ForcedUnwind or longjmp ok [@ascuheap @acsmem?] |
| 2195 | @c lll_lock @asulock @aculock |
| 2196 | @c lll_unlock @asulock @aculock |
| 2197 | @c CANCEL_RESET -> pthread_disable_asynccancel ok |
| 2198 | @c lll_futex_wait ok |
| 2199 | @c ->start_routine ok ----- |
| 2200 | @c call_tls_dtors @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2201 | @c user-supplied dtor |
| 2202 | @c rtld_lock_lock_recursive (dl_load_lock) @asulock @aculock |
| 2203 | @c rtld_lock_unlock_recursive @aculock |
| 2204 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2205 | @c nptl_deallocate_tsd @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2206 | @c tsd user-supplied dtors ok |
| 2207 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2208 | @c libc_thread_freeres |
| 2209 | @c libc_thread_subfreeres ok |
| 2210 | @c atomic_decrement_and_test ok |
| 2211 | @c td_eventword ok |
| 2212 | @c td_eventmask ok |
| 2213 | @c atomic_compare_exchange_bool_acq ok |
| 2214 | @c nptl_death_event ok |
| 2215 | @c lll_robust_dead ok |
| 2216 | @c getpagesize ok |
| 2217 | @c madvise ok |
| 2218 | @c free_tcb @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2219 | @c free @ascuheap @acsmem |
| 2220 | @c deallocate_stack @asulock @ascuheap @aculock @acsmem |
| 2221 | @c lll_futex_wait ok |
| 2222 | @c exit_thread_inline ok |
| 2223 | @c syscall(exit) ok |
| 2224 | |
| 2225 | This function initiates an asynchronous read operation. It |
| 2226 | immediately returns after the operation was enqueued or when an |
| 2227 | error was encountered. |
| 2228 | |
| 2229 | The first @code{aiocbp->aio_nbytes} bytes of the file for which |
| 2230 | @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} is a descriptor are written to the buffer |
| 2231 | starting at @code{aiocbp->aio_buf}. Reading starts at the absolute |
| 2232 | position @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} in the file. |
| 2233 | |
| 2234 | If prioritized I/O is supported by the platform the |
| 2235 | @code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is used to adjust the priority before |
| 2236 | the request is actually enqueued. |
| 2237 | |
| 2238 | The calling process is notified about the termination of the read |
| 2239 | request according to the @code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} value. |
| 2240 | |
| 2241 | When @code{aio_read} returns, the return value is zero if no error |
| 2242 | occurred that can be found before the process is enqueued. If such an |
| 2243 | early error is found, the function returns @math{-1} and sets |
| 2244 | @code{errno} to one of the following values: |
| 2245 | |
| 2246 | @table @code |
| 2247 | @item EAGAIN |
| 2248 | The request was not enqueued due to (temporarily) exceeded resource |
| 2249 | limitations. |
| 2250 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2251 | The @code{aio_read} function is not implemented. |
| 2252 | @item EBADF |
| 2253 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. This condition |
| 2254 | need not be recognized before enqueueing the request and so this error |
| 2255 | might also be signaled asynchronously. |
| 2256 | @item EINVAL |
| 2257 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} or @code{aiocbp->aio_reqpiro} value is |
| 2258 | invalid. This condition need not be recognized before enqueueing the |
| 2259 | request and so this error might also be signaled asynchronously. |
| 2260 | @end table |
| 2261 | |
| 2262 | If @code{aio_read} returns zero, the current status of the request |
| 2263 | can be queried using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return} functions. |
| 2264 | As long as the value returned by @code{aio_error} is @code{EINPROGRESS} |
| 2265 | the operation has not yet completed. If @code{aio_error} returns zero, |
| 2266 | the operation successfully terminated, otherwise the value is to be |
| 2267 | interpreted as an error code. If the function terminated, the result of |
| 2268 | the operation can be obtained using a call to @code{aio_return}. The |
| 2269 | returned value is the same as an equivalent call to @code{read} would |
| 2270 | have returned. Possible error codes returned by @code{aio_error} are: |
| 2271 | |
| 2272 | @table @code |
| 2273 | @item EBADF |
| 2274 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. |
| 2275 | @item ECANCELED |
| 2276 | The operation was canceled before the operation was finished |
| 2277 | (@pxref{Cancel AIO Operations}) |
| 2278 | @item EINVAL |
| 2279 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} value is invalid. |
| 2280 | @end table |
| 2281 | |
| 2282 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2283 | function is in fact @code{aio_read64} since the LFS interface transparently |
| 2284 | replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2285 | @end deftypefun |
| 2286 | |
| 2287 | @comment aio.h |
| 2288 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2289 | @deftypefun int aio_read64 (struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2290 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2291 | This function is similar to the @code{aio_read} function. The only |
| 2292 | difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines, the file descriptor should |
| 2293 | be opened in the large file mode. Internally, @code{aio_read64} uses |
| 2294 | functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position |
| 2295 | Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the reading, |
| 2296 | as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in @code{aio_read}. |
| 2297 | |
| 2298 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2299 | function is available under the name @code{aio_read} and so transparently |
| 2300 | replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit machines. |
| 2301 | @end deftypefun |
| 2302 | |
| 2303 | To write data asynchronously to a file, there exists an equivalent pair |
| 2304 | of functions with a very similar interface. |
| 2305 | |
| 2306 | @comment aio.h |
| 2307 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2308 | @deftypefun int aio_write (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2309 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2310 | This function initiates an asynchronous write operation. The function |
| 2311 | call immediately returns after the operation was enqueued or if before |
| 2312 | this happens an error was encountered. |
| 2313 | |
| 2314 | The first @code{aiocbp->aio_nbytes} bytes from the buffer starting at |
| 2315 | @code{aiocbp->aio_buf} are written to the file for which |
| 2316 | @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} is a descriptor, starting at the absolute |
| 2317 | position @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} in the file. |
| 2318 | |
| 2319 | If prioritized I/O is supported by the platform, the |
| 2320 | @code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is used to adjust the priority before |
| 2321 | the request is actually enqueued. |
| 2322 | |
| 2323 | The calling process is notified about the termination of the read |
| 2324 | request according to the @code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} value. |
| 2325 | |
| 2326 | When @code{aio_write} returns, the return value is zero if no error |
| 2327 | occurred that can be found before the process is enqueued. If such an |
| 2328 | early error is found the function returns @math{-1} and sets |
| 2329 | @code{errno} to one of the following values. |
| 2330 | |
| 2331 | @table @code |
| 2332 | @item EAGAIN |
| 2333 | The request was not enqueued due to (temporarily) exceeded resource |
| 2334 | limitations. |
| 2335 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2336 | The @code{aio_write} function is not implemented. |
| 2337 | @item EBADF |
| 2338 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. This condition |
| 2339 | may not be recognized before enqueueing the request, and so this error |
| 2340 | might also be signaled asynchronously. |
| 2341 | @item EINVAL |
| 2342 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} or @code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is |
| 2343 | invalid. This condition may not be recognized before enqueueing the |
| 2344 | request and so this error might also be signaled asynchronously. |
| 2345 | @end table |
| 2346 | |
| 2347 | In the case @code{aio_write} returns zero, the current status of the |
| 2348 | request can be queried using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return} |
| 2349 | functions. As long as the value returned by @code{aio_error} is |
| 2350 | @code{EINPROGRESS} the operation has not yet completed. If |
| 2351 | @code{aio_error} returns zero, the operation successfully terminated, |
| 2352 | otherwise the value is to be interpreted as an error code. If the |
| 2353 | function terminated, the result of the operation can be get using a call |
| 2354 | to @code{aio_return}. The returned value is the same as an equivalent |
| 2355 | call to @code{read} would have returned. Possible error codes returned |
| 2356 | by @code{aio_error} are: |
| 2357 | |
| 2358 | @table @code |
| 2359 | @item EBADF |
| 2360 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. |
| 2361 | @item ECANCELED |
| 2362 | The operation was canceled before the operation was finished. |
| 2363 | (@pxref{Cancel AIO Operations}) |
| 2364 | @item EINVAL |
| 2365 | The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} value is invalid. |
| 2366 | @end table |
| 2367 | |
| 2368 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2369 | function is in fact @code{aio_write64} since the LFS interface transparently |
| 2370 | replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2371 | @end deftypefun |
| 2372 | |
| 2373 | @comment aio.h |
| 2374 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2375 | @deftypefun int aio_write64 (struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2376 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2377 | This function is similar to the @code{aio_write} function. The only |
| 2378 | difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines the file descriptor should |
| 2379 | be opened in the large file mode. Internally @code{aio_write64} uses |
| 2380 | functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position |
| 2381 | Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the writing, |
| 2382 | as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in @code{aio_write}. |
| 2383 | |
| 2384 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2385 | function is available under the name @code{aio_write} and so transparently |
| 2386 | replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit machines. |
| 2387 | @end deftypefun |
| 2388 | |
| 2389 | Besides these functions with the more or less traditional interface, |
| 2390 | POSIX.1b also defines a function which can initiate more than one |
| 2391 | operation at a time, and which can handle freely mixed read and write |
| 2392 | operations. It is therefore similar to a combination of @code{readv} and |
| 2393 | @code{writev}. |
| 2394 | |
| 2395 | @comment aio.h |
| 2396 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2397 | @deftypefun int lio_listio (int @var{mode}, struct aiocb *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, struct sigevent *@var{sig}) |
| 2398 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2399 | @c Call lio_listio_internal, that takes the aio_requests_mutex lock and |
| 2400 | @c enqueues each request. Then, it waits for notification or prepares |
| 2401 | @c for it before releasing the lock. Even though it performs memory |
| 2402 | @c allocation and locking of its own, it doesn't add any classes of |
| 2403 | @c safety issues that aren't already covered by aio_enqueue_request. |
| 2404 | The @code{lio_listio} function can be used to enqueue an arbitrary |
| 2405 | number of read and write requests at one time. The requests can all be |
| 2406 | meant for the same file, all for different files or every solution in |
| 2407 | between. |
| 2408 | |
| 2409 | @code{lio_listio} gets the @var{nent} requests from the array pointed to |
| 2410 | by @var{list}. The operation to be performed is determined by the |
| 2411 | @code{aio_lio_opcode} member in each element of @var{list}. If this |
| 2412 | field is @code{LIO_READ} a read operation is enqueued, similar to a call |
| 2413 | of @code{aio_read} for this element of the array (except that the way |
| 2414 | the termination is signalled is different, as we will see below). If |
| 2415 | the @code{aio_lio_opcode} member is @code{LIO_WRITE} a write operation |
| 2416 | is enqueued. Otherwise the @code{aio_lio_opcode} must be @code{LIO_NOP} |
| 2417 | in which case this element of @var{list} is simply ignored. This |
| 2418 | ``operation'' is useful in situations where one has a fixed array of |
| 2419 | @code{struct aiocb} elements from which only a few need to be handled at |
| 2420 | a time. Another situation is where the @code{lio_listio} call was |
| 2421 | canceled before all requests are processed (@pxref{Cancel AIO |
| 2422 | Operations}) and the remaining requests have to be reissued. |
| 2423 | |
| 2424 | The other members of each element of the array pointed to by |
| 2425 | @code{list} must have values suitable for the operation as described in |
| 2426 | the documentation for @code{aio_read} and @code{aio_write} above. |
| 2427 | |
| 2428 | The @var{mode} argument determines how @code{lio_listio} behaves after |
| 2429 | having enqueued all the requests. If @var{mode} is @code{LIO_WAIT} it |
| 2430 | waits until all requests terminated. Otherwise @var{mode} must be |
| 2431 | @code{LIO_NOWAIT} and in this case the function returns immediately after |
| 2432 | having enqueued all the requests. In this case the caller gets a |
| 2433 | notification of the termination of all requests according to the |
| 2434 | @var{sig} parameter. If @var{sig} is @code{NULL} no notification is |
| 2435 | send. Otherwise a signal is sent or a thread is started, just as |
| 2436 | described in the description for @code{aio_read} or @code{aio_write}. |
| 2437 | |
| 2438 | If @var{mode} is @code{LIO_WAIT}, the return value of @code{lio_listio} |
| 2439 | is @math{0} when all requests completed successfully. Otherwise the |
| 2440 | function return @math{-1} and @code{errno} is set accordingly. To find |
| 2441 | out which request or requests failed one has to use the @code{aio_error} |
| 2442 | function on all the elements of the array @var{list}. |
| 2443 | |
| 2444 | In case @var{mode} is @code{LIO_NOWAIT}, the function returns @math{0} if |
| 2445 | all requests were enqueued correctly. The current state of the requests |
| 2446 | can be found using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return} as described |
| 2447 | above. If @code{lio_listio} returns @math{-1} in this mode, the |
| 2448 | global variable @code{errno} is set accordingly. If a request did not |
| 2449 | yet terminate, a call to @code{aio_error} returns @code{EINPROGRESS}. If |
| 2450 | the value is different, the request is finished and the error value (or |
| 2451 | @math{0}) is returned and the result of the operation can be retrieved |
| 2452 | using @code{aio_return}. |
| 2453 | |
| 2454 | Possible values for @code{errno} are: |
| 2455 | |
| 2456 | @table @code |
| 2457 | @item EAGAIN |
| 2458 | The resources necessary to queue all the requests are not available at |
| 2459 | the moment. The error status for each element of @var{list} must be |
| 2460 | checked to determine which request failed. |
| 2461 | |
| 2462 | Another reason could be that the system wide limit of AIO requests is |
| 2463 | exceeded. This cannot be the case for the implementation on @gnusystems{} |
| 2464 | since no arbitrary limits exist. |
| 2465 | @item EINVAL |
| 2466 | The @var{mode} parameter is invalid or @var{nent} is larger than |
| 2467 | @code{AIO_LISTIO_MAX}. |
| 2468 | @item EIO |
| 2469 | One or more of the request's I/O operations failed. The error status of |
| 2470 | each request should be checked to determine which one failed. |
| 2471 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2472 | The @code{lio_listio} function is not supported. |
| 2473 | @end table |
| 2474 | |
| 2475 | If the @var{mode} parameter is @code{LIO_NOWAIT} and the caller cancels |
| 2476 | a request, the error status for this request returned by |
| 2477 | @code{aio_error} is @code{ECANCELED}. |
| 2478 | |
| 2479 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2480 | function is in fact @code{lio_listio64} since the LFS interface |
| 2481 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2482 | @end deftypefun |
| 2483 | |
| 2484 | @comment aio.h |
| 2485 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2486 | @deftypefun int lio_listio64 (int @var{mode}, struct aiocb64 *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, struct sigevent *@var{sig}) |
| 2487 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2488 | This function is similar to the @code{lio_listio} function. The only |
| 2489 | difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines, the file descriptor should |
| 2490 | be opened in the large file mode. Internally, @code{lio_listio64} uses |
| 2491 | functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position |
| 2492 | Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the reading or |
| 2493 | writing, as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in |
| 2494 | @code{lio_listio}. |
| 2495 | |
| 2496 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2497 | function is available under the name @code{lio_listio} and so |
| 2498 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2499 | machines. |
| 2500 | @end deftypefun |
| 2501 | |
| 2502 | @node Status of AIO Operations |
| 2503 | @subsection Getting the Status of AIO Operations |
| 2504 | |
| 2505 | As already described in the documentation of the functions in the last |
| 2506 | section, it must be possible to get information about the status of an I/O |
| 2507 | request. When the operation is performed truly asynchronously (as with |
| 2508 | @code{aio_read} and @code{aio_write} and with @code{lio_listio} when the |
| 2509 | mode is @code{LIO_NOWAIT}), one sometimes needs to know whether a |
| 2510 | specific request already terminated and if so, what the result was. |
| 2511 | The following two functions allow you to get this kind of information. |
| 2512 | |
| 2513 | @comment aio.h |
| 2514 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2515 | @deftypefun int aio_error (const struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2516 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2517 | This function determines the error state of the request described by the |
| 2518 | @code{struct aiocb} variable pointed to by @var{aiocbp}. If the |
| 2519 | request has not yet terminated the value returned is always |
| 2520 | @code{EINPROGRESS}. Once the request has terminated the value |
| 2521 | @code{aio_error} returns is either @math{0} if the request completed |
| 2522 | successfully or it returns the value which would be stored in the |
| 2523 | @code{errno} variable if the request would have been done using |
| 2524 | @code{read}, @code{write}, or @code{fsync}. |
| 2525 | |
| 2526 | The function can return @code{ENOSYS} if it is not implemented. It |
| 2527 | could also return @code{EINVAL} if the @var{aiocbp} parameter does not |
| 2528 | refer to an asynchronous operation whose return status is not yet known. |
| 2529 | |
| 2530 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2531 | function is in fact @code{aio_error64} since the LFS interface |
| 2532 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2533 | @end deftypefun |
| 2534 | |
| 2535 | @comment aio.h |
| 2536 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2537 | @deftypefun int aio_error64 (const struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2538 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2539 | This function is similar to @code{aio_error} with the only difference |
| 2540 | that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct |
| 2541 | aiocb64}. |
| 2542 | |
| 2543 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2544 | function is available under the name @code{aio_error} and so |
| 2545 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2546 | machines. |
| 2547 | @end deftypefun |
| 2548 | |
| 2549 | @comment aio.h |
| 2550 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2551 | @deftypefun ssize_t aio_return (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2552 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2553 | This function can be used to retrieve the return status of the operation |
| 2554 | carried out by the request described in the variable pointed to by |
| 2555 | @var{aiocbp}. As long as the error status of this request as returned |
| 2556 | by @code{aio_error} is @code{EINPROGRESS} the return of this function is |
| 2557 | undefined. |
| 2558 | |
| 2559 | Once the request is finished this function can be used exactly once to |
| 2560 | retrieve the return value. Following calls might lead to undefined |
| 2561 | behavior. The return value itself is the value which would have been |
| 2562 | returned by the @code{read}, @code{write}, or @code{fsync} call. |
| 2563 | |
| 2564 | The function can return @code{ENOSYS} if it is not implemented. It |
| 2565 | could also return @code{EINVAL} if the @var{aiocbp} parameter does not |
| 2566 | refer to an asynchronous operation whose return status is not yet known. |
| 2567 | |
| 2568 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2569 | function is in fact @code{aio_return64} since the LFS interface |
| 2570 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2571 | @end deftypefun |
| 2572 | |
| 2573 | @comment aio.h |
| 2574 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2575 | @deftypefun ssize_t aio_return64 (struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2576 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2577 | This function is similar to @code{aio_return} with the only difference |
| 2578 | that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct |
| 2579 | aiocb64}. |
| 2580 | |
| 2581 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2582 | function is available under the name @code{aio_return} and so |
| 2583 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2584 | machines. |
| 2585 | @end deftypefun |
| 2586 | |
| 2587 | @node Synchronizing AIO Operations |
| 2588 | @subsection Getting into a Consistent State |
| 2589 | |
| 2590 | When dealing with asynchronous operations it is sometimes necessary to |
| 2591 | get into a consistent state. This would mean for AIO that one wants to |
| 2592 | know whether a certain request or a group of request were processed. |
| 2593 | This could be done by waiting for the notification sent by the system |
| 2594 | after the operation terminated, but this sometimes would mean wasting |
| 2595 | resources (mainly computation time). Instead POSIX.1b defines two |
| 2596 | functions which will help with most kinds of consistency. |
| 2597 | |
| 2598 | The @code{aio_fsync} and @code{aio_fsync64} functions are only available |
| 2599 | if the symbol @code{_POSIX_SYNCHRONIZED_IO} is defined in @file{unistd.h}. |
| 2600 | |
| 2601 | @cindex synchronizing |
| 2602 | @comment aio.h |
| 2603 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2604 | @deftypefun int aio_fsync (int @var{op}, struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2605 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2606 | @c After fcntl to check that the FD is open, it calls |
| 2607 | @c aio_enqueue_request. |
| 2608 | Calling this function forces all I/O operations operating queued at the |
| 2609 | time of the function call operating on the file descriptor |
| 2610 | @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} into the synchronized I/O completion state |
| 2611 | (@pxref{Synchronizing I/O}). The @code{aio_fsync} function returns |
| 2612 | immediately but the notification through the method described in |
| 2613 | @code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} will happen only after all requests for this |
| 2614 | file descriptor have terminated and the file is synchronized. This also |
| 2615 | means that requests for this very same file descriptor which are queued |
| 2616 | after the synchronization request are not affected. |
| 2617 | |
| 2618 | If @var{op} is @code{O_DSYNC} the synchronization happens as with a call |
| 2619 | to @code{fdatasync}. Otherwise @var{op} should be @code{O_SYNC} and |
| 2620 | the synchronization happens as with @code{fsync}. |
| 2621 | |
| 2622 | As long as the synchronization has not happened, a call to |
| 2623 | @code{aio_error} with the reference to the object pointed to by |
| 2624 | @var{aiocbp} returns @code{EINPROGRESS}. Once the synchronization is |
| 2625 | done @code{aio_error} return @math{0} if the synchronization was not |
| 2626 | successful. Otherwise the value returned is the value to which the |
| 2627 | @code{fsync} or @code{fdatasync} function would have set the |
| 2628 | @code{errno} variable. In this case nothing can be assumed about the |
| 2629 | consistency for the data written to this file descriptor. |
| 2630 | |
| 2631 | The return value of this function is @math{0} if the request was |
| 2632 | successfully enqueued. Otherwise the return value is @math{-1} and |
| 2633 | @code{errno} is set to one of the following values: |
| 2634 | |
| 2635 | @table @code |
| 2636 | @item EAGAIN |
| 2637 | The request could not be enqueued due to temporary lack of resources. |
| 2638 | @item EBADF |
| 2639 | The file descriptor @code{@var{aiocbp}->aio_fildes} is not valid. |
| 2640 | @item EINVAL |
| 2641 | The implementation does not support I/O synchronization or the @var{op} |
| 2642 | parameter is other than @code{O_DSYNC} and @code{O_SYNC}. |
| 2643 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2644 | This function is not implemented. |
| 2645 | @end table |
| 2646 | |
| 2647 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2648 | function is in fact @code{aio_fsync64} since the LFS interface |
| 2649 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2650 | @end deftypefun |
| 2651 | |
| 2652 | @comment aio.h |
| 2653 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2654 | @deftypefun int aio_fsync64 (int @var{op}, struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2655 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2656 | This function is similar to @code{aio_fsync} with the only difference |
| 2657 | that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct |
| 2658 | aiocb64}. |
| 2659 | |
| 2660 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2661 | function is available under the name @code{aio_fsync} and so |
| 2662 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2663 | machines. |
| 2664 | @end deftypefun |
| 2665 | |
| 2666 | Another method of synchronization is to wait until one or more requests of a |
| 2667 | specific set terminated. This could be achieved by the @code{aio_*} |
| 2668 | functions to notify the initiating process about the termination but in |
| 2669 | some situations this is not the ideal solution. In a program which |
| 2670 | constantly updates clients somehow connected to the server it is not |
| 2671 | always the best solution to go round robin since some connections might |
| 2672 | be slow. On the other hand letting the @code{aio_*} function notify the |
| 2673 | caller might also be not the best solution since whenever the process |
| 2674 | works on preparing data for on client it makes no sense to be |
| 2675 | interrupted by a notification since the new client will not be handled |
| 2676 | before the current client is served. For situations like this |
| 2677 | @code{aio_suspend} should be used. |
| 2678 | |
| 2679 | @comment aio.h |
| 2680 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2681 | @deftypefun int aio_suspend (const struct aiocb *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, const struct timespec *@var{timeout}) |
| 2682 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{}}} |
| 2683 | @c Take aio_requests_mutex, set up waitlist and requestlist, wait |
| 2684 | @c for completion or timeout, and release the mutex. |
| 2685 | When calling this function, the calling thread is suspended until at |
| 2686 | least one of the requests pointed to by the @var{nent} elements of the |
| 2687 | array @var{list} has completed. If any of the requests has already |
| 2688 | completed at the time @code{aio_suspend} is called, the function returns |
| 2689 | immediately. Whether a request has terminated or not is determined by |
| 2690 | comparing the error status of the request with @code{EINPROGRESS}. If |
| 2691 | an element of @var{list} is @code{NULL}, the entry is simply ignored. |
| 2692 | |
| 2693 | If no request has finished, the calling process is suspended. If |
| 2694 | @var{timeout} is @code{NULL}, the process is not woken until a request |
| 2695 | has finished. If @var{timeout} is not @code{NULL}, the process remains |
| 2696 | suspended at least as long as specified in @var{timeout}. In this case, |
| 2697 | @code{aio_suspend} returns with an error. |
| 2698 | |
| 2699 | The return value of the function is @math{0} if one or more requests |
| 2700 | from the @var{list} have terminated. Otherwise the function returns |
| 2701 | @math{-1} and @code{errno} is set to one of the following values: |
| 2702 | |
| 2703 | @table @code |
| 2704 | @item EAGAIN |
| 2705 | None of the requests from the @var{list} completed in the time specified |
| 2706 | by @var{timeout}. |
| 2707 | @item EINTR |
| 2708 | A signal interrupted the @code{aio_suspend} function. This signal might |
| 2709 | also be sent by the AIO implementation while signalling the termination |
| 2710 | of one of the requests. |
| 2711 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2712 | The @code{aio_suspend} function is not implemented. |
| 2713 | @end table |
| 2714 | |
| 2715 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2716 | function is in fact @code{aio_suspend64} since the LFS interface |
| 2717 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2718 | @end deftypefun |
| 2719 | |
| 2720 | @comment aio.h |
| 2721 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2722 | @deftypefun int aio_suspend64 (const struct aiocb64 *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, const struct timespec *@var{timeout}) |
| 2723 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{}}} |
| 2724 | This function is similar to @code{aio_suspend} with the only difference |
| 2725 | that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct |
| 2726 | aiocb64}. |
| 2727 | |
| 2728 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this |
| 2729 | function is available under the name @code{aio_suspend} and so |
| 2730 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2731 | machines. |
| 2732 | @end deftypefun |
| 2733 | |
| 2734 | @node Cancel AIO Operations |
| 2735 | @subsection Cancellation of AIO Operations |
| 2736 | |
| 2737 | When one or more requests are asynchronously processed, it might be |
| 2738 | useful in some situations to cancel a selected operation, e.g., if it |
| 2739 | becomes obvious that the written data is no longer accurate and would |
| 2740 | have to be overwritten soon. As an example, assume an application, which |
| 2741 | writes data in files in a situation where new incoming data would have |
| 2742 | to be written in a file which will be updated by an enqueued request. |
| 2743 | The POSIX AIO implementation provides such a function, but this function |
| 2744 | is not capable of forcing the cancellation of the request. It is up to the |
| 2745 | implementation to decide whether it is possible to cancel the operation |
| 2746 | or not. Therefore using this function is merely a hint. |
| 2747 | |
| 2748 | @comment aio.h |
| 2749 | @comment POSIX.1b |
| 2750 | @deftypefun int aio_cancel (int @var{fildes}, struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2751 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2752 | @c After fcntl to check the fd is open, hold aio_requests_mutex, call |
| 2753 | @c aio_find_req_fd, aio_remove_request, then aio_notify and |
| 2754 | @c aio_free_request each request before releasing the lock. |
| 2755 | @c aio_notify calls aio_notify_only and free, besides cond signal or |
| 2756 | @c similar. aio_notify_only calls pthread_attr_init, |
| 2757 | @c pthread_attr_setdetachstate, malloc, pthread_create, |
| 2758 | @c notify_func_wrapper, aio_sigqueue, getpid, raise. |
| 2759 | @c notify_func_wraper calls aio_start_notify_thread, free and then the |
| 2760 | @c notifier function. |
| 2761 | The @code{aio_cancel} function can be used to cancel one or more |
| 2762 | outstanding requests. If the @var{aiocbp} parameter is @code{NULL}, the |
| 2763 | function tries to cancel all of the outstanding requests which would process |
| 2764 | the file descriptor @var{fildes} (i.e., whose @code{aio_fildes} member |
| 2765 | is @var{fildes}). If @var{aiocbp} is not @code{NULL}, @code{aio_cancel} |
| 2766 | attempts to cancel the specific request pointed to by @var{aiocbp}. |
| 2767 | |
| 2768 | For requests which were successfully canceled, the normal notification |
| 2769 | about the termination of the request should take place. I.e., depending |
| 2770 | on the @code{struct sigevent} object which controls this, nothing |
| 2771 | happens, a signal is sent or a thread is started. If the request cannot |
| 2772 | be canceled, it terminates the usual way after performing the operation. |
| 2773 | |
| 2774 | After a request is successfully canceled, a call to @code{aio_error} with |
| 2775 | a reference to this request as the parameter will return |
| 2776 | @code{ECANCELED} and a call to @code{aio_return} will return @math{-1}. |
| 2777 | If the request wasn't canceled and is still running the error status is |
| 2778 | still @code{EINPROGRESS}. |
| 2779 | |
| 2780 | The return value of the function is @code{AIO_CANCELED} if there were |
| 2781 | requests which haven't terminated and which were successfully canceled. |
| 2782 | If there is one or more requests left which couldn't be canceled, the |
| 2783 | return value is @code{AIO_NOTCANCELED}. In this case @code{aio_error} |
| 2784 | must be used to find out which of the, perhaps multiple, requests (in |
| 2785 | @var{aiocbp} is @code{NULL}) weren't successfully canceled. If all |
| 2786 | requests already terminated at the time @code{aio_cancel} is called the |
| 2787 | return value is @code{AIO_ALLDONE}. |
| 2788 | |
| 2789 | If an error occurred during the execution of @code{aio_cancel} the |
| 2790 | function returns @math{-1} and sets @code{errno} to one of the following |
| 2791 | values. |
| 2792 | |
| 2793 | @table @code |
| 2794 | @item EBADF |
| 2795 | The file descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid. |
| 2796 | @item ENOSYS |
| 2797 | @code{aio_cancel} is not implemented. |
| 2798 | @end table |
| 2799 | |
| 2800 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2801 | function is in fact @code{aio_cancel64} since the LFS interface |
| 2802 | transparently replaces the normal implementation. |
| 2803 | @end deftypefun |
| 2804 | |
| 2805 | @comment aio.h |
| 2806 | @comment Unix98 |
| 2807 | @deftypefun int aio_cancel64 (int @var{fildes}, struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp}) |
| 2808 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{} @ascuheap{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{} @acsmem{}}} |
| 2809 | This function is similar to @code{aio_cancel} with the only difference |
| 2810 | that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct |
| 2811 | aiocb64}. |
| 2812 | |
| 2813 | When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this |
| 2814 | function is available under the name @code{aio_cancel} and so |
| 2815 | transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit |
| 2816 | machines. |
| 2817 | @end deftypefun |
| 2818 | |
| 2819 | @node Configuration of AIO |
| 2820 | @subsection How to optimize the AIO implementation |
| 2821 | |
| 2822 | The POSIX standard does not specify how the AIO functions are |
| 2823 | implemented. They could be system calls, but it is also possible to |
| 2824 | emulate them at userlevel. |
| 2825 | |
| 2826 | At the point of this writing, the available implementation is a userlevel |
| 2827 | implementation which uses threads for handling the enqueued requests. |
| 2828 | While this implementation requires making some decisions about |
| 2829 | limitations, hard limitations are something which is best avoided |
| 2830 | in @theglibc{}. Therefore, @theglibc{} provides a means |
| 2831 | for tuning the AIO implementation according to the individual use. |
| 2832 | |
| 2833 | @comment aio.h |
| 2834 | @comment GNU |
| 2835 | @deftp {Data Type} {struct aioinit} |
| 2836 | This data type is used to pass the configuration or tunable parameters |
| 2837 | to the implementation. The program has to initialize the members of |
| 2838 | this struct and pass it to the implementation using the @code{aio_init} |
| 2839 | function. |
| 2840 | |
| 2841 | @table @code |
| 2842 | @item int aio_threads |
| 2843 | This member specifies the maximal number of threads which may be used |
| 2844 | at any one time. |
| 2845 | @item int aio_num |
| 2846 | This number provides an estimate on the maximal number of simultaneously |
| 2847 | enqueued requests. |
| 2848 | @item int aio_locks |
| 2849 | Unused. |
| 2850 | @item int aio_usedba |
| 2851 | Unused. |
| 2852 | @item int aio_debug |
| 2853 | Unused. |
| 2854 | @item int aio_numusers |
| 2855 | Unused. |
| 2856 | @item int aio_reserved[2] |
| 2857 | Unused. |
| 2858 | @end table |
| 2859 | @end deftp |
| 2860 | |
| 2861 | @comment aio.h |
| 2862 | @comment GNU |
| 2863 | @deftypefun void aio_init (const struct aioinit *@var{init}) |
| 2864 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@asunsafe{@asulock{}}@acunsafe{@aculock{}}} |
| 2865 | @c All changes to global objects are guarded by aio_requests_mutex. |
| 2866 | This function must be called before any other AIO function. Calling it |
| 2867 | is completely voluntary, as it is only meant to help the AIO |
| 2868 | implementation perform better. |
| 2869 | |
| 2870 | Before calling the @code{aio_init}, function the members of a variable of |
| 2871 | type @code{struct aioinit} must be initialized. Then a reference to |
| 2872 | this variable is passed as the parameter to @code{aio_init} which itself |
| 2873 | may or may not pay attention to the hints. |
| 2874 | |
| 2875 | The function has no return value and no error cases are defined. It is |
| 2876 | a extension which follows a proposal from the SGI implementation in |
| 2877 | @w{Irix 6}. It is not covered by POSIX.1b or Unix98. |
| 2878 | @end deftypefun |
| 2879 | |
| 2880 | @node Control Operations |
| 2881 | @section Control Operations on Files |
| 2882 | |
| 2883 | @cindex control operations on files |
| 2884 | @cindex @code{fcntl} function |
| 2885 | This section describes how you can perform various other operations on |
| 2886 | file descriptors, such as inquiring about or setting flags describing |
| 2887 | the status of the file descriptor, manipulating record locks, and the |
| 2888 | like. All of these operations are performed by the function @code{fcntl}. |
| 2889 | |
| 2890 | The second argument to the @code{fcntl} function is a command that |
| 2891 | specifies which operation to perform. The function and macros that name |
| 2892 | various flags that are used with it are declared in the header file |
| 2893 | @file{fcntl.h}. Many of these flags are also used by the @code{open} |
| 2894 | function; see @ref{Opening and Closing Files}. |
| 2895 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 2896 | |
| 2897 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 2898 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 2899 | @deftypefun int fcntl (int @var{filedes}, int @var{command}, @dots{}) |
| 2900 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2901 | The @code{fcntl} function performs the operation specified by |
| 2902 | @var{command} on the file descriptor @var{filedes}. Some commands |
| 2903 | require additional arguments to be supplied. These additional arguments |
| 2904 | and the return value and error conditions are given in the detailed |
| 2905 | descriptions of the individual commands. |
| 2906 | |
| 2907 | Briefly, here is a list of what the various commands are. |
| 2908 | |
| 2909 | @table @code |
| 2910 | @item F_DUPFD |
| 2911 | Duplicate the file descriptor (return another file descriptor pointing |
| 2912 | to the same open file). @xref{Duplicating Descriptors}. |
| 2913 | |
| 2914 | @item F_GETFD |
| 2915 | Get flags associated with the file descriptor. @xref{Descriptor Flags}. |
| 2916 | |
| 2917 | @item F_SETFD |
| 2918 | Set flags associated with the file descriptor. @xref{Descriptor Flags}. |
| 2919 | |
| 2920 | @item F_GETFL |
| 2921 | Get flags associated with the open file. @xref{File Status Flags}. |
| 2922 | |
| 2923 | @item F_SETFL |
| 2924 | Set flags associated with the open file. @xref{File Status Flags}. |
| 2925 | |
| 2926 | @item F_GETLK |
| 2927 | Test a file lock. @xref{File Locks}. |
| 2928 | |
| 2929 | @item F_SETLK |
| 2930 | Set or clear a file lock. @xref{File Locks}. |
| 2931 | |
| 2932 | @item F_SETLKW |
| 2933 | Like @code{F_SETLK}, but wait for completion. @xref{File Locks}. |
| 2934 | |
| 2935 | @item F_OFD_GETLK |
| 2936 | Test an open file description lock. @xref{Open File Description Locks}. |
| 2937 | Specific to Linux. |
| 2938 | |
| 2939 | @item F_OFD_SETLK |
| 2940 | Set or clear an open file description lock. @xref{Open File Description Locks}. |
| 2941 | Specific to Linux. |
| 2942 | |
| 2943 | @item F_OFD_SETLKW |
| 2944 | Like @code{F_OFD_SETLK}, but block until lock is acquired. |
| 2945 | @xref{Open File Description Locks}. Specific to Linux. |
| 2946 | |
| 2947 | @item F_GETOWN |
| 2948 | Get process or process group ID to receive @code{SIGIO} signals. |
| 2949 | @xref{Interrupt Input}. |
| 2950 | |
| 2951 | @item F_SETOWN |
| 2952 | Set process or process group ID to receive @code{SIGIO} signals. |
| 2953 | @xref{Interrupt Input}. |
| 2954 | @end table |
| 2955 | |
| 2956 | This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This |
| 2957 | is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file |
| 2958 | descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{fcntl} is |
| 2959 | called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated |
| 2960 | until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{fcntl} should be |
| 2961 | protected using cancellation handlers. |
| 2962 | @c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop |
| 2963 | @end deftypefun |
| 2964 | |
| 2965 | |
| 2966 | @node Duplicating Descriptors |
| 2967 | @section Duplicating Descriptors |
| 2968 | |
| 2969 | @cindex duplicating file descriptors |
| 2970 | @cindex redirecting input and output |
| 2971 | |
| 2972 | You can @dfn{duplicate} a file descriptor, or allocate another file |
| 2973 | descriptor that refers to the same open file as the original. Duplicate |
| 2974 | descriptors share one file position and one set of file status flags |
| 2975 | (@pxref{File Status Flags}), but each has its own set of file descriptor |
| 2976 | flags (@pxref{Descriptor Flags}). |
| 2977 | |
| 2978 | The major use of duplicating a file descriptor is to implement |
| 2979 | @dfn{redirection} of input or output: that is, to change the |
| 2980 | file or pipe that a particular file descriptor corresponds to. |
| 2981 | |
| 2982 | You can perform this operation using the @code{fcntl} function with the |
| 2983 | @code{F_DUPFD} command, but there are also convenient functions |
| 2984 | @code{dup} and @code{dup2} for duplicating descriptors. |
| 2985 | |
| 2986 | @pindex unistd.h |
| 2987 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 2988 | The @code{fcntl} function and flags are declared in @file{fcntl.h}, |
| 2989 | while prototypes for @code{dup} and @code{dup2} are in the header file |
| 2990 | @file{unistd.h}. |
| 2991 | |
| 2992 | @comment unistd.h |
| 2993 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 2994 | @deftypefun int dup (int @var{old}) |
| 2995 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 2996 | This function copies descriptor @var{old} to the first available |
| 2997 | descriptor number (the first number not currently open). It is |
| 2998 | equivalent to @code{fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, 0)}. |
| 2999 | @end deftypefun |
| 3000 | |
| 3001 | @comment unistd.h |
| 3002 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3003 | @deftypefun int dup2 (int @var{old}, int @var{new}) |
| 3004 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 3005 | This function copies the descriptor @var{old} to descriptor number |
| 3006 | @var{new}. |
| 3007 | |
| 3008 | If @var{old} is an invalid descriptor, then @code{dup2} does nothing; it |
| 3009 | does not close @var{new}. Otherwise, the new duplicate of @var{old} |
| 3010 | replaces any previous meaning of descriptor @var{new}, as if @var{new} |
| 3011 | were closed first. |
| 3012 | |
| 3013 | If @var{old} and @var{new} are different numbers, and @var{old} is a |
| 3014 | valid descriptor number, then @code{dup2} is equivalent to: |
| 3015 | |
| 3016 | @smallexample |
| 3017 | close (@var{new}); |
| 3018 | fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, @var{new}) |
| 3019 | @end smallexample |
| 3020 | |
| 3021 | However, @code{dup2} does this atomically; there is no instant in the |
| 3022 | middle of calling @code{dup2} at which @var{new} is closed and not yet a |
| 3023 | duplicate of @var{old}. |
| 3024 | @end deftypefun |
| 3025 | |
| 3026 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3027 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3028 | @deftypevr Macro int F_DUPFD |
| 3029 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3030 | copy the file descriptor given as the first argument. |
| 3031 | |
| 3032 | The form of the call in this case is: |
| 3033 | |
| 3034 | @smallexample |
| 3035 | fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, @var{next-filedes}) |
| 3036 | @end smallexample |
| 3037 | |
| 3038 | The @var{next-filedes} argument is of type @code{int} and specifies that |
| 3039 | the file descriptor returned should be the next available one greater |
| 3040 | than or equal to this value. |
| 3041 | |
| 3042 | The return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is normally the value |
| 3043 | of the new file descriptor. A return value of @math{-1} indicates an |
| 3044 | error. The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for |
| 3045 | this command: |
| 3046 | |
| 3047 | @table @code |
| 3048 | @item EBADF |
| 3049 | The @var{old} argument is invalid. |
| 3050 | |
| 3051 | @item EINVAL |
| 3052 | The @var{next-filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 3053 | |
| 3054 | @item EMFILE |
| 3055 | There are no more file descriptors available---your program is already |
| 3056 | using the maximum. In BSD and GNU, the maximum is controlled by a |
| 3057 | resource limit that can be changed; @pxref{Limits on Resources}, for |
| 3058 | more information about the @code{RLIMIT_NOFILE} limit. |
| 3059 | @end table |
| 3060 | |
| 3061 | @code{ENFILE} is not a possible error code for @code{dup2} because |
| 3062 | @code{dup2} does not create a new opening of a file; duplicate |
| 3063 | descriptors do not count toward the limit which @code{ENFILE} |
| 3064 | indicates. @code{EMFILE} is possible because it refers to the limit on |
| 3065 | distinct descriptor numbers in use in one process. |
| 3066 | @end deftypevr |
| 3067 | |
| 3068 | Here is an example showing how to use @code{dup2} to do redirection. |
| 3069 | Typically, redirection of the standard streams (like @code{stdin}) is |
| 3070 | done by a shell or shell-like program before calling one of the |
| 3071 | @code{exec} functions (@pxref{Executing a File}) to execute a new |
| 3072 | program in a child process. When the new program is executed, it |
| 3073 | creates and initializes the standard streams to point to the |
| 3074 | corresponding file descriptors, before its @code{main} function is |
| 3075 | invoked. |
| 3076 | |
| 3077 | So, to redirect standard input to a file, the shell could do something |
| 3078 | like: |
| 3079 | |
| 3080 | @smallexample |
| 3081 | pid = fork (); |
| 3082 | if (pid == 0) |
| 3083 | @{ |
| 3084 | char *filename; |
| 3085 | char *program; |
| 3086 | int file; |
| 3087 | @dots{} |
| 3088 | file = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (open (filename, O_RDONLY)); |
| 3089 | dup2 (file, STDIN_FILENO); |
| 3090 | TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (close (file)); |
| 3091 | execv (program, NULL); |
| 3092 | @} |
| 3093 | @end smallexample |
| 3094 | |
| 3095 | There is also a more detailed example showing how to implement redirection |
| 3096 | in the context of a pipeline of processes in @ref{Launching Jobs}. |
| 3097 | |
| 3098 | |
| 3099 | @node Descriptor Flags |
| 3100 | @section File Descriptor Flags |
| 3101 | @cindex file descriptor flags |
| 3102 | |
| 3103 | @dfn{File descriptor flags} are miscellaneous attributes of a file |
| 3104 | descriptor. These flags are associated with particular file |
| 3105 | descriptors, so that if you have created duplicate file descriptors |
| 3106 | from a single opening of a file, each descriptor has its own set of flags. |
| 3107 | |
| 3108 | Currently there is just one file descriptor flag: @code{FD_CLOEXEC}, |
| 3109 | which causes the descriptor to be closed if you use any of the |
| 3110 | @code{exec@dots{}} functions (@pxref{Executing a File}). |
| 3111 | |
| 3112 | The symbols in this section are defined in the header file |
| 3113 | @file{fcntl.h}. |
| 3114 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 3115 | |
| 3116 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3117 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3118 | @deftypevr Macro int F_GETFD |
| 3119 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3120 | specify that it should return the file descriptor flags associated |
| 3121 | with the @var{filedes} argument. |
| 3122 | |
| 3123 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is a |
| 3124 | nonnegative number which can be interpreted as the bitwise OR of the |
| 3125 | individual flags (except that currently there is only one flag to use). |
| 3126 | |
| 3127 | In case of an error, @code{fcntl} returns @math{-1}. The following |
| 3128 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command: |
| 3129 | |
| 3130 | @table @code |
| 3131 | @item EBADF |
| 3132 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 3133 | @end table |
| 3134 | @end deftypevr |
| 3135 | |
| 3136 | |
| 3137 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3138 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3139 | @deftypevr Macro int F_SETFD |
| 3140 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3141 | specify that it should set the file descriptor flags associated with the |
| 3142 | @var{filedes} argument. This requires a third @code{int} argument to |
| 3143 | specify the new flags, so the form of the call is: |
| 3144 | |
| 3145 | @smallexample |
| 3146 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETFD, @var{new-flags}) |
| 3147 | @end smallexample |
| 3148 | |
| 3149 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an |
| 3150 | unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which indicates an error. |
| 3151 | The flags and error conditions are the same as for the @code{F_GETFD} |
| 3152 | command. |
| 3153 | @end deftypevr |
| 3154 | |
| 3155 | The following macro is defined for use as a file descriptor flag with |
| 3156 | the @code{fcntl} function. The value is an integer constant usable |
| 3157 | as a bit mask value. |
| 3158 | |
| 3159 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3160 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3161 | @deftypevr Macro int FD_CLOEXEC |
| 3162 | @cindex close-on-exec (file descriptor flag) |
| 3163 | This flag specifies that the file descriptor should be closed when |
| 3164 | an @code{exec} function is invoked; see @ref{Executing a File}. When |
| 3165 | a file descriptor is allocated (as with @code{open} or @code{dup}), |
| 3166 | this bit is initially cleared on the new file descriptor, meaning that |
| 3167 | descriptor will survive into the new program after @code{exec}. |
| 3168 | @end deftypevr |
| 3169 | |
| 3170 | If you want to modify the file descriptor flags, you should get the |
| 3171 | current flags with @code{F_GETFD} and modify the value. Don't assume |
| 3172 | that the flags listed here are the only ones that are implemented; your |
| 3173 | program may be run years from now and more flags may exist then. For |
| 3174 | example, here is a function to set or clear the flag @code{FD_CLOEXEC} |
| 3175 | without altering any other flags: |
| 3176 | |
| 3177 | @smallexample |
| 3178 | /* @r{Set the @code{FD_CLOEXEC} flag of @var{desc} if @var{value} is nonzero,} |
| 3179 | @r{or clear the flag if @var{value} is 0.} |
| 3180 | @r{Return 0 on success, or -1 on error with @code{errno} set.} */ |
| 3181 | |
| 3182 | int |
| 3183 | set_cloexec_flag (int desc, int value) |
| 3184 | @{ |
| 3185 | int oldflags = fcntl (desc, F_GETFD, 0); |
| 3186 | /* @r{If reading the flags failed, return error indication now.} */ |
| 3187 | if (oldflags < 0) |
| 3188 | return oldflags; |
| 3189 | /* @r{Set just the flag we want to set.} */ |
| 3190 | if (value != 0) |
| 3191 | oldflags |= FD_CLOEXEC; |
| 3192 | else |
| 3193 | oldflags &= ~FD_CLOEXEC; |
| 3194 | /* @r{Store modified flag word in the descriptor.} */ |
| 3195 | return fcntl (desc, F_SETFD, oldflags); |
| 3196 | @} |
| 3197 | @end smallexample |
| 3198 | |
| 3199 | @node File Status Flags |
| 3200 | @section File Status Flags |
| 3201 | @cindex file status flags |
| 3202 | |
| 3203 | @dfn{File status flags} are used to specify attributes of the opening of a |
| 3204 | file. Unlike the file descriptor flags discussed in @ref{Descriptor |
| 3205 | Flags}, the file status flags are shared by duplicated file descriptors |
| 3206 | resulting from a single opening of the file. The file status flags are |
| 3207 | specified with the @var{flags} argument to @code{open}; |
| 3208 | @pxref{Opening and Closing Files}. |
| 3209 | |
| 3210 | File status flags fall into three categories, which are described in the |
| 3211 | following sections. |
| 3212 | |
| 3213 | @itemize @bullet |
| 3214 | @item |
| 3215 | @ref{Access Modes}, specify what type of access is allowed to the |
| 3216 | file: reading, writing, or both. They are set by @code{open} and are |
| 3217 | returned by @code{fcntl}, but cannot be changed. |
| 3218 | |
| 3219 | @item |
| 3220 | @ref{Open-time Flags}, control details of what @code{open} will do. |
| 3221 | These flags are not preserved after the @code{open} call. |
| 3222 | |
| 3223 | @item |
| 3224 | @ref{Operating Modes}, affect how operations such as @code{read} and |
| 3225 | @code{write} are done. They are set by @code{open}, and can be fetched or |
| 3226 | changed with @code{fcntl}. |
| 3227 | @end itemize |
| 3228 | |
| 3229 | The symbols in this section are defined in the header file |
| 3230 | @file{fcntl.h}. |
| 3231 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 3232 | |
| 3233 | @menu |
| 3234 | * Access Modes:: Whether the descriptor can read or write. |
| 3235 | * Open-time Flags:: Details of @code{open}. |
| 3236 | * Operating Modes:: Special modes to control I/O operations. |
| 3237 | * Getting File Status Flags:: Fetching and changing these flags. |
| 3238 | @end menu |
| 3239 | |
| 3240 | @node Access Modes |
| 3241 | @subsection File Access Modes |
| 3242 | |
| 3243 | The file access modes allow a file descriptor to be used for reading, |
| 3244 | writing, or both. (On @gnuhurdsystems{}, they can also allow none of these, |
| 3245 | and allow execution of the file as a program.) The access modes are chosen |
| 3246 | when the file is opened, and never change. |
| 3247 | |
| 3248 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3249 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3250 | @deftypevr Macro int O_RDONLY |
| 3251 | Open the file for read access. |
| 3252 | @end deftypevr |
| 3253 | |
| 3254 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3255 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3256 | @deftypevr Macro int O_WRONLY |
| 3257 | Open the file for write access. |
| 3258 | @end deftypevr |
| 3259 | |
| 3260 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3261 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3262 | @deftypevr Macro int O_RDWR |
| 3263 | Open the file for both reading and writing. |
| 3264 | @end deftypevr |
| 3265 | |
| 3266 | On @gnuhurdsystems{} (and not on other systems), @code{O_RDONLY} and |
| 3267 | @code{O_WRONLY} are independent bits that can be bitwise-ORed together, |
| 3268 | and it is valid for either bit to be set or clear. This means that |
| 3269 | @code{O_RDWR} is the same as @code{O_RDONLY|O_WRONLY}. A file access |
| 3270 | mode of zero is permissible; it allows no operations that do input or |
| 3271 | output to the file, but does allow other operations such as |
| 3272 | @code{fchmod}. On @gnuhurdsystems{}, since ``read-only'' or ``write-only'' |
| 3273 | is a misnomer, @file{fcntl.h} defines additional names for the file |
| 3274 | access modes. These names are preferred when writing GNU-specific code. |
| 3275 | But most programs will want to be portable to other POSIX.1 systems and |
| 3276 | should use the POSIX.1 names above instead. |
| 3277 | |
| 3278 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3279 | @comment GNU |
| 3280 | @deftypevr Macro int O_READ |
| 3281 | Open the file for reading. Same as @code{O_RDONLY}; only defined on GNU. |
| 3282 | @end deftypevr |
| 3283 | |
| 3284 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3285 | @comment GNU |
| 3286 | @deftypevr Macro int O_WRITE |
| 3287 | Open the file for writing. Same as @code{O_WRONLY}; only defined on GNU. |
| 3288 | @end deftypevr |
| 3289 | |
| 3290 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3291 | @comment GNU |
| 3292 | @deftypevr Macro int O_EXEC |
| 3293 | Open the file for executing. Only defined on GNU. |
| 3294 | @end deftypevr |
| 3295 | |
| 3296 | To determine the file access mode with @code{fcntl}, you must extract |
| 3297 | the access mode bits from the retrieved file status flags. On |
| 3298 | @gnuhurdsystems{}, |
| 3299 | you can just test the @code{O_READ} and @code{O_WRITE} bits in |
| 3300 | the flags word. But in other POSIX.1 systems, reading and writing |
| 3301 | access modes are not stored as distinct bit flags. The portable way to |
| 3302 | extract the file access mode bits is with @code{O_ACCMODE}. |
| 3303 | |
| 3304 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3305 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3306 | @deftypevr Macro int O_ACCMODE |
| 3307 | This macro stands for a mask that can be bitwise-ANDed with the file |
| 3308 | status flag value to produce a value representing the file access mode. |
| 3309 | The mode will be @code{O_RDONLY}, @code{O_WRONLY}, or @code{O_RDWR}. |
| 3310 | (On @gnuhurdsystems{} it could also be zero, and it never includes the |
| 3311 | @code{O_EXEC} bit.) |
| 3312 | @end deftypevr |
| 3313 | |
| 3314 | @node Open-time Flags |
| 3315 | @subsection Open-time Flags |
| 3316 | |
| 3317 | The open-time flags specify options affecting how @code{open} will behave. |
| 3318 | These options are not preserved once the file is open. The exception to |
| 3319 | this is @code{O_NONBLOCK}, which is also an I/O operating mode and so it |
| 3320 | @emph{is} saved. @xref{Opening and Closing Files}, for how to call |
| 3321 | @code{open}. |
| 3322 | |
| 3323 | There are two sorts of options specified by open-time flags. |
| 3324 | |
| 3325 | @itemize @bullet |
| 3326 | @item |
| 3327 | @dfn{File name translation flags} affect how @code{open} looks up the |
| 3328 | file name to locate the file, and whether the file can be created. |
| 3329 | @cindex file name translation flags |
| 3330 | @cindex flags, file name translation |
| 3331 | |
| 3332 | @item |
| 3333 | @dfn{Open-time action flags} specify extra operations that @code{open} will |
| 3334 | perform on the file once it is open. |
| 3335 | @cindex open-time action flags |
| 3336 | @cindex flags, open-time action |
| 3337 | @end itemize |
| 3338 | |
| 3339 | Here are the file name translation flags. |
| 3340 | |
| 3341 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3342 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3343 | @deftypevr Macro int O_CREAT |
| 3344 | If set, the file will be created if it doesn't already exist. |
| 3345 | @c !!! mode arg, umask |
| 3346 | @cindex create on open (file status flag) |
| 3347 | @end deftypevr |
| 3348 | |
| 3349 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3350 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3351 | @deftypevr Macro int O_EXCL |
| 3352 | If both @code{O_CREAT} and @code{O_EXCL} are set, then @code{open} fails |
| 3353 | if the specified file already exists. This is guaranteed to never |
| 3354 | clobber an existing file. |
| 3355 | @end deftypevr |
| 3356 | |
| 3357 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3358 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3359 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NONBLOCK |
| 3360 | @cindex non-blocking open |
| 3361 | This prevents @code{open} from blocking for a ``long time'' to open the |
| 3362 | file. This is only meaningful for some kinds of files, usually devices |
| 3363 | such as serial ports; when it is not meaningful, it is harmless and |
| 3364 | ignored. Often opening a port to a modem blocks until the modem reports |
| 3365 | carrier detection; if @code{O_NONBLOCK} is specified, @code{open} will |
| 3366 | return immediately without a carrier. |
| 3367 | |
| 3368 | Note that the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is overloaded as both an I/O operating |
| 3369 | mode and a file name translation flag. This means that specifying |
| 3370 | @code{O_NONBLOCK} in @code{open} also sets nonblocking I/O mode; |
| 3371 | @pxref{Operating Modes}. To open the file without blocking but do normal |
| 3372 | I/O that blocks, you must call @code{open} with @code{O_NONBLOCK} set and |
| 3373 | then call @code{fcntl} to turn the bit off. |
| 3374 | @end deftypevr |
| 3375 | |
| 3376 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3377 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3378 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NOCTTY |
| 3379 | If the named file is a terminal device, don't make it the controlling |
| 3380 | terminal for the process. @xref{Job Control}, for information about |
| 3381 | what it means to be the controlling terminal. |
| 3382 | |
| 3383 | On @gnuhurdsystems{} and 4.4 BSD, opening a file never makes it the |
| 3384 | controlling terminal and @code{O_NOCTTY} is zero. However, @gnulinuxsystems{} |
| 3385 | and some other systems use a nonzero value for @code{O_NOCTTY} and set the |
| 3386 | controlling terminal when you open a file that is a terminal device; so |
| 3387 | to be portable, use @code{O_NOCTTY} when it is important to avoid this. |
| 3388 | @cindex controlling terminal, setting |
| 3389 | @end deftypevr |
| 3390 | |
| 3391 | The following three file name translation flags exist only on |
| 3392 | @gnuhurdsystems{}. |
| 3393 | |
| 3394 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3395 | @comment GNU |
| 3396 | @deftypevr Macro int O_IGNORE_CTTY |
| 3397 | Do not recognize the named file as the controlling terminal, even if it |
| 3398 | refers to the process's existing controlling terminal device. Operations |
| 3399 | on the new file descriptor will never induce job control signals. |
| 3400 | @xref{Job Control}. |
| 3401 | @end deftypevr |
| 3402 | |
| 3403 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3404 | @comment GNU |
| 3405 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NOLINK |
| 3406 | If the named file is a symbolic link, open the link itself instead of |
| 3407 | the file it refers to. (@code{fstat} on the new file descriptor will |
| 3408 | return the information returned by @code{lstat} on the link's name.) |
| 3409 | @cindex symbolic link, opening |
| 3410 | @end deftypevr |
| 3411 | |
| 3412 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3413 | @comment GNU |
| 3414 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NOTRANS |
| 3415 | If the named file is specially translated, do not invoke the translator. |
| 3416 | Open the bare file the translator itself sees. |
| 3417 | @end deftypevr |
| 3418 | |
| 3419 | |
| 3420 | The open-time action flags tell @code{open} to do additional operations |
| 3421 | which are not really related to opening the file. The reason to do them |
| 3422 | as part of @code{open} instead of in separate calls is that @code{open} |
| 3423 | can do them @i{atomically}. |
| 3424 | |
| 3425 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3426 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3427 | @deftypevr Macro int O_TRUNC |
| 3428 | Truncate the file to zero length. This option is only useful for |
| 3429 | regular files, not special files such as directories or FIFOs. POSIX.1 |
| 3430 | requires that you open the file for writing to use @code{O_TRUNC}. In |
| 3431 | BSD and GNU you must have permission to write the file to truncate it, |
| 3432 | but you need not open for write access. |
| 3433 | |
| 3434 | This is the only open-time action flag specified by POSIX.1. There is |
| 3435 | no good reason for truncation to be done by @code{open}, instead of by |
| 3436 | calling @code{ftruncate} afterwards. The @code{O_TRUNC} flag existed in |
| 3437 | Unix before @code{ftruncate} was invented, and is retained for backward |
| 3438 | compatibility. |
| 3439 | @end deftypevr |
| 3440 | |
| 3441 | The remaining operating modes are BSD extensions. They exist only |
| 3442 | on some systems. On other systems, these macros are not defined. |
| 3443 | |
| 3444 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3445 | @comment BSD |
| 3446 | @deftypevr Macro int O_SHLOCK |
| 3447 | Acquire a shared lock on the file, as with @code{flock}. |
| 3448 | @xref{File Locks}. |
| 3449 | |
| 3450 | If @code{O_CREAT} is specified, the locking is done atomically when |
| 3451 | creating the file. You are guaranteed that no other process will get |
| 3452 | the lock on the new file first. |
| 3453 | @end deftypevr |
| 3454 | |
| 3455 | @comment fcntl.h (optional) |
| 3456 | @comment BSD |
| 3457 | @deftypevr Macro int O_EXLOCK |
| 3458 | Acquire an exclusive lock on the file, as with @code{flock}. |
| 3459 | @xref{File Locks}. This is atomic like @code{O_SHLOCK}. |
| 3460 | @end deftypevr |
| 3461 | |
| 3462 | @node Operating Modes |
| 3463 | @subsection I/O Operating Modes |
| 3464 | |
| 3465 | The operating modes affect how input and output operations using a file |
| 3466 | descriptor work. These flags are set by @code{open} and can be fetched |
| 3467 | and changed with @code{fcntl}. |
| 3468 | |
| 3469 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3470 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3471 | @deftypevr Macro int O_APPEND |
| 3472 | The bit that enables append mode for the file. If set, then all |
| 3473 | @code{write} operations write the data at the end of the file, extending |
| 3474 | it, regardless of the current file position. This is the only reliable |
| 3475 | way to append to a file. In append mode, you are guaranteed that the |
| 3476 | data you write will always go to the current end of the file, regardless |
| 3477 | of other processes writing to the file. Conversely, if you simply set |
| 3478 | the file position to the end of file and write, then another process can |
| 3479 | extend the file after you set the file position but before you write, |
| 3480 | resulting in your data appearing someplace before the real end of file. |
| 3481 | @end deftypevr |
| 3482 | |
| 3483 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3484 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3485 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NONBLOCK |
| 3486 | The bit that enables nonblocking mode for the file. If this bit is set, |
| 3487 | @code{read} requests on the file can return immediately with a failure |
| 3488 | status if there is no input immediately available, instead of blocking. |
| 3489 | Likewise, @code{write} requests can also return immediately with a |
| 3490 | failure status if the output can't be written immediately. |
| 3491 | |
| 3492 | Note that the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is overloaded as both an I/O |
| 3493 | operating mode and a file name translation flag; @pxref{Open-time Flags}. |
| 3494 | @end deftypevr |
| 3495 | |
| 3496 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3497 | @comment BSD |
| 3498 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NDELAY |
| 3499 | This is an obsolete name for @code{O_NONBLOCK}, provided for |
| 3500 | compatibility with BSD. It is not defined by the POSIX.1 standard. |
| 3501 | @end deftypevr |
| 3502 | |
| 3503 | The remaining operating modes are BSD and GNU extensions. They exist only |
| 3504 | on some systems. On other systems, these macros are not defined. |
| 3505 | |
| 3506 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3507 | @comment BSD |
| 3508 | @deftypevr Macro int O_ASYNC |
| 3509 | The bit that enables asynchronous input mode. If set, then @code{SIGIO} |
| 3510 | signals will be generated when input is available. @xref{Interrupt Input}. |
| 3511 | |
| 3512 | Asynchronous input mode is a BSD feature. |
| 3513 | @end deftypevr |
| 3514 | |
| 3515 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3516 | @comment BSD |
| 3517 | @deftypevr Macro int O_FSYNC |
| 3518 | The bit that enables synchronous writing for the file. If set, each |
| 3519 | @code{write} call will make sure the data is reliably stored on disk before |
| 3520 | returning. @c !!! xref fsync |
| 3521 | |
| 3522 | Synchronous writing is a BSD feature. |
| 3523 | @end deftypevr |
| 3524 | |
| 3525 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3526 | @comment BSD |
| 3527 | @deftypevr Macro int O_SYNC |
| 3528 | This is another name for @code{O_FSYNC}. They have the same value. |
| 3529 | @end deftypevr |
| 3530 | |
| 3531 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3532 | @comment GNU |
| 3533 | @deftypevr Macro int O_NOATIME |
| 3534 | If this bit is set, @code{read} will not update the access time of the |
| 3535 | file. @xref{File Times}. This is used by programs that do backups, so |
| 3536 | that backing a file up does not count as reading it. |
| 3537 | Only the owner of the file or the superuser may use this bit. |
| 3538 | |
| 3539 | This is a GNU extension. |
| 3540 | @end deftypevr |
| 3541 | |
| 3542 | @node Getting File Status Flags |
| 3543 | @subsection Getting and Setting File Status Flags |
| 3544 | |
| 3545 | The @code{fcntl} function can fetch or change file status flags. |
| 3546 | |
| 3547 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3548 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3549 | @deftypevr Macro int F_GETFL |
| 3550 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3551 | read the file status flags for the open file with descriptor |
| 3552 | @var{filedes}. |
| 3553 | |
| 3554 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is a |
| 3555 | nonnegative number which can be interpreted as the bitwise OR of the |
| 3556 | individual flags. Since the file access modes are not single-bit values, |
| 3557 | you can mask off other bits in the returned flags with @code{O_ACCMODE} |
| 3558 | to compare them. |
| 3559 | |
| 3560 | In case of an error, @code{fcntl} returns @math{-1}. The following |
| 3561 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command: |
| 3562 | |
| 3563 | @table @code |
| 3564 | @item EBADF |
| 3565 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 3566 | @end table |
| 3567 | @end deftypevr |
| 3568 | |
| 3569 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3570 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3571 | @deftypevr Macro int F_SETFL |
| 3572 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to set |
| 3573 | the file status flags for the open file corresponding to the |
| 3574 | @var{filedes} argument. This command requires a third @code{int} |
| 3575 | argument to specify the new flags, so the call looks like this: |
| 3576 | |
| 3577 | @smallexample |
| 3578 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETFL, @var{new-flags}) |
| 3579 | @end smallexample |
| 3580 | |
| 3581 | You can't change the access mode for the file in this way; that is, |
| 3582 | whether the file descriptor was opened for reading or writing. |
| 3583 | |
| 3584 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an |
| 3585 | unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which indicates an error. The |
| 3586 | error conditions are the same as for the @code{F_GETFL} command. |
| 3587 | @end deftypevr |
| 3588 | |
| 3589 | If you want to modify the file status flags, you should get the current |
| 3590 | flags with @code{F_GETFL} and modify the value. Don't assume that the |
| 3591 | flags listed here are the only ones that are implemented; your program |
| 3592 | may be run years from now and more flags may exist then. For example, |
| 3593 | here is a function to set or clear the flag @code{O_NONBLOCK} without |
| 3594 | altering any other flags: |
| 3595 | |
| 3596 | @smallexample |
| 3597 | @group |
| 3598 | /* @r{Set the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag of @var{desc} if @var{value} is nonzero,} |
| 3599 | @r{or clear the flag if @var{value} is 0.} |
| 3600 | @r{Return 0 on success, or -1 on error with @code{errno} set.} */ |
| 3601 | |
| 3602 | int |
| 3603 | set_nonblock_flag (int desc, int value) |
| 3604 | @{ |
| 3605 | int oldflags = fcntl (desc, F_GETFL, 0); |
| 3606 | /* @r{If reading the flags failed, return error indication now.} */ |
| 3607 | if (oldflags == -1) |
| 3608 | return -1; |
| 3609 | /* @r{Set just the flag we want to set.} */ |
| 3610 | if (value != 0) |
| 3611 | oldflags |= O_NONBLOCK; |
| 3612 | else |
| 3613 | oldflags &= ~O_NONBLOCK; |
| 3614 | /* @r{Store modified flag word in the descriptor.} */ |
| 3615 | return fcntl (desc, F_SETFL, oldflags); |
| 3616 | @} |
| 3617 | @end group |
| 3618 | @end smallexample |
| 3619 | |
| 3620 | @node File Locks |
| 3621 | @section File Locks |
| 3622 | |
| 3623 | @cindex file locks |
| 3624 | @cindex record locking |
| 3625 | This section describes record locks that are associated with the process. |
| 3626 | There is also a different type of record lock that is associated with the |
| 3627 | open file description instead of the process. @xref{Open File Description Locks}. |
| 3628 | |
| 3629 | The remaining @code{fcntl} commands are used to support @dfn{record |
| 3630 | locking}, which permits multiple cooperating programs to prevent each |
| 3631 | other from simultaneously accessing parts of a file in error-prone |
| 3632 | ways. |
| 3633 | |
| 3634 | @cindex exclusive lock |
| 3635 | @cindex write lock |
| 3636 | An @dfn{exclusive} or @dfn{write} lock gives a process exclusive access |
| 3637 | for writing to the specified part of the file. While a write lock is in |
| 3638 | place, no other process can lock that part of the file. |
| 3639 | |
| 3640 | @cindex shared lock |
| 3641 | @cindex read lock |
| 3642 | A @dfn{shared} or @dfn{read} lock prohibits any other process from |
| 3643 | requesting a write lock on the specified part of the file. However, |
| 3644 | other processes can request read locks. |
| 3645 | |
| 3646 | The @code{read} and @code{write} functions do not actually check to see |
| 3647 | whether there are any locks in place. If you want to implement a |
| 3648 | locking protocol for a file shared by multiple processes, your application |
| 3649 | must do explicit @code{fcntl} calls to request and clear locks at the |
| 3650 | appropriate points. |
| 3651 | |
| 3652 | Locks are associated with processes. A process can only have one kind |
| 3653 | of lock set for each byte of a given file. When any file descriptor for |
| 3654 | that file is closed by the process, all of the locks that process holds |
| 3655 | on that file are released, even if the locks were made using other |
| 3656 | descriptors that remain open. Likewise, locks are released when a |
| 3657 | process exits, and are not inherited by child processes created using |
| 3658 | @code{fork} (@pxref{Creating a Process}). |
| 3659 | |
| 3660 | When making a lock, use a @code{struct flock} to specify what kind of |
| 3661 | lock and where. This data type and the associated macros for the |
| 3662 | @code{fcntl} function are declared in the header file @file{fcntl.h}. |
| 3663 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 3664 | |
| 3665 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3666 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3667 | @deftp {Data Type} {struct flock} |
| 3668 | This structure is used with the @code{fcntl} function to describe a file |
| 3669 | lock. It has these members: |
| 3670 | |
| 3671 | @table @code |
| 3672 | @item short int l_type |
| 3673 | Specifies the type of the lock; one of @code{F_RDLCK}, @code{F_WRLCK}, or |
| 3674 | @code{F_UNLCK}. |
| 3675 | |
| 3676 | @item short int l_whence |
| 3677 | This corresponds to the @var{whence} argument to @code{fseek} or |
| 3678 | @code{lseek}, and specifies what the offset is relative to. Its value |
| 3679 | can be one of @code{SEEK_SET}, @code{SEEK_CUR}, or @code{SEEK_END}. |
| 3680 | |
| 3681 | @item off_t l_start |
| 3682 | This specifies the offset of the start of the region to which the lock |
| 3683 | applies, and is given in bytes relative to the point specified by |
| 3684 | @code{l_whence} member. |
| 3685 | |
| 3686 | @item off_t l_len |
| 3687 | This specifies the length of the region to be locked. A value of |
| 3688 | @code{0} is treated specially; it means the region extends to the end of |
| 3689 | the file. |
| 3690 | |
| 3691 | @item pid_t l_pid |
| 3692 | This field is the process ID (@pxref{Process Creation Concepts}) of the |
| 3693 | process holding the lock. It is filled in by calling @code{fcntl} with |
| 3694 | the @code{F_GETLK} command, but is ignored when making a lock. If the |
| 3695 | conflicting lock is an open file description lock |
| 3696 | (@pxref{Open File Description Locks}), then this field will be set to |
| 3697 | @math{-1}. |
| 3698 | @end table |
| 3699 | @end deftp |
| 3700 | |
| 3701 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3702 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3703 | @deftypevr Macro int F_GETLK |
| 3704 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3705 | specify that it should get information about a lock. This command |
| 3706 | requires a third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed |
| 3707 | to @code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is: |
| 3708 | |
| 3709 | @smallexample |
| 3710 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_GETLK, @var{lockp}) |
| 3711 | @end smallexample |
| 3712 | |
| 3713 | If there is a lock already in place that would block the lock described |
| 3714 | by the @var{lockp} argument, information about that lock overwrites |
| 3715 | @code{*@var{lockp}}. Existing locks are not reported if they are |
| 3716 | compatible with making a new lock as specified. Thus, you should |
| 3717 | specify a lock type of @code{F_WRLCK} if you want to find out about both |
| 3718 | read and write locks, or @code{F_RDLCK} if you want to find out about |
| 3719 | write locks only. |
| 3720 | |
| 3721 | There might be more than one lock affecting the region specified by the |
| 3722 | @var{lockp} argument, but @code{fcntl} only returns information about |
| 3723 | one of them. The @code{l_whence} member of the @var{lockp} structure is |
| 3724 | set to @code{SEEK_SET} and the @code{l_start} and @code{l_len} fields |
| 3725 | set to identify the locked region. |
| 3726 | |
| 3727 | If no lock applies, the only change to the @var{lockp} structure is to |
| 3728 | update the @code{l_type} to a value of @code{F_UNLCK}. |
| 3729 | |
| 3730 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an |
| 3731 | unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which is reserved to indicate an |
| 3732 | error. The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for |
| 3733 | this command: |
| 3734 | |
| 3735 | @table @code |
| 3736 | @item EBADF |
| 3737 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 3738 | |
| 3739 | @item EINVAL |
| 3740 | Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information, |
| 3741 | or the file associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks. |
| 3742 | @end table |
| 3743 | @end deftypevr |
| 3744 | |
| 3745 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3746 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3747 | @deftypevr Macro int F_SETLK |
| 3748 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3749 | specify that it should set or clear a lock. This command requires a |
| 3750 | third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed to |
| 3751 | @code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is: |
| 3752 | |
| 3753 | @smallexample |
| 3754 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETLK, @var{lockp}) |
| 3755 | @end smallexample |
| 3756 | |
| 3757 | If the process already has a lock on any part of the region, the old lock |
| 3758 | on that part is replaced with the new lock. You can remove a lock |
| 3759 | by specifying a lock type of @code{F_UNLCK}. |
| 3760 | |
| 3761 | If the lock cannot be set, @code{fcntl} returns immediately with a value |
| 3762 | of @math{-1}. This function does not block waiting for other processes |
| 3763 | to release locks. If @code{fcntl} succeeds, it return a value other |
| 3764 | than @math{-1}. |
| 3765 | |
| 3766 | The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this |
| 3767 | function: |
| 3768 | |
| 3769 | @table @code |
| 3770 | @item EAGAIN |
| 3771 | @itemx EACCES |
| 3772 | The lock cannot be set because it is blocked by an existing lock on the |
| 3773 | file. Some systems use @code{EAGAIN} in this case, and other systems |
| 3774 | use @code{EACCES}; your program should treat them alike, after |
| 3775 | @code{F_SETLK}. (@gnulinuxhurdsystems{} always use @code{EAGAIN}.) |
| 3776 | |
| 3777 | @item EBADF |
| 3778 | Either: the @var{filedes} argument is invalid; you requested a read lock |
| 3779 | but the @var{filedes} is not open for read access; or, you requested a |
| 3780 | write lock but the @var{filedes} is not open for write access. |
| 3781 | |
| 3782 | @item EINVAL |
| 3783 | Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information, |
| 3784 | or the file associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks. |
| 3785 | |
| 3786 | @item ENOLCK |
| 3787 | The system has run out of file lock resources; there are already too |
| 3788 | many file locks in place. |
| 3789 | |
| 3790 | Well-designed file systems never report this error, because they have no |
| 3791 | limitation on the number of locks. However, you must still take account |
| 3792 | of the possibility of this error, as it could result from network access |
| 3793 | to a file system on another machine. |
| 3794 | @end table |
| 3795 | @end deftypevr |
| 3796 | |
| 3797 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3798 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3799 | @deftypevr Macro int F_SETLKW |
| 3800 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3801 | specify that it should set or clear a lock. It is just like the |
| 3802 | @code{F_SETLK} command, but causes the process to block (or wait) |
| 3803 | until the request can be specified. |
| 3804 | |
| 3805 | This command requires a third argument of type @code{struct flock *}, as |
| 3806 | for the @code{F_SETLK} command. |
| 3807 | |
| 3808 | The @code{fcntl} return values and errors are the same as for the |
| 3809 | @code{F_SETLK} command, but these additional @code{errno} error conditions |
| 3810 | are defined for this command: |
| 3811 | |
| 3812 | @table @code |
| 3813 | @item EINTR |
| 3814 | The function was interrupted by a signal while it was waiting. |
| 3815 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 3816 | |
| 3817 | @item EDEADLK |
| 3818 | The specified region is being locked by another process. But that |
| 3819 | process is waiting to lock a region which the current process has |
| 3820 | locked, so waiting for the lock would result in deadlock. The system |
| 3821 | does not guarantee that it will detect all such conditions, but it lets |
| 3822 | you know if it notices one. |
| 3823 | @end table |
| 3824 | @end deftypevr |
| 3825 | |
| 3826 | |
| 3827 | The following macros are defined for use as values for the @code{l_type} |
| 3828 | member of the @code{flock} structure. The values are integer constants. |
| 3829 | |
| 3830 | @table @code |
| 3831 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3832 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3833 | @vindex F_RDLCK |
| 3834 | @item F_RDLCK |
| 3835 | This macro is used to specify a read (or shared) lock. |
| 3836 | |
| 3837 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3838 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3839 | @vindex F_WRLCK |
| 3840 | @item F_WRLCK |
| 3841 | This macro is used to specify a write (or exclusive) lock. |
| 3842 | |
| 3843 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3844 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3845 | @vindex F_UNLCK |
| 3846 | @item F_UNLCK |
| 3847 | This macro is used to specify that the region is unlocked. |
| 3848 | @end table |
| 3849 | |
| 3850 | As an example of a situation where file locking is useful, consider a |
| 3851 | program that can be run simultaneously by several different users, that |
| 3852 | logs status information to a common file. One example of such a program |
| 3853 | might be a game that uses a file to keep track of high scores. Another |
| 3854 | example might be a program that records usage or accounting information |
| 3855 | for billing purposes. |
| 3856 | |
| 3857 | Having multiple copies of the program simultaneously writing to the |
| 3858 | file could cause the contents of the file to become mixed up. But |
| 3859 | you can prevent this kind of problem by setting a write lock on the |
| 3860 | file before actually writing to the file. |
| 3861 | |
| 3862 | If the program also needs to read the file and wants to make sure that |
| 3863 | the contents of the file are in a consistent state, then it can also use |
| 3864 | a read lock. While the read lock is set, no other process can lock |
| 3865 | that part of the file for writing. |
| 3866 | |
| 3867 | @c ??? This section could use an example program. |
| 3868 | |
| 3869 | Remember that file locks are only an @emph{advisory} protocol for |
| 3870 | controlling access to a file. There is still potential for access to |
| 3871 | the file by programs that don't use the lock protocol. |
| 3872 | |
| 3873 | @node Open File Description Locks |
| 3874 | @section Open File Description Locks |
| 3875 | |
| 3876 | In contrast to process-associated record locks (@pxref{File Locks}), |
| 3877 | open file description record locks are associated with an open file |
| 3878 | description rather than a process. |
| 3879 | |
| 3880 | Using @code{fcntl} to apply an open file description lock on a region that |
| 3881 | already has an existing open file description lock that was created via the |
| 3882 | same file descriptor will never cause a lock conflict. |
| 3883 | |
| 3884 | Open file description locks are also inherited by child processes across |
| 3885 | @code{fork}, or @code{clone} with @code{CLONE_FILES} set |
| 3886 | (@pxref{Creating a Process}), along with the file descriptor. |
| 3887 | |
| 3888 | It is important to distinguish between the open file @emph{description} (an |
| 3889 | instance of an open file, usually created by a call to @code{open}) and |
| 3890 | an open file @emph{descriptor}, which is a numeric value that refers to the |
| 3891 | open file description. The locks described here are associated with the |
| 3892 | open file @emph{description} and not the open file @emph{descriptor}. |
| 3893 | |
| 3894 | Using @code{dup} (@pxref{Duplicating Descriptors}) to copy a file |
| 3895 | descriptor does not give you a new open file description, but rather copies a |
| 3896 | reference to an existing open file description and assigns it to a new |
| 3897 | file descriptor. Thus, open file description locks set on a file |
| 3898 | descriptor cloned by @code{dup} will never conflict with open file |
| 3899 | description locks set on the original descriptor since they refer to the |
| 3900 | same open file description. Depending on the range and type of lock |
| 3901 | involved, the original lock may be modified by a @code{F_OFD_SETLK} or |
| 3902 | @code{F_OFD_SETLKW} command in this situation however. |
| 3903 | |
| 3904 | Open file description locks always conflict with process-associated locks, |
| 3905 | even if acquired by the same process or on the same open file |
| 3906 | descriptor. |
| 3907 | |
| 3908 | Open file description locks use the same @code{struct flock} as |
| 3909 | process-associated locks as an argument (@pxref{File Locks}) and the |
| 3910 | macros for the @code{command} values are also declared in the header file |
| 3911 | @file{fcntl.h}. To use them, the macro @code{_GNU_SOURCE} must be |
| 3912 | defined prior to including any header file. |
| 3913 | |
| 3914 | In contrast to process-associated locks, any @code{struct flock} used as |
| 3915 | an argument to open file description lock commands must have the @code{l_pid} |
| 3916 | value set to @math{0}. Also, when returning information about an |
| 3917 | open file description lock in a @code{F_GETLK} or @code{F_OFD_GETLK} request, |
| 3918 | the @code{l_pid} field in @code{struct flock} will be set to @math{-1} |
| 3919 | to indicate that the lock is not associated with a process. |
| 3920 | |
| 3921 | When the same @code{struct flock} is reused as an argument to a |
| 3922 | @code{F_OFD_SETLK} or @code{F_OFD_SETLKW} request after being used for an |
| 3923 | @code{F_OFD_GETLK} request, it is necessary to inspect and reset the |
| 3924 | @code{l_pid} field to @math{0}. |
| 3925 | |
| 3926 | @pindex fcntl.h. |
| 3927 | |
| 3928 | @deftypevr Macro int F_OFD_GETLK |
| 3929 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3930 | specify that it should get information about a lock. This command |
| 3931 | requires a third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed |
| 3932 | to @code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is: |
| 3933 | |
| 3934 | @smallexample |
| 3935 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_OFD_GETLK, @var{lockp}) |
| 3936 | @end smallexample |
| 3937 | |
| 3938 | If there is a lock already in place that would block the lock described |
| 3939 | by the @var{lockp} argument, information about that lock is written to |
| 3940 | @code{*@var{lockp}}. Existing locks are not reported if they are |
| 3941 | compatible with making a new lock as specified. Thus, you should |
| 3942 | specify a lock type of @code{F_WRLCK} if you want to find out about both |
| 3943 | read and write locks, or @code{F_RDLCK} if you want to find out about |
| 3944 | write locks only. |
| 3945 | |
| 3946 | There might be more than one lock affecting the region specified by the |
| 3947 | @var{lockp} argument, but @code{fcntl} only returns information about |
| 3948 | one of them. Which lock is returned in this situation is undefined. |
| 3949 | |
| 3950 | The @code{l_whence} member of the @var{lockp} structure are set to |
| 3951 | @code{SEEK_SET} and the @code{l_start} and @code{l_len} fields are set |
| 3952 | to identify the locked region. |
| 3953 | |
| 3954 | If no conflicting lock exists, the only change to the @var{lockp} structure |
| 3955 | is to update the @code{l_type} field to the value @code{F_UNLCK}. |
| 3956 | |
| 3957 | The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is either @math{0} |
| 3958 | on success or @math{-1}, which indicates an error. The following @code{errno} |
| 3959 | error conditions are defined for this command: |
| 3960 | |
| 3961 | @table @code |
| 3962 | @item EBADF |
| 3963 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 3964 | |
| 3965 | @item EINVAL |
| 3966 | Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information, |
| 3967 | the operating system kernel doesn't support open file description locks, or the file |
| 3968 | associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks. |
| 3969 | @end table |
| 3970 | @end deftypevr |
| 3971 | |
| 3972 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 3973 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 3974 | @deftypevr Macro int F_OFD_SETLK |
| 3975 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 3976 | specify that it should set or clear a lock. This command requires a |
| 3977 | third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed to |
| 3978 | @code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is: |
| 3979 | |
| 3980 | @smallexample |
| 3981 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_OFD_SETLK, @var{lockp}) |
| 3982 | @end smallexample |
| 3983 | |
| 3984 | If the open file already has a lock on any part of the |
| 3985 | region, the old lock on that part is replaced with the new lock. You |
| 3986 | can remove a lock by specifying a lock type of @code{F_UNLCK}. |
| 3987 | |
| 3988 | If the lock cannot be set, @code{fcntl} returns immediately with a value |
| 3989 | of @math{-1}. This command does not wait for other tasks |
| 3990 | to release locks. If @code{fcntl} succeeds, it returns @math{0}. |
| 3991 | |
| 3992 | The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this |
| 3993 | command: |
| 3994 | |
| 3995 | @table @code |
| 3996 | @item EAGAIN |
| 3997 | The lock cannot be set because it is blocked by an existing lock on the |
| 3998 | file. |
| 3999 | |
| 4000 | @item EBADF |
| 4001 | Either: the @var{filedes} argument is invalid; you requested a read lock |
| 4002 | but the @var{filedes} is not open for read access; or, you requested a |
| 4003 | write lock but the @var{filedes} is not open for write access. |
| 4004 | |
| 4005 | @item EINVAL |
| 4006 | Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information, |
| 4007 | the operating system kernel doesn't support open file description locks, or the |
| 4008 | file associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks. |
| 4009 | |
| 4010 | @item ENOLCK |
| 4011 | The system has run out of file lock resources; there are already too |
| 4012 | many file locks in place. |
| 4013 | |
| 4014 | Well-designed file systems never report this error, because they have no |
| 4015 | limitation on the number of locks. However, you must still take account |
| 4016 | of the possibility of this error, as it could result from network access |
| 4017 | to a file system on another machine. |
| 4018 | @end table |
| 4019 | @end deftypevr |
| 4020 | |
| 4021 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 4022 | @comment POSIX.1 |
| 4023 | @deftypevr Macro int F_OFD_SETLKW |
| 4024 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 4025 | specify that it should set or clear a lock. It is just like the |
| 4026 | @code{F_OFD_SETLK} command, but causes the process to wait until the request |
| 4027 | can be completed. |
| 4028 | |
| 4029 | This command requires a third argument of type @code{struct flock *}, as |
| 4030 | for the @code{F_OFD_SETLK} command. |
| 4031 | |
| 4032 | The @code{fcntl} return values and errors are the same as for the |
| 4033 | @code{F_OFD_SETLK} command, but these additional @code{errno} error conditions |
| 4034 | are defined for this command: |
| 4035 | |
| 4036 | @table @code |
| 4037 | @item EINTR |
| 4038 | The function was interrupted by a signal while it was waiting. |
| 4039 | @xref{Interrupted Primitives}. |
| 4040 | |
| 4041 | @end table |
| 4042 | @end deftypevr |
| 4043 | |
| 4044 | Open file description locks are useful in the same sorts of situations as |
| 4045 | process-associated locks. They can also be used to synchronize file |
| 4046 | access between threads within the same process by having each thread perform |
| 4047 | its own @code{open} of the file, to obtain its own open file description. |
| 4048 | |
| 4049 | Because open file description locks are automatically freed only upon |
| 4050 | closing the last file descriptor that refers to the open file |
| 4051 | description, this locking mechanism avoids the possibility that locks |
| 4052 | are inadvertently released due to a library routine opening and closing |
| 4053 | a file without the application being aware. |
| 4054 | |
| 4055 | As with process-associated locks, open file description locks are advisory. |
| 4056 | |
| 4057 | @node Open File Description Locks Example |
| 4058 | @section Open File Description Locks Example |
| 4059 | |
| 4060 | Here is an example of using open file description locks in a threaded |
| 4061 | program. If this program used process-associated locks, then it would be |
| 4062 | subject to data corruption because process-associated locks are shared |
| 4063 | by the threads inside a process, and thus cannot be used by one thread |
| 4064 | to lock out another thread in the same process. |
| 4065 | |
| 4066 | Proper error handling has been omitted in the following program for |
| 4067 | brevity. |
| 4068 | |
| 4069 | @smallexample |
| 4070 | @include ofdlocks.c.texi |
| 4071 | @end smallexample |
| 4072 | |
| 4073 | This example creates three threads each of which loops five times, |
| 4074 | appending to the file. Access to the file is serialized via open file |
| 4075 | description locks. If we compile and run the above program, we'll end up |
| 4076 | with /tmp/foo that has 15 lines in it. |
| 4077 | |
| 4078 | If we, however, were to replace the @code{F_OFD_SETLK} and |
| 4079 | @code{F_OFD_SETLKW} commands with their process-associated lock |
| 4080 | equivalents, the locking essentially becomes a noop since it is all done |
| 4081 | within the context of the same process. That leads to data corruption |
| 4082 | (typically manifested as missing lines) as some threads race in and |
| 4083 | overwrite the data written by others. |
| 4084 | |
| 4085 | @node Interrupt Input |
| 4086 | @section Interrupt-Driven Input |
| 4087 | |
| 4088 | @cindex interrupt-driven input |
| 4089 | If you set the @code{O_ASYNC} status flag on a file descriptor |
| 4090 | (@pxref{File Status Flags}), a @code{SIGIO} signal is sent whenever |
| 4091 | input or output becomes possible on that file descriptor. The process |
| 4092 | or process group to receive the signal can be selected by using the |
| 4093 | @code{F_SETOWN} command to the @code{fcntl} function. If the file |
| 4094 | descriptor is a socket, this also selects the recipient of @code{SIGURG} |
| 4095 | signals that are delivered when out-of-band data arrives on that socket; |
| 4096 | see @ref{Out-of-Band Data}. (@code{SIGURG} is sent in any situation |
| 4097 | where @code{select} would report the socket as having an ``exceptional |
| 4098 | condition''. @xref{Waiting for I/O}.) |
| 4099 | |
| 4100 | If the file descriptor corresponds to a terminal device, then @code{SIGIO} |
| 4101 | signals are sent to the foreground process group of the terminal. |
| 4102 | @xref{Job Control}. |
| 4103 | |
| 4104 | @pindex fcntl.h |
| 4105 | The symbols in this section are defined in the header file |
| 4106 | @file{fcntl.h}. |
| 4107 | |
| 4108 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 4109 | @comment BSD |
| 4110 | @deftypevr Macro int F_GETOWN |
| 4111 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 4112 | specify that it should get information about the process or process |
| 4113 | group to which @code{SIGIO} signals are sent. (For a terminal, this is |
| 4114 | actually the foreground process group ID, which you can get using |
| 4115 | @code{tcgetpgrp}; see @ref{Terminal Access Functions}.) |
| 4116 | |
| 4117 | The return value is interpreted as a process ID; if negative, its |
| 4118 | absolute value is the process group ID. |
| 4119 | |
| 4120 | The following @code{errno} error condition is defined for this command: |
| 4121 | |
| 4122 | @table @code |
| 4123 | @item EBADF |
| 4124 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 4125 | @end table |
| 4126 | @end deftypevr |
| 4127 | |
| 4128 | @comment fcntl.h |
| 4129 | @comment BSD |
| 4130 | @deftypevr Macro int F_SETOWN |
| 4131 | This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to |
| 4132 | specify that it should set the process or process group to which |
| 4133 | @code{SIGIO} signals are sent. This command requires a third argument |
| 4134 | of type @code{pid_t} to be passed to @code{fcntl}, so that the form of |
| 4135 | the call is: |
| 4136 | |
| 4137 | @smallexample |
| 4138 | fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETOWN, @var{pid}) |
| 4139 | @end smallexample |
| 4140 | |
| 4141 | The @var{pid} argument should be a process ID. You can also pass a |
| 4142 | negative number whose absolute value is a process group ID. |
| 4143 | |
| 4144 | The return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is @math{-1} |
| 4145 | in case of error and some other value if successful. The following |
| 4146 | @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command: |
| 4147 | |
| 4148 | @table @code |
| 4149 | @item EBADF |
| 4150 | The @var{filedes} argument is invalid. |
| 4151 | |
| 4152 | @item ESRCH |
| 4153 | There is no process or process group corresponding to @var{pid}. |
| 4154 | @end table |
| 4155 | @end deftypevr |
| 4156 | |
| 4157 | @c ??? This section could use an example program. |
| 4158 | |
| 4159 | @node IOCTLs |
| 4160 | @section Generic I/O Control operations |
| 4161 | @cindex generic i/o control operations |
| 4162 | @cindex IOCTLs |
| 4163 | |
| 4164 | @gnusystems{} can handle most input/output operations on many different |
| 4165 | devices and objects in terms of a few file primitives - @code{read}, |
| 4166 | @code{write} and @code{lseek}. However, most devices also have a few |
| 4167 | peculiar operations which do not fit into this model. Such as: |
| 4168 | |
| 4169 | @itemize @bullet |
| 4170 | |
| 4171 | @item |
| 4172 | Changing the character font used on a terminal. |
| 4173 | |
| 4174 | @item |
| 4175 | Telling a magnetic tape system to rewind or fast forward. (Since they |
| 4176 | cannot move in byte increments, @code{lseek} is inapplicable). |
| 4177 | |
| 4178 | @item |
| 4179 | Ejecting a disk from a drive. |
| 4180 | |
| 4181 | @item |
| 4182 | Playing an audio track from a CD-ROM drive. |
| 4183 | |
| 4184 | @item |
| 4185 | Maintaining routing tables for a network. |
| 4186 | |
| 4187 | @end itemize |
| 4188 | |
| 4189 | Although some such objects such as sockets and terminals |
| 4190 | @footnote{Actually, the terminal-specific functions are implemented with |
| 4191 | IOCTLs on many platforms.} have special functions of their own, it would |
| 4192 | not be practical to create functions for all these cases. |
| 4193 | |
| 4194 | Instead these minor operations, known as @dfn{IOCTL}s, are assigned code |
| 4195 | numbers and multiplexed through the @code{ioctl} function, defined in |
| 4196 | @code{sys/ioctl.h}. The code numbers themselves are defined in many |
| 4197 | different headers. |
| 4198 | |
| 4199 | @comment sys/ioctl.h |
| 4200 | @comment BSD |
| 4201 | @deftypefun int ioctl (int @var{filedes}, int @var{command}, @dots{}) |
| 4202 | @safety{@prelim{}@mtsafe{}@assafe{}@acsafe{}} |
| 4203 | |
| 4204 | The @code{ioctl} function performs the generic I/O operation |
| 4205 | @var{command} on @var{filedes}. |
| 4206 | |
| 4207 | A third argument is usually present, either a single number or a pointer |
| 4208 | to a structure. The meaning of this argument, the returned value, and |
| 4209 | any error codes depends upon the command used. Often @math{-1} is |
| 4210 | returned for a failure. |
| 4211 | |
| 4212 | @end deftypefun |
| 4213 | |
| 4214 | On some systems, IOCTLs used by different devices share the same numbers. |
| 4215 | Thus, although use of an inappropriate IOCTL @emph{usually} only produces |
| 4216 | an error, you should not attempt to use device-specific IOCTLs on an |
| 4217 | unknown device. |
| 4218 | |
| 4219 | Most IOCTLs are OS-specific and/or only used in special system utilities, |
| 4220 | and are thus beyond the scope of this document. For an example of the use |
| 4221 | of an IOCTL, see @ref{Out-of-Band Data}. |
| 4222 | |
| 4223 | @c FIXME this is undocumented: |
| 4224 | @c dup3 |