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28f540f4 1@node Low-Level I/O, File System Interface, I/O on Streams, Top
7a68c94a 2@c %MENU% Low-level, less portable I/O
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3@chapter Low-Level Input/Output
4
5This chapter describes functions for performing low-level input/output
6operations on file descriptors. These functions include the primitives
7for the higher-level I/O functions described in @ref{I/O on Streams}, as
8well as functions for performing low-level control operations for which
9there are no equivalents on streams.
10
11Stream-level I/O is more flexible and usually more convenient;
12therefore, programmers generally use the descriptor-level functions only
13when necessary. These are some of the usual reasons:
14
15@itemize @bullet
16@item
17For reading binary files in large chunks.
18
19@item
20For reading an entire file into core before parsing it.
21
22@item
23To perform operations other than data transfer, which can only be done
24with a descriptor. (You can use @code{fileno} to get the descriptor
25corresponding to a stream.)
26
27@item
28To pass descriptors to a child process. (The child can create its own
29stream to use a descriptor that it inherits, but cannot inherit a stream
30directly.)
31@end itemize
32
33@menu
34* Opening and Closing Files:: How to open and close file
2c6fe0bd 35 descriptors.
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36* I/O Primitives:: Reading and writing data.
37* File Position Primitive:: Setting a descriptor's file
2c6fe0bd 38 position.
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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.
49c091e5 43* Scatter-Gather:: Fast I/O to discontinuous buffers.
07435eb4 44* Memory-mapped I/O:: Using files like memory.
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45* Waiting for I/O:: How to check for input or output
46 on multiple file descriptors.
dfd2257a 47* Synchronizing I/O:: Making sure all I/O actions completed.
b07d03e0 48* Asynchronous I/O:: Perform I/O in parallel.
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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
2c6fe0bd 55 descriptors.
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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* Interrupt Input:: Getting an asynchronous signal when
61 input arrives.
07435eb4 62* IOCTLs:: Generic I/O Control operations.
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63@end menu
64
65
66@node Opening and Closing Files
67@section Opening and Closing Files
68
69@cindex opening a file descriptor
70@cindex closing a file descriptor
71This section describes the primitives for opening and closing files
72using file descriptors. The @code{open} and @code{creat} functions are
73declared in the header file @file{fcntl.h}, while @code{close} is
74declared in @file{unistd.h}.
75@pindex unistd.h
76@pindex fcntl.h
77
78@comment fcntl.h
79@comment POSIX.1
80@deftypefun int open (const char *@var{filename}, int @var{flags}[, mode_t @var{mode}])
81The @code{open} function creates and returns a new file descriptor
82for the file named by @var{filename}. Initially, the file position
83indicator for the file is at the beginning of the file. The argument
84@var{mode} is used only when a file is created, but it doesn't hurt
85to supply the argument in any case.
86
87The @var{flags} argument controls how the file is to be opened. This is
88a bit mask; you create the value by the bitwise OR of the appropriate
89parameters (using the @samp{|} operator in C).
90@xref{File Status Flags}, for the parameters available.
91
92The normal return value from @code{open} is a non-negative integer file
07435eb4 93descriptor. In the case of an error, a value of @math{-1} is returned
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94instead. In addition to the usual file name errors (@pxref{File
95Name Errors}), the following @code{errno} error conditions are defined
96for this function:
97
98@table @code
99@item EACCES
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100The file exists but is not readable/writable as requested by the @var{flags}
101argument, the file does not exist and the directory is unwritable so
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102it cannot be created.
103
104@item EEXIST
105Both @code{O_CREAT} and @code{O_EXCL} are set, and the named file already
106exists.
107
108@item EINTR
109The @code{open} operation was interrupted by a signal.
110@xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
111
112@item EISDIR
113The @var{flags} argument specified write access, and the file is a directory.
114
115@item EMFILE
116The process has too many files open.
117The maximum number of file descriptors is controlled by the
118@code{RLIMIT_NOFILE} resource limit; @pxref{Limits on Resources}.
119
120@item ENFILE
121The entire system, or perhaps the file system which contains the
122directory, cannot support any additional open files at the moment.
123(This problem cannot happen on the GNU system.)
124
125@item ENOENT
126The named file does not exist, and @code{O_CREAT} is not specified.
127
128@item ENOSPC
129The directory or file system that would contain the new file cannot be
130extended, because there is no disk space left.
131
132@item ENXIO
133@code{O_NONBLOCK} and @code{O_WRONLY} are both set in the @var{flags}
134argument, the file named by @var{filename} is a FIFO (@pxref{Pipes and
135FIFOs}), and no process has the file open for reading.
136
137@item EROFS
138The file resides on a read-only file system and any of @w{@code{O_WRONLY}},
139@code{O_RDWR}, and @code{O_TRUNC} are set in the @var{flags} argument,
140or @code{O_CREAT} is set and the file does not already exist.
141@end table
142
143@c !!! umask
144
04b9968b 145If on a 32 bit machine the sources are translated with
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146@code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the function @code{open} returns a file
147descriptor opened in the large file mode which enables the file handling
fed8f7f7 148functions to use files up to @math{2^63} bytes in size and offset from
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149@math{-2^63} to @math{2^63}. This happens transparently for the user
150since all of the lowlevel file handling functions are equally replaced.
151
04b9968b 152This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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153is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
154descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{open} is
19e4c7dd 155called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
dfd2257a 156until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{open} should be
04b9968b 157protected using cancellation handlers.
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158@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
159
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160The @code{open} function is the underlying primitive for the @code{fopen}
161and @code{freopen} functions, that create streams.
162@end deftypefun
163
b07d03e0 164@comment fcntl.h
a3a4a74e 165@comment Unix98
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166@deftypefun int open64 (const char *@var{filename}, int @var{flags}[, mode_t @var{mode}])
167This function is similar to @code{open}. It returns a file descriptor
168which can be used to access the file named by @var{filename}. The only
04b9968b 169difference is that on 32 bit systems the file is opened in the
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170large file mode. I.e., file length and file offsets can exceed 31 bits.
171
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172When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
173function is actually available under the name @code{open}. I.e., the
174new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently
175replaces the old API.
176@end deftypefun
177
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178@comment fcntl.h
179@comment POSIX.1
180@deftypefn {Obsolete function} int creat (const char *@var{filename}, mode_t @var{mode})
181This function is obsolete. The call:
182
183@smallexample
184creat (@var{filename}, @var{mode})
185@end smallexample
186
187@noindent
188is equivalent to:
189
190@smallexample
191open (@var{filename}, O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, @var{mode})
192@end smallexample
b07d03e0 193
04b9968b 194If on a 32 bit machine the sources are translated with
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195@code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the function @code{creat} returns a file
196descriptor opened in the large file mode which enables the file handling
197functions to use files up to @math{2^63} in size and offset from
198@math{-2^63} to @math{2^63}. This happens transparently for the user
199since all of the lowlevel file handling functions are equally replaced.
200@end deftypefn
201
202@comment fcntl.h
a3a4a74e 203@comment Unix98
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204@deftypefn {Obsolete function} int creat64 (const char *@var{filename}, mode_t @var{mode})
205This function is similar to @code{creat}. It returns a file descriptor
206which can be used to access the file named by @var{filename}. The only
04b9968b 207the difference is that on 32 bit systems the file is opened in the
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208large file mode. I.e., file length and file offsets can exceed 31 bits.
209
210To use this file descriptor one must not use the normal operations but
211instead the counterparts named @code{*64}, e.g., @code{read64}.
212
213When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
214function is actually available under the name @code{open}. I.e., the
215new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently
216replaces the old API.
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217@end deftypefn
218
219@comment unistd.h
220@comment POSIX.1
221@deftypefun int close (int @var{filedes})
222The function @code{close} closes the file descriptor @var{filedes}.
223Closing a file has the following consequences:
224
225@itemize @bullet
2c6fe0bd 226@item
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227The file descriptor is deallocated.
228
229@item
230Any record locks owned by the process on the file are unlocked.
231
232@item
233When all file descriptors associated with a pipe or FIFO have been closed,
234any unread data is discarded.
235@end itemize
236
04b9968b 237This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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238is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
239descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{close} is
19e4c7dd 240called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
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241until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{close} should be
242protected using cancellation handlers.
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243@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
244
07435eb4 245The normal return value from @code{close} is @math{0}; a value of @math{-1}
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246is returned in case of failure. The following @code{errno} error
247conditions are defined for this function:
248
249@table @code
250@item EBADF
251The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor.
252
253@item EINTR
254The @code{close} call was interrupted by a signal.
255@xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
256Here is an example of how to handle @code{EINTR} properly:
257
258@smallexample
259TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (close (desc));
260@end smallexample
261
262@item ENOSPC
263@itemx EIO
264@itemx EDQUOT
2c6fe0bd 265When the file is accessed by NFS, these errors from @code{write} can sometimes
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266not be detected until @code{close}. @xref{I/O Primitives}, for details
267on their meaning.
268@end table
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269
270Please note that there is @emph{no} separate @code{close64} function.
271This is not necessary since this function does not determine nor depend
fed8f7f7 272on the mode of the file. The kernel which performs the @code{close}
04b9968b 273operation knows which mode the descriptor is used for and can handle
b07d03e0 274this situation.
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275@end deftypefun
276
277To close a stream, call @code{fclose} (@pxref{Closing Streams}) instead
278of trying to close its underlying file descriptor with @code{close}.
279This flushes any buffered output and updates the stream object to
280indicate that it is closed.
281
282@node I/O Primitives
283@section Input and Output Primitives
284
285This section describes the functions for performing primitive input and
286output operations on file descriptors: @code{read}, @code{write}, and
287@code{lseek}. These functions are declared in the header file
288@file{unistd.h}.
289@pindex unistd.h
290
291@comment unistd.h
292@comment POSIX.1
293@deftp {Data Type} ssize_t
294This data type is used to represent the sizes of blocks that can be
295read or written in a single operation. It is similar to @code{size_t},
296but must be a signed type.
297@end deftp
298
299@cindex reading from a file descriptor
300@comment unistd.h
301@comment POSIX.1
302@deftypefun ssize_t read (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size})
303The @code{read} function reads up to @var{size} bytes from the file
304with descriptor @var{filedes}, storing the results in the @var{buffer}.
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305(This is not necessarily a character string, and no terminating null
306character is added.)
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307
308@cindex end-of-file, on a file descriptor
309The return value is the number of bytes actually read. This might be
310less than @var{size}; for example, if there aren't that many bytes left
311in the file or if there aren't that many bytes immediately available.
312The exact behavior depends on what kind of file it is. Note that
313reading less than @var{size} bytes is not an error.
314
315A value of zero indicates end-of-file (except if the value of the
316@var{size} argument is also zero). This is not considered an error.
317If you keep calling @code{read} while at end-of-file, it will keep
318returning zero and doing nothing else.
319
320If @code{read} returns at least one character, there is no way you can
321tell whether end-of-file was reached. But if you did reach the end, the
322next read will return zero.
323
07435eb4 324In case of an error, @code{read} returns @math{-1}. The following
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325@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function:
326
327@table @code
328@item EAGAIN
329Normally, when no input is immediately available, @code{read} waits for
330some input. But if the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is set for the file
331(@pxref{File Status Flags}), @code{read} returns immediately without
332reading any data, and reports this error.
333
334@strong{Compatibility Note:} Most versions of BSD Unix use a different
1f77f049 335error code for this: @code{EWOULDBLOCK}. In @theglibc{},
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336@code{EWOULDBLOCK} is an alias for @code{EAGAIN}, so it doesn't matter
337which name you use.
338
339On some systems, reading a large amount of data from a character special
340file can also fail with @code{EAGAIN} if the kernel cannot find enough
341physical memory to lock down the user's pages. This is limited to
342devices that transfer with direct memory access into the user's memory,
343which means it does not include terminals, since they always use
344separate buffers inside the kernel. This problem never happens in the
345GNU system.
346
347Any condition that could result in @code{EAGAIN} can instead result in a
348successful @code{read} which returns fewer bytes than requested.
349Calling @code{read} again immediately would result in @code{EAGAIN}.
350
351@item EBADF
352The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor,
353or is not open for reading.
354
355@item EINTR
356@code{read} was interrupted by a signal while it was waiting for input.
357@xref{Interrupted Primitives}. A signal will not necessary cause
358@code{read} to return @code{EINTR}; it may instead result in a
359successful @code{read} which returns fewer bytes than requested.
360
361@item EIO
362For many devices, and for disk files, this error code indicates
363a hardware error.
364
365@code{EIO} also occurs when a background process tries to read from the
366controlling terminal, and the normal action of stopping the process by
367sending it a @code{SIGTTIN} signal isn't working. This might happen if
04b9968b 368the signal is being blocked or ignored, or because the process group is
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369orphaned. @xref{Job Control}, for more information about job control,
370and @ref{Signal Handling}, for information about signals.
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371
372@item EINVAL
373In some systems, when reading from a character or block device, position
374and size offsets must be aligned to a particular block size. This error
375indicates that the offsets were not properly aligned.
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376@end table
377
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378Please note that there is no function named @code{read64}. This is not
379necessary since this function does not directly modify or handle the
380possibly wide file offset. Since the kernel handles this state
04b9968b 381internally, the @code{read} function can be used for all cases.
b07d03e0 382
04b9968b 383This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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384is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
385descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{read} is
19e4c7dd 386called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
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387until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{read} should be
388protected using cancellation handlers.
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389@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
390
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391The @code{read} function is the underlying primitive for all of the
392functions that read from streams, such as @code{fgetc}.
393@end deftypefun
394
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395@comment unistd.h
396@comment Unix98
397@deftypefun ssize_t pread (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off_t @var{offset})
398The @code{pread} function is similar to the @code{read} function. The
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399first three arguments are identical, and the return values and error
400codes also correspond.
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401
402The difference is the fourth argument and its handling. The data block
403is not read from the current position of the file descriptor
404@code{filedes}. Instead the data is read from the file starting at
405position @var{offset}. The position of the file descriptor itself is
04b9968b 406not affected by the operation. The value is the same as before the call.
a5a0310d 407
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408When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the
409@code{pread} function is in fact @code{pread64} and the type
04b9968b 410@code{off_t} has 64 bits, which makes it possible to handle files up to
c756c71c 411@math{2^63} bytes in length.
b07d03e0 412
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413The return value of @code{pread} describes the number of bytes read.
414In the error case it returns @math{-1} like @code{read} does and the
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415error codes are also the same, with these additions:
416
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417@table @code
418@item EINVAL
419The value given for @var{offset} is negative and therefore illegal.
420
421@item ESPIPE
422The file descriptor @var{filedes} is associate with a pipe or a FIFO and
423this device does not allow positioning of the file pointer.
424@end table
425
426The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification
427version 2.
428@end deftypefun
429
b07d03e0 430@comment unistd.h
a3a4a74e 431@comment Unix98
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432@deftypefun ssize_t pread64 (int @var{filedes}, void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off64_t @var{offset})
433This function is similar to the @code{pread} function. The difference
434is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of
04b9968b 435@code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address
c756c71c 436files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The
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437file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since
438otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to
439errors with a descriptor in small file mode.
440
c756c71c 441When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
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44232 bit machine this function is actually available under the name
443@code{pread} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface.
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444@end deftypefun
445
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446@cindex writing to a file descriptor
447@comment unistd.h
448@comment POSIX.1
449@deftypefun ssize_t write (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size})
450The @code{write} function writes up to @var{size} bytes from
451@var{buffer} to the file with descriptor @var{filedes}. The data in
452@var{buffer} is not necessarily a character string and a null character is
453output like any other character.
454
455The return value is the number of bytes actually written. This may be
456@var{size}, but can always be smaller. Your program should always call
457@code{write} in a loop, iterating until all the data is written.
458
459Once @code{write} returns, the data is enqueued to be written and can be
460read back right away, but it is not necessarily written out to permanent
461storage immediately. You can use @code{fsync} when you need to be sure
462your data has been permanently stored before continuing. (It is more
463efficient for the system to batch up consecutive writes and do them all
464at once when convenient. Normally they will always be written to disk
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465within a minute or less.) Modern systems provide another function
466@code{fdatasync} which guarantees integrity only for the file data and
467is therefore faster.
468@c !!! xref fsync, fdatasync
2c6fe0bd 469You can use the @code{O_FSYNC} open mode to make @code{write} always
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470store the data to disk before returning; @pxref{Operating Modes}.
471
07435eb4 472In the case of an error, @code{write} returns @math{-1}. The following
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473@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function:
474
475@table @code
476@item EAGAIN
477Normally, @code{write} blocks until the write operation is complete.
478But if the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is set for the file (@pxref{Control
04b9968b 479Operations}), it returns immediately without writing any data and
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480reports this error. An example of a situation that might cause the
481process to block on output is writing to a terminal device that supports
482flow control, where output has been suspended by receipt of a STOP
483character.
484
485@strong{Compatibility Note:} Most versions of BSD Unix use a different
1f77f049 486error code for this: @code{EWOULDBLOCK}. In @theglibc{},
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487@code{EWOULDBLOCK} is an alias for @code{EAGAIN}, so it doesn't matter
488which name you use.
489
490On some systems, writing a large amount of data from a character special
491file can also fail with @code{EAGAIN} if the kernel cannot find enough
492physical memory to lock down the user's pages. This is limited to
493devices that transfer with direct memory access into the user's memory,
494which means it does not include terminals, since they always use
495separate buffers inside the kernel. This problem does not arise in the
496GNU system.
497
498@item EBADF
499The @var{filedes} argument is not a valid file descriptor,
500or is not open for writing.
501
502@item EFBIG
503The size of the file would become larger than the implementation can support.
504
505@item EINTR
506The @code{write} operation was interrupted by a signal while it was
04b9968b 507blocked waiting for completion. A signal will not necessarily cause
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508@code{write} to return @code{EINTR}; it may instead result in a
509successful @code{write} which writes fewer bytes than requested.
510@xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
511
512@item EIO
513For many devices, and for disk files, this error code indicates
514a hardware error.
515
516@item ENOSPC
517The device containing the file is full.
518
519@item EPIPE
520This error is returned when you try to write to a pipe or FIFO that
521isn't open for reading by any process. When this happens, a @code{SIGPIPE}
522signal is also sent to the process; see @ref{Signal Handling}.
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523
524@item EINVAL
525In some systems, when writing to a character or block device, position
526and size offsets must be aligned to a particular block size. This error
527indicates that the offsets were not properly aligned.
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528@end table
529
530Unless you have arranged to prevent @code{EINTR} failures, you should
531check @code{errno} after each failing call to @code{write}, and if the
532error was @code{EINTR}, you should simply repeat the call.
533@xref{Interrupted Primitives}. The easy way to do this is with the
534macro @code{TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY}, as follows:
535
536@smallexample
537nbytes = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (write (desc, buffer, count));
538@end smallexample
539
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540Please note that there is no function named @code{write64}. This is not
541necessary since this function does not directly modify or handle the
542possibly wide file offset. Since the kernel handles this state
543internally the @code{write} function can be used for all cases.
544
04b9968b 545This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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546is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
547descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{write} is
19e4c7dd 548called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
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549until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{write} should be
550protected using cancellation handlers.
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551@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
552
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553The @code{write} function is the underlying primitive for all of the
554functions that write to streams, such as @code{fputc}.
555@end deftypefun
556
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557@comment unistd.h
558@comment Unix98
559@deftypefun ssize_t pwrite (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off_t @var{offset})
560The @code{pwrite} function is similar to the @code{write} function. The
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561first three arguments are identical, and the return values and error codes
562also correspond.
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563
564The difference is the fourth argument and its handling. The data block
565is not written to the current position of the file descriptor
566@code{filedes}. Instead the data is written to the file starting at
567position @var{offset}. The position of the file descriptor itself is
04b9968b 568not affected by the operation. The value is the same as before the call.
a5a0310d 569
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570When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the
571@code{pwrite} function is in fact @code{pwrite64} and the type
04b9968b 572@code{off_t} has 64 bits, which makes it possible to handle files up to
c756c71c 573@math{2^63} bytes in length.
b07d03e0 574
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575The return value of @code{pwrite} describes the number of written bytes.
576In the error case it returns @math{-1} like @code{write} does and the
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577error codes are also the same, with these additions:
578
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579@table @code
580@item EINVAL
581The value given for @var{offset} is negative and therefore illegal.
582
583@item ESPIPE
04b9968b 584The file descriptor @var{filedes} is associated with a pipe or a FIFO and
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585this device does not allow positioning of the file pointer.
586@end table
587
588The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification
589version 2.
590@end deftypefun
591
b07d03e0 592@comment unistd.h
a3a4a74e 593@comment Unix98
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594@deftypefun ssize_t pwrite64 (int @var{filedes}, const void *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size}, off64_t @var{offset})
595This function is similar to the @code{pwrite} function. The difference
596is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of
04b9968b 597@code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address
c756c71c 598files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The
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599file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since
600otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to
601errors with a descriptor in small file mode.
602
c756c71c 603When the source file is compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
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60432 bit machine this function is actually available under the name
605@code{pwrite} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface.
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606@end deftypefun
607
a5a0310d 608
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609@node File Position Primitive
610@section Setting the File Position of a Descriptor
611
612Just as you can set the file position of a stream with @code{fseek}, you
613can set the file position of a descriptor with @code{lseek}. This
614specifies the position in the file for the next @code{read} or
615@code{write} operation. @xref{File Positioning}, for more information
616on the file position and what it means.
617
618To read the current file position value from a descriptor, use
619@code{lseek (@var{desc}, 0, SEEK_CUR)}.
620
621@cindex file positioning on a file descriptor
622@cindex positioning a file descriptor
623@cindex seeking on a file descriptor
624@comment unistd.h
625@comment POSIX.1
626@deftypefun off_t lseek (int @var{filedes}, off_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence})
627The @code{lseek} function is used to change the file position of the
628file with descriptor @var{filedes}.
629
630The @var{whence} argument specifies how the @var{offset} should be
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631interpreted, in the same way as for the @code{fseek} function, and it must
632be one of the symbolic constants @code{SEEK_SET}, @code{SEEK_CUR}, or
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633@code{SEEK_END}.
634
635@table @code
636@item SEEK_SET
637Specifies that @var{whence} is a count of characters from the beginning
638of the file.
639
640@item SEEK_CUR
641Specifies that @var{whence} is a count of characters from the current
642file position. This count may be positive or negative.
643
644@item SEEK_END
645Specifies that @var{whence} is a count of characters from the end of
646the file. A negative count specifies a position within the current
647extent of the file; a positive count specifies a position past the
2c6fe0bd 648current end. If you set the position past the current end, and
28f540f4 649actually write data, you will extend the file with zeros up to that
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650position.
651@end table
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652
653The return value from @code{lseek} is normally the resulting file
654position, measured in bytes from the beginning of the file.
655You can use this feature together with @code{SEEK_CUR} to read the
656current file position.
657
658If you want to append to the file, setting the file position to the
659current end of file with @code{SEEK_END} is not sufficient. Another
660process may write more data after you seek but before you write,
661extending the file so the position you write onto clobbers their data.
662Instead, use the @code{O_APPEND} operating mode; @pxref{Operating Modes}.
663
664You can set the file position past the current end of the file. This
665does not by itself make the file longer; @code{lseek} never changes the
666file. But subsequent output at that position will extend the file.
667Characters between the previous end of file and the new position are
668filled with zeros. Extending the file in this way can create a
669``hole'': the blocks of zeros are not actually allocated on disk, so the
78759725 670file takes up less space than it appears to; it is then called a
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671``sparse file''.
672@cindex sparse files
673@cindex holes in files
674
675If the file position cannot be changed, or the operation is in some way
07435eb4 676invalid, @code{lseek} returns a value of @math{-1}. The following
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677@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this function:
678
679@table @code
680@item EBADF
681The @var{filedes} is not a valid file descriptor.
682
683@item EINVAL
684The @var{whence} argument value is not valid, or the resulting
685file offset is not valid. A file offset is invalid.
686
687@item ESPIPE
688The @var{filedes} corresponds to an object that cannot be positioned,
689such as a pipe, FIFO or terminal device. (POSIX.1 specifies this error
690only for pipes and FIFOs, but in the GNU system, you always get
691@code{ESPIPE} if the object is not seekable.)
692@end table
693
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694When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} the
695@code{lseek} function is in fact @code{lseek64} and the type
696@code{off_t} has 64 bits which makes it possible to handle files up to
c756c71c 697@math{2^63} bytes in length.
b07d03e0 698
04b9968b 699This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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700is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
701descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{lseek} is
19e4c7dd 702called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
dfd2257a 703until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{lseek} should be
04b9968b 704protected using cancellation handlers.
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705@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
706
28f540f4 707The @code{lseek} function is the underlying primitive for the
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708@code{fseek}, @code{fseeko}, @code{ftell}, @code{ftello} and
709@code{rewind} functions, which operate on streams instead of file
710descriptors.
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711@end deftypefun
712
b07d03e0 713@comment unistd.h
a3a4a74e 714@comment Unix98
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715@deftypefun off64_t lseek64 (int @var{filedes}, off64_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence})
716This function is similar to the @code{lseek} function. The difference
717is that the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t} instead of
04b9968b 718@code{off_t} which makes it possible on 32 bit machines to address
c756c71c 719files larger than @math{2^31} bytes and up to @math{2^63} bytes. The
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720file descriptor @code{filedes} must be opened using @code{open64} since
721otherwise the large offsets possible with @code{off64_t} will lead to
722errors with a descriptor in small file mode.
723
c756c71c 724When the source file is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
b07d03e0 72532 bits machine this function is actually available under the name
04b9968b 726@code{lseek} and so transparently replaces the 32 bit interface.
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727@end deftypefun
728
28f540f4 729You can have multiple descriptors for the same file if you open the file
2c6fe0bd 730more than once, or if you duplicate a descriptor with @code{dup}.
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731Descriptors that come from separate calls to @code{open} have independent
732file positions; using @code{lseek} on one descriptor has no effect on the
2c6fe0bd 733other. For example,
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734
735@smallexample
736@group
737@{
738 int d1, d2;
739 char buf[4];
740 d1 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY);
741 d2 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY);
742 lseek (d1, 1024, SEEK_SET);
743 read (d2, buf, 4);
744@}
745@end group
746@end smallexample
747
748@noindent
749will read the first four characters of the file @file{foo}. (The
750error-checking code necessary for a real program has been omitted here
751for brevity.)
752
753By contrast, descriptors made by duplication share a common file
754position with the original descriptor that was duplicated. Anything
755which alters the file position of one of the duplicates, including
756reading or writing data, affects all of them alike. Thus, for example,
757
758@smallexample
759@{
760 int d1, d2, d3;
761 char buf1[4], buf2[4];
762 d1 = open ("foo", O_RDONLY);
763 d2 = dup (d1);
764 d3 = dup (d2);
765 lseek (d3, 1024, SEEK_SET);
766 read (d1, buf1, 4);
767 read (d2, buf2, 4);
768@}
769@end smallexample
770
771@noindent
772will read four characters starting with the 1024'th character of
773@file{foo}, and then four more characters starting with the 1028'th
774character.
775
776@comment sys/types.h
777@comment POSIX.1
778@deftp {Data Type} off_t
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779This is a signed integer type used to represent file sizes. In
780@theglibc{}, this type is no narrower than @code{int}.
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781
782If the source is compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this type
783is transparently replaced by @code{off64_t}.
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784@end deftp
785
b07d03e0 786@comment sys/types.h
a3a4a74e 787@comment Unix98
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788@deftp {Data Type} off64_t
789This type is used similar to @code{off_t}. The difference is that even
04b9968b 790on 32 bit machines, where the @code{off_t} type would have 32 bits,
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791@code{off64_t} has 64 bits and so is able to address files up to
792@math{2^63} bytes in length.
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793
794When compiling with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this type is
795available under the name @code{off_t}.
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796@end deftp
797
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798These aliases for the @samp{SEEK_@dots{}} constants exist for the sake
799of compatibility with older BSD systems. They are defined in two
800different header files: @file{fcntl.h} and @file{sys/file.h}.
801
802@table @code
803@item L_SET
804An alias for @code{SEEK_SET}.
805
806@item L_INCR
807An alias for @code{SEEK_CUR}.
808
809@item L_XTND
810An alias for @code{SEEK_END}.
811@end table
812
813@node Descriptors and Streams
814@section Descriptors and Streams
815@cindex streams, and file descriptors
816@cindex converting file descriptor to stream
817@cindex extracting file descriptor from stream
818
819Given an open file descriptor, you can create a stream for it with the
820@code{fdopen} function. You can get the underlying file descriptor for
821an existing stream with the @code{fileno} function. These functions are
822declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
823@pindex stdio.h
824
825@comment stdio.h
826@comment POSIX.1
827@deftypefun {FILE *} fdopen (int @var{filedes}, const char *@var{opentype})
828The @code{fdopen} function returns a new stream for the file descriptor
829@var{filedes}.
830
831The @var{opentype} argument is interpreted in the same way as for the
832@code{fopen} function (@pxref{Opening Streams}), except that
833the @samp{b} option is not permitted; this is because GNU makes no
834distinction between text and binary files. Also, @code{"w"} and
04b9968b 835@code{"w+"} do not cause truncation of the file; these have an effect only
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836when opening a file, and in this case the file has already been opened.
837You must make sure that the @var{opentype} argument matches the actual
838mode of the open file descriptor.
839
840The return value is the new stream. If the stream cannot be created
841(for example, if the modes for the file indicated by the file descriptor
842do not permit the access specified by the @var{opentype} argument), a
843null pointer is returned instead.
844
845In some other systems, @code{fdopen} may fail to detect that the modes
846for file descriptor do not permit the access specified by
1f77f049 847@code{opentype}. @Theglibc{} always checks for this.
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848@end deftypefun
849
850For an example showing the use of the @code{fdopen} function,
851see @ref{Creating a Pipe}.
852
853@comment stdio.h
854@comment POSIX.1
855@deftypefun int fileno (FILE *@var{stream})
856This function returns the file descriptor associated with the stream
857@var{stream}. If an error is detected (for example, if the @var{stream}
858is not valid) or if @var{stream} does not do I/O to a file,
07435eb4 859@code{fileno} returns @math{-1}.
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860@end deftypefun
861
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862@comment stdio.h
863@comment GNU
864@deftypefun int fileno_unlocked (FILE *@var{stream})
865The @code{fileno_unlocked} function is equivalent to the @code{fileno}
866function except that it does not implicitly lock the stream if the state
867is @code{FSETLOCKING_INTERNAL}.
868
869This function is a GNU extension.
870@end deftypefun
871
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872@cindex standard file descriptors
873@cindex file descriptors, standard
874There are also symbolic constants defined in @file{unistd.h} for the
875file descriptors belonging to the standard streams @code{stdin},
876@code{stdout}, and @code{stderr}; see @ref{Standard Streams}.
877@pindex unistd.h
878
879@comment unistd.h
880@comment POSIX.1
881@table @code
882@item STDIN_FILENO
883@vindex STDIN_FILENO
884This macro has value @code{0}, which is the file descriptor for
885standard input.
886@cindex standard input file descriptor
887
888@comment unistd.h
889@comment POSIX.1
890@item STDOUT_FILENO
891@vindex STDOUT_FILENO
892This macro has value @code{1}, which is the file descriptor for
893standard output.
894@cindex standard output file descriptor
895
896@comment unistd.h
897@comment POSIX.1
898@item STDERR_FILENO
899@vindex STDERR_FILENO
900This macro has value @code{2}, which is the file descriptor for
901standard error output.
902@end table
903@cindex standard error file descriptor
904
905@node Stream/Descriptor Precautions
906@section Dangers of Mixing Streams and Descriptors
907@cindex channels
908@cindex streams and descriptors
909@cindex descriptors and streams
910@cindex mixing descriptors and streams
911
912You can have multiple file descriptors and streams (let's call both
913streams and descriptors ``channels'' for short) connected to the same
914file, but you must take care to avoid confusion between channels. There
915are two cases to consider: @dfn{linked} channels that share a single
916file position value, and @dfn{independent} channels that have their own
917file positions.
918
919It's best to use just one channel in your program for actual data
920transfer to any given file, except when all the access is for input.
921For example, if you open a pipe (something you can only do at the file
922descriptor level), either do all I/O with the descriptor, or construct a
923stream from the descriptor with @code{fdopen} and then do all I/O with
924the stream.
925
926@menu
927* Linked Channels:: Dealing with channels sharing a file position.
928* Independent Channels:: Dealing with separately opened, unlinked channels.
2c6fe0bd 929* Cleaning Streams:: Cleaning a stream makes it safe to use
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930 another channel.
931@end menu
932
933@node Linked Channels
934@subsection Linked Channels
935@cindex linked channels
936
937Channels that come from a single opening share the same file position;
938we call them @dfn{linked} channels. Linked channels result when you
939make a stream from a descriptor using @code{fdopen}, when you get a
940descriptor from a stream with @code{fileno}, when you copy a descriptor
941with @code{dup} or @code{dup2}, and when descriptors are inherited
942during @code{fork}. For files that don't support random access, such as
943terminals and pipes, @emph{all} channels are effectively linked. On
944random-access files, all append-type output streams are effectively
945linked to each other.
946
947@cindex cleaning up a stream
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948If you have been using a stream for I/O (or have just opened the stream),
949and you want to do I/O using
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950another channel (either a stream or a descriptor) that is linked to it,
951you must first @dfn{clean up} the stream that you have been using.
952@xref{Cleaning Streams}.
953
954Terminating a process, or executing a new program in the process,
955destroys all the streams in the process. If descriptors linked to these
956streams persist in other processes, their file positions become
957undefined as a result. To prevent this, you must clean up the streams
958before destroying them.
959
960@node Independent Channels
961@subsection Independent Channels
962@cindex independent channels
963
964When you open channels (streams or descriptors) separately on a seekable
965file, each channel has its own file position. These are called
966@dfn{independent channels}.
967
968The system handles each channel independently. Most of the time, this
969is quite predictable and natural (especially for input): each channel
970can read or write sequentially at its own place in the file. However,
971if some of the channels are streams, you must take these precautions:
972
973@itemize @bullet
974@item
975You should clean an output stream after use, before doing anything else
976that might read or write from the same part of the file.
977
978@item
979You should clean an input stream before reading data that may have been
980modified using an independent channel. Otherwise, you might read
981obsolete data that had been in the stream's buffer.
982@end itemize
983
984If you do output to one channel at the end of the file, this will
985certainly leave the other independent channels positioned somewhere
986before the new end. You cannot reliably set their file positions to the
987new end of file before writing, because the file can always be extended
988by another process between when you set the file position and when you
989write the data. Instead, use an append-type descriptor or stream; they
990always output at the current end of the file. In order to make the
991end-of-file position accurate, you must clean the output channel you
992were using, if it is a stream.
993
994It's impossible for two channels to have separate file pointers for a
995file that doesn't support random access. Thus, channels for reading or
996writing such files are always linked, never independent. Append-type
997channels are also always linked. For these channels, follow the rules
998for linked channels; see @ref{Linked Channels}.
999
1000@node Cleaning Streams
1001@subsection Cleaning Streams
1002
6664049b 1003You can use @code{fflush} to clean a stream in most
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1004cases.
1005
6664049b 1006You can skip the @code{fflush} if you know the stream
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1007is already clean. A stream is clean whenever its buffer is empty. For
1008example, an unbuffered stream is always clean. An input stream that is
1009at end-of-file is clean. A line-buffered stream is clean when the last
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1010character output was a newline. However, a just-opened input stream
1011might not be clean, as its input buffer might not be empty.
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1012
1013There is one case in which cleaning a stream is impossible on most
1014systems. This is when the stream is doing input from a file that is not
1015random-access. Such streams typically read ahead, and when the file is
1016not random access, there is no way to give back the excess data already
1017read. When an input stream reads from a random-access file,
1018@code{fflush} does clean the stream, but leaves the file pointer at an
1019unpredictable place; you must set the file pointer before doing any
6664049b 1020further I/O.
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1021
1022Closing an output-only stream also does @code{fflush}, so this is a
6664049b 1023valid way of cleaning an output stream.
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1024
1025You need not clean a stream before using its descriptor for control
1026operations such as setting terminal modes; these operations don't affect
1027the file position and are not affected by it. You can use any
1028descriptor for these operations, and all channels are affected
1029simultaneously. However, text already ``output'' to a stream but still
1030buffered by the stream will be subject to the new terminal modes when
1031subsequently flushed. To make sure ``past'' output is covered by the
1032terminal settings that were in effect at the time, flush the output
1033streams for that terminal before setting the modes. @xref{Terminal
1034Modes}.
1035
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1036@node Scatter-Gather
1037@section Fast Scatter-Gather I/O
1038@cindex scatter-gather
1039
1040Some applications may need to read or write data to multiple buffers,
04b9968b 1041which are separated in memory. Although this can be done easily enough
19e4c7dd 1042with multiple calls to @code{read} and @code{write}, it is inefficient
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1043because there is overhead associated with each kernel call.
1044
1045Instead, many platforms provide special high-speed primitives to perform
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1046these @dfn{scatter-gather} operations in a single kernel call. @Theglibc{}
1047will provide an emulation on any system that lacks these
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1048primitives, so they are not a portability threat. They are defined in
1049@code{sys/uio.h}.
1050
1051These functions are controlled with arrays of @code{iovec} structures,
1052which describe the location and size of each buffer.
1053
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1054@comment sys/uio.h
1055@comment BSD
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1056@deftp {Data Type} {struct iovec}
1057
1058The @code{iovec} structure describes a buffer. It contains two fields:
1059
1060@table @code
1061
1062@item void *iov_base
1063Contains the address of a buffer.
1064
1065@item size_t iov_len
1066Contains the length of the buffer.
1067
1068@end table
1069@end deftp
1070
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1071@comment sys/uio.h
1072@comment BSD
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1073@deftypefun ssize_t readv (int @var{filedes}, const struct iovec *@var{vector}, int @var{count})
1074
1075The @code{readv} function reads data from @var{filedes} and scatters it
1076into the buffers described in @var{vector}, which is taken to be
1077@var{count} structures long. As each buffer is filled, data is sent to the
1078next.
1079
1080Note that @code{readv} is not guaranteed to fill all the buffers.
1081It may stop at any point, for the same reasons @code{read} would.
1082
1083The return value is a count of bytes (@emph{not} buffers) read, @math{0}
1084indicating end-of-file, or @math{-1} indicating an error. The possible
1085errors are the same as in @code{read}.
1086
1087@end deftypefun
1088
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1089@comment sys/uio.h
1090@comment BSD
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1091@deftypefun ssize_t writev (int @var{filedes}, const struct iovec *@var{vector}, int @var{count})
1092
1093The @code{writev} function gathers data from the buffers described in
1094@var{vector}, which is taken to be @var{count} structures long, and writes
1095them to @code{filedes}. As each buffer is written, it moves on to the
1096next.
1097
1098Like @code{readv}, @code{writev} may stop midstream under the same
1099conditions @code{write} would.
1100
1101The return value is a count of bytes written, or @math{-1} indicating an
1102error. The possible errors are the same as in @code{write}.
1103
1104@end deftypefun
1105
1106@c Note - I haven't read this anywhere. I surmised it from my knowledge
1107@c of computer science. Thus, there could be subtleties I'm missing.
1108
1109Note that if the buffers are small (under about 1kB), high-level streams
1110may be easier to use than these functions. However, @code{readv} and
1111@code{writev} are more efficient when the individual buffers themselves
1112(as opposed to the total output), are large. In that case, a high-level
1113stream would not be able to cache the data effectively.
1114
1115@node Memory-mapped I/O
1116@section Memory-mapped I/O
1117
1118On modern operating systems, it is possible to @dfn{mmap} (pronounced
1119``em-map'') a file to a region of memory. When this is done, the file can
1120be accessed just like an array in the program.
1121
19e4c7dd 1122This is more efficient than @code{read} or @code{write}, as only the regions
04b9968b 1123of the file that a program actually accesses are loaded. Accesses to
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1124not-yet-loaded parts of the mmapped region are handled in the same way as
1125swapped out pages.
1126
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1127Since mmapped pages can be stored back to their file when physical
1128memory is low, it is possible to mmap files orders of magnitude larger
1129than both the physical memory @emph{and} swap space. The only limit is
1130address space. The theoretical limit is 4GB on a 32-bit machine -
1131however, the actual limit will be smaller since some areas will be
1132reserved for other purposes. If the LFS interface is used the file size
1133on 32-bit systems is not limited to 2GB (offsets are signed which
1134reduces the addressable area of 4GB by half); the full 64-bit are
1135available.
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1136
1137Memory mapping only works on entire pages of memory. Thus, addresses
1138for mapping must be page-aligned, and length values will be rounded up.
1139To determine the size of a page the machine uses one should use
1140
b642f101 1141@vindex _SC_PAGESIZE
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1142@smallexample
1143size_t page_size = (size_t) sysconf (_SC_PAGESIZE);
1144@end smallexample
1145
b642f101 1146@noindent
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1147These functions are declared in @file{sys/mman.h}.
1148
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1149@comment sys/mman.h
1150@comment POSIX
cc6e48bc 1151@deftypefun {void *} mmap (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{protect}, int @var{flags}, int @var{filedes}, off_t @var{offset})
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1152
1153The @code{mmap} function creates a new mapping, connected to bytes
b73147d0 1154(@var{offset}) to (@var{offset} + @var{length} - 1) in the file open on
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1155@var{filedes}. A new reference for the file specified by @var{filedes}
1156is created, which is not removed by closing the file.
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1157
1158@var{address} gives a preferred starting address for the mapping.
1159@code{NULL} expresses no preference. Any previous mapping at that
1160address is automatically removed. The address you give may still be
1161changed, unless you use the @code{MAP_FIXED} flag.
1162
1163@vindex PROT_READ
1164@vindex PROT_WRITE
1165@vindex PROT_EXEC
1166@var{protect} contains flags that control what kind of access is
1167permitted. They include @code{PROT_READ}, @code{PROT_WRITE}, and
1168@code{PROT_EXEC}, which permit reading, writing, and execution,
1169respectively. Inappropriate access will cause a segfault (@pxref{Program
1170Error Signals}).
1171
1172Note that most hardware designs cannot support write permission without
1173read permission, and many do not distinguish read and execute permission.
49c091e5 1174Thus, you may receive wider permissions than you ask for, and mappings of
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1175write-only files may be denied even if you do not use @code{PROT_READ}.
1176
1177@var{flags} contains flags that control the nature of the map.
1178One of @code{MAP_SHARED} or @code{MAP_PRIVATE} must be specified.
1179
1180They include:
1181
1182@vtable @code
1183@item MAP_PRIVATE
1184This specifies that writes to the region should never be written back
1185to the attached file. Instead, a copy is made for the process, and the
1186region will be swapped normally if memory runs low. No other process will
1187see the changes.
1188
1189Since private mappings effectively revert to ordinary memory
1190when written to, you must have enough virtual memory for a copy of
1191the entire mmapped region if you use this mode with @code{PROT_WRITE}.
1192
1193@item MAP_SHARED
1194This specifies that writes to the region will be written back to the
1195file. Changes made will be shared immediately with other processes
1196mmaping the same file.
1197
1198Note that actual writing may take place at any time. You need to use
1199@code{msync}, described below, if it is important that other processes
1200using conventional I/O get a consistent view of the file.
1201
1202@item MAP_FIXED
1203This forces the system to use the exact mapping address specified in
1204@var{address} and fail if it can't.
1205
1206@c One of these is official - the other is obviously an obsolete synonym
1207@c Which is which?
1208@item MAP_ANONYMOUS
1209@itemx MAP_ANON
1210This flag tells the system to create an anonymous mapping, not connected
1211to a file. @var{filedes} and @var{off} are ignored, and the region is
1212initialized with zeros.
1213
1214Anonymous maps are used as the basic primitive to extend the heap on some
1215systems. They are also useful to share data between multiple tasks
1216without creating a file.
1217
49c091e5 1218On some systems using private anonymous mmaps is more efficient than using
1f77f049 1219@code{malloc} for large blocks. This is not an issue with @theglibc{},
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1220as the included @code{malloc} automatically uses @code{mmap} where appropriate.
1221
1222@c Linux has some other MAP_ options, which I have not discussed here.
1223@c MAP_DENYWRITE, MAP_EXECUTABLE and MAP_GROWSDOWN don't seem applicable to
1224@c user programs (and I don't understand the last two). MAP_LOCKED does
1225@c not appear to be implemented.
1226
1227@end vtable
1228
1229@code{mmap} returns the address of the new mapping, or @math{-1} for an
1230error.
1231
1232Possible errors include:
1233
1234@table @code
1235
1236@item EINVAL
1237
1238Either @var{address} was unusable, or inconsistent @var{flags} were
1239given.
1240
1241@item EACCES
1242
1243@var{filedes} was not open for the type of access specified in @var{protect}.
1244
1245@item ENOMEM
1246
1247Either there is not enough memory for the operation, or the process is
1248out of address space.
1249
1250@item ENODEV
1251
1252This file is of a type that doesn't support mapping.
1253
1254@item ENOEXEC
1255
1256The file is on a filesystem that doesn't support mapping.
1257
1258@c On Linux, EAGAIN will appear if the file has a conflicting mandatory lock.
1259@c However mandatory locks are not discussed in this manual.
1260@c
1261@c Similarly, ETXTBSY will occur if the MAP_DENYWRITE flag (not documented
1262@c here) is used and the file is already open for writing.
1263
1264@end table
1265
1266@end deftypefun
1267
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1268@comment sys/mman.h
1269@comment LFS
cc6e48bc 1270@deftypefun {void *} mmap64 (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{protect}, int @var{flags}, int @var{filedes}, off64_t @var{offset})
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1271The @code{mmap64} function is equivalent to the @code{mmap} function but
1272the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t}. On 32-bit systems
1273this allows the file associated with the @var{filedes} descriptor to be
1274larger than 2GB. @var{filedes} must be a descriptor returned from a
1275call to @code{open64} or @code{fopen64} and @code{freopen64} where the
1276descriptor is retrieved with @code{fileno}.
1277
1278When the sources are translated with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
1279function is actually available under the name @code{mmap}. I.e., the
1280new, extended API using 64 bit file sizes and offsets transparently
1281replaces the old API.
1282@end deftypefun
1283
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1284@comment sys/mman.h
1285@comment POSIX
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1286@deftypefun int munmap (void *@var{addr}, size_t @var{length})
1287
1288@code{munmap} removes any memory maps from (@var{addr}) to (@var{addr} +
1289@var{length}). @var{length} should be the length of the mapping.
1290
04b9968b 1291It is safe to unmap multiple mappings in one command, or include unmapped
07435eb4 1292space in the range. It is also possible to unmap only part of an existing
04b9968b 1293mapping. However, only entire pages can be removed. If @var{length} is not
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1294an even number of pages, it will be rounded up.
1295
1296It returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for an error.
1297
1298One error is possible:
1299
1300@table @code
1301
1302@item EINVAL
04b9968b 1303The memory range given was outside the user mmap range or wasn't page
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1304aligned.
1305
1306@end table
1307
1308@end deftypefun
1309
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1310@comment sys/mman.h
1311@comment POSIX
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1312@deftypefun int msync (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{flags})
1313
1314When using shared mappings, the kernel can write the file at any time
1315before the mapping is removed. To be certain data has actually been
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1316written to the file and will be accessible to non-memory-mapped I/O, it
1317is necessary to use this function.
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1318
1319It operates on the region @var{address} to (@var{address} + @var{length}).
1320It may be used on part of a mapping or multiple mappings, however the
1321region given should not contain any unmapped space.
1322
1323@var{flags} can contain some options:
1324
1325@vtable @code
1326
1327@item MS_SYNC
1328
1329This flag makes sure the data is actually written @emph{to disk}.
1330Normally @code{msync} only makes sure that accesses to a file with
1331conventional I/O reflect the recent changes.
1332
1333@item MS_ASYNC
1334
1335This tells @code{msync} to begin the synchronization, but not to wait for
1336it to complete.
1337
1338@c Linux also has MS_INVALIDATE, which I don't understand.
1339
1340@end vtable
1341
1342@code{msync} returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for
1343error. Errors include:
1344
1345@table @code
1346
1347@item EINVAL
1348An invalid region was given, or the @var{flags} were invalid.
1349
1350@item EFAULT
1351There is no existing mapping in at least part of the given region.
1352
1353@end table
1354
1355@end deftypefun
1356
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1357@comment sys/mman.h
1358@comment GNU
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1359@deftypefun {void *} mremap (void *@var{address}, size_t @var{length}, size_t @var{new_length}, int @var{flag})
1360
1361This function can be used to change the size of an existing memory
1362area. @var{address} and @var{length} must cover a region entirely mapped
1363in the same @code{mmap} statement. A new mapping with the same
04b9968b 1364characteristics will be returned with the length @var{new_length}.
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1365
1366One option is possible, @code{MREMAP_MAYMOVE}. If it is given in
1367@var{flags}, the system may remove the existing mapping and create a new
1368one of the desired length in another location.
1369
1370The address of the resulting mapping is returned, or @math{-1}. Possible
1371error codes include:
1372
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1373@table @code
1374
1375@item EFAULT
1376There is no existing mapping in at least part of the original region, or
1377the region covers two or more distinct mappings.
1378
1379@item EINVAL
1380The address given is misaligned or inappropriate.
1381
1382@item EAGAIN
1383The region has pages locked, and if extended it would exceed the
1384process's resource limit for locked pages. @xref{Limits on Resources}.
1385
1386@item ENOMEM
19e4c7dd 1387The region is private writable, and insufficient virtual memory is
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1388available to extend it. Also, this error will occur if
1389@code{MREMAP_MAYMOVE} is not given and the extension would collide with
1390another mapped region.
1391
1392@end table
1393@end deftypefun
1394
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1395This function is only available on a few systems. Except for performing
1396optional optimizations one should not rely on this function.
1397
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1398Not all file descriptors may be mapped. Sockets, pipes, and most devices
1399only allow sequential access and do not fit into the mapping abstraction.
1400In addition, some regular files may not be mmapable, and older kernels may
1401not support mapping at all. Thus, programs using @code{mmap} should
1402have a fallback method to use should it fail. @xref{Mmap,,,standards,GNU
1403Coding Standards}.
1404
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1405@comment sys/mman.h
1406@comment POSIX
1407@deftypefun int madvise (void *@var{addr}, size_t @var{length}, int @var{advice})
1408
1409This function can be used to provide the system with @var{advice} about
1410the intended usage patterns of the memory region starting at @var{addr}
1411and extending @var{length} bytes.
1412
1413The valid BSD values for @var{advice} are:
1414
1415@table @code
1416
1417@item MADV_NORMAL
1418The region should receive no further special treatment.
1419
1420@item MADV_RANDOM
1421The region will be accessed via random page references. The kernel
1422should page-in the minimal number of pages for each page fault.
1423
1424@item MADV_SEQUENTIAL
1425The region will be accessed via sequential page references. This
1426may cause the kernel to aggressively read-ahead, expecting further
1427sequential references after any page fault within this region.
1428
1429@item MADV_WILLNEED
1430The region will be needed. The pages within this region may
1431be pre-faulted in by the kernel.
1432
1433@item MADV_DONTNEED
1434The region is no longer needed. The kernel may free these pages,
1435causing any changes to the pages to be lost, as well as swapped
1436out pages to be discarded.
1437
1438@end table
1439
1440The POSIX names are slightly different, but with the same meanings:
1441
1442@table @code
1443
1444@item POSIX_MADV_NORMAL
1445This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_NORMAL}.
1446
1447@item POSIX_MADV_RANDOM
1448This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_RANDOM}.
1449
1450@item POSIX_MADV_SEQUENTIAL
1451This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_SEQUENTIAL}.
1452
1453@item POSIX_MADV_WILLNEED
1454This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_WILLNEED}.
1455
1456@item POSIX_MADV_DONTNEED
1457This corresponds with BSD's @code{MADV_DONTNEED}.
1458
1459@end table
1460
1461@code{msync} returns @math{0} for success and @math{-1} for
1462error. Errors include:
1463@table @code
1464
1465@item EINVAL
1466An invalid region was given, or the @var{advice} was invalid.
1467
1468@item EFAULT
1469There is no existing mapping in at least part of the given region.
1470
1471@end table
1472@end deftypefun
07435eb4 1473
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1474@node Waiting for I/O
1475@section Waiting for Input or Output
1476@cindex waiting for input or output
1477@cindex multiplexing input
1478@cindex input from multiple files
1479
1480Sometimes a program needs to accept input on multiple input channels
1481whenever input arrives. For example, some workstations may have devices
1482such as a digitizing tablet, function button box, or dial box that are
1483connected via normal asynchronous serial interfaces; good user interface
1484style requires responding immediately to input on any device. Another
1485example is a program that acts as a server to several other processes
1486via pipes or sockets.
1487
1488You cannot normally use @code{read} for this purpose, because this
1489blocks the program until input is available on one particular file
1490descriptor; input on other channels won't wake it up. You could set
1491nonblocking mode and poll each file descriptor in turn, but this is very
1492inefficient.
1493
1494A better solution is to use the @code{select} function. This blocks the
1495program until input or output is ready on a specified set of file
1496descriptors, or until a timer expires, whichever comes first. This
1497facility is declared in the header file @file{sys/types.h}.
1498@pindex sys/types.h
1499
1500In the case of a server socket (@pxref{Listening}), we say that
1501``input'' is available when there are pending connections that could be
1502accepted (@pxref{Accepting Connections}). @code{accept} for server
1503sockets blocks and interacts with @code{select} just as @code{read} does
1504for normal input.
1505
1506@cindex file descriptor sets, for @code{select}
1507The file descriptor sets for the @code{select} function are specified
1508as @code{fd_set} objects. Here is the description of the data type
1509and some macros for manipulating these objects.
1510
1511@comment sys/types.h
1512@comment BSD
1513@deftp {Data Type} fd_set
1514The @code{fd_set} data type represents file descriptor sets for the
1515@code{select} function. It is actually a bit array.
1516@end deftp
1517
1518@comment sys/types.h
1519@comment BSD
1520@deftypevr Macro int FD_SETSIZE
1521The value of this macro is the maximum number of file descriptors that a
1522@code{fd_set} object can hold information about. On systems with a
1523fixed maximum number, @code{FD_SETSIZE} is at least that number. On
1524some systems, including GNU, there is no absolute limit on the number of
1525descriptors open, but this macro still has a constant value which
1526controls the number of bits in an @code{fd_set}; if you get a file
1527descriptor with a value as high as @code{FD_SETSIZE}, you cannot put
1528that descriptor into an @code{fd_set}.
1529@end deftypevr
1530
1531@comment sys/types.h
1532@comment BSD
1533@deftypefn Macro void FD_ZERO (fd_set *@var{set})
1534This macro initializes the file descriptor set @var{set} to be the
1535empty set.
1536@end deftypefn
1537
1538@comment sys/types.h
1539@comment BSD
1540@deftypefn Macro void FD_SET (int @var{filedes}, fd_set *@var{set})
1541This macro adds @var{filedes} to the file descriptor set @var{set}.
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1542
1543The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is
1544evaluated more than once.
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1545@end deftypefn
1546
1547@comment sys/types.h
1548@comment BSD
1549@deftypefn Macro void FD_CLR (int @var{filedes}, fd_set *@var{set})
1550This macro removes @var{filedes} from the file descriptor set @var{set}.
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1551
1552The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is
1553evaluated more than once.
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1554@end deftypefn
1555
1556@comment sys/types.h
1557@comment BSD
d9997a45 1558@deftypefn Macro int FD_ISSET (int @var{filedes}, const fd_set *@var{set})
28f540f4 1559This macro returns a nonzero value (true) if @var{filedes} is a member
3081378b 1560of the file descriptor set @var{set}, and zero (false) otherwise.
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1561
1562The @var{filedes} parameter must not have side effects since it is
1563evaluated more than once.
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1564@end deftypefn
1565
1566Next, here is the description of the @code{select} function itself.
1567
1568@comment sys/types.h
1569@comment BSD
1570@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})
1571The @code{select} function blocks the calling process until there is
1572activity on any of the specified sets of file descriptors, or until the
1573timeout period has expired.
1574
1575The file descriptors specified by the @var{read-fds} argument are
1576checked to see if they are ready for reading; the @var{write-fds} file
1577descriptors are checked to see if they are ready for writing; and the
1578@var{except-fds} file descriptors are checked for exceptional
1579conditions. You can pass a null pointer for any of these arguments if
1580you are not interested in checking for that kind of condition.
1581
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1582A file descriptor is considered ready for reading if a @code{read}
1583call will not block. This usually includes the read offset being at
1584the end of the file or there is an error to report. A server socket
1585is considered ready for reading if there is a pending connection which
1586can be accepted with @code{accept}; @pxref{Accepting Connections}. A
1587client socket is ready for writing when its connection is fully
1588established; @pxref{Connecting}.
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1589
1590``Exceptional conditions'' does not mean errors---errors are reported
1591immediately when an erroneous system call is executed, and do not
1592constitute a state of the descriptor. Rather, they include conditions
1593such as the presence of an urgent message on a socket. (@xref{Sockets},
1594for information on urgent messages.)
1595
1596The @code{select} function checks only the first @var{nfds} file
1597descriptors. The usual thing is to pass @code{FD_SETSIZE} as the value
1598of this argument.
1599
1600The @var{timeout} specifies the maximum time to wait. If you pass a
1601null pointer for this argument, it means to block indefinitely until one
1602of the file descriptors is ready. Otherwise, you should provide the
1603time in @code{struct timeval} format; see @ref{High-Resolution
1604Calendar}. Specify zero as the time (a @code{struct timeval} containing
1605all zeros) if you want to find out which descriptors are ready without
1606waiting if none are ready.
1607
1608The normal return value from @code{select} is the total number of ready file
1609descriptors in all of the sets. Each of the argument sets is overwritten
1610with information about the descriptors that are ready for the corresponding
1611operation. Thus, to see if a particular descriptor @var{desc} has input,
1612use @code{FD_ISSET (@var{desc}, @var{read-fds})} after @code{select} returns.
1613
1614If @code{select} returns because the timeout period expires, it returns
1615a value of zero.
1616
1617Any signal will cause @code{select} to return immediately. So if your
1618program uses signals, you can't rely on @code{select} to keep waiting
1619for the full time specified. If you want to be sure of waiting for a
1620particular amount of time, you must check for @code{EINTR} and repeat
1621the @code{select} with a newly calculated timeout based on the current
1622time. See the example below. See also @ref{Interrupted Primitives}.
1623
1624If an error occurs, @code{select} returns @code{-1} and does not modify
2c6fe0bd 1625the argument file descriptor sets. The following @code{errno} error
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1626conditions are defined for this function:
1627
1628@table @code
1629@item EBADF
1630One of the file descriptor sets specified an invalid file descriptor.
1631
1632@item EINTR
1633The operation was interrupted by a signal. @xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
1634
1635@item EINVAL
1636The @var{timeout} argument is invalid; one of the components is negative
1637or too large.
1638@end table
1639@end deftypefun
1640
1641@strong{Portability Note:} The @code{select} function is a BSD Unix
1642feature.
1643
1644Here is an example showing how you can use @code{select} to establish a
1645timeout period for reading from a file descriptor. The @code{input_timeout}
1646function blocks the calling process until input is available on the
1647file descriptor, or until the timeout period expires.
1648
1649@smallexample
1650@include select.c.texi
1651@end smallexample
1652
1653There is another example showing the use of @code{select} to multiplex
1654input from multiple sockets in @ref{Server Example}.
1655
1656
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1657@node Synchronizing I/O
1658@section Synchronizing I/O operations
1659
1660@cindex synchronizing
19e4c7dd 1661In most modern operating systems, the normal I/O operations are not
dfd2257a 1662executed synchronously. I.e., even if a @code{write} system call
19e4c7dd 1663returns, this does not mean the data is actually written to the media,
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1664e.g., the disk.
1665
19e4c7dd 1666In situations where synchronization points are necessary, you can use
04b9968b 1667special functions which ensure that all operations finish before
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1668they return.
1669
1670@comment unistd.h
1671@comment X/Open
1672@deftypefun int sync (void)
1673A call to this function will not return as long as there is data which
04b9968b 1674has not been written to the device. All dirty buffers in the kernel will
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1675be written and so an overall consistent system can be achieved (if no
1676other process in parallel writes data).
1677
1678A prototype for @code{sync} can be found in @file{unistd.h}.
1679
1680The return value is zero to indicate no error.
1681@end deftypefun
1682
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1683Programs more often want to ensure that data written to a given file is
1684committed, rather than all data in the system. For this, @code{sync} is overkill.
1685
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1686
1687@comment unistd.h
1688@comment POSIX
1689@deftypefun int fsync (int @var{fildes})
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1690The @code{fsync} function can be used to make sure all data associated with
1691the open file @var{fildes} is written to the device associated with the
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1692descriptor. The function call does not return unless all actions have
1693finished.
1694
1695A prototype for @code{fsync} can be found in @file{unistd.h}.
1696
04b9968b 1697This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
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1698is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
1699descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{fsync} is
19e4c7dd 1700called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
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1701until the program ends. To avoid this, calls to @code{fsync} should be
1702protected using cancellation handlers.
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1703@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
1704
49c091e5 1705The return value of the function is zero if no error occurred. Otherwise
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1706it is @math{-1} and the global variable @var{errno} is set to the
1707following values:
1708@table @code
1709@item EBADF
1710The descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid.
1711
1712@item EINVAL
1713No synchronization is possible since the system does not implement this.
1714@end table
1715@end deftypefun
1716
1717Sometimes it is not even necessary to write all data associated with a
1718file descriptor. E.g., in database files which do not change in size it
1719is enough to write all the file content data to the device.
19e4c7dd 1720Meta-information, like the modification time etc., are not that important
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1721and leaving such information uncommitted does not prevent a successful
1722recovering of the file in case of a problem.
1723
1724@comment unistd.h
1725@comment POSIX
1726@deftypefun int fdatasync (int @var{fildes})
04b9968b 1727When a call to the @code{fdatasync} function returns, it is ensured
dfd2257a 1728that all of the file data is written to the device. For all pending I/O
04b9968b 1729operations, the parts guaranteeing data integrity finished.
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1730
1731Not all systems implement the @code{fdatasync} operation. On systems
1732missing this functionality @code{fdatasync} is emulated by a call to
1733@code{fsync} since the performed actions are a superset of those
19e4c7dd 1734required by @code{fdatasync}.
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1735
1736The prototype for @code{fdatasync} is in @file{unistd.h}.
1737
49c091e5 1738The return value of the function is zero if no error occurred. Otherwise
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1739it is @math{-1} and the global variable @var{errno} is set to the
1740following values:
1741@table @code
1742@item EBADF
1743The descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid.
1744
1745@item EINVAL
1746No synchronization is possible since the system does not implement this.
1747@end table
1748@end deftypefun
1749
1750
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1751@node Asynchronous I/O
1752@section Perform I/O Operations in Parallel
1753
1754The POSIX.1b standard defines a new set of I/O operations which can
04b9968b 1755significantly reduce the time an application spends waiting at I/O. The
b07d03e0 1756new functions allow a program to initiate one or more I/O operations and
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1757then immediately resume normal work while the I/O operations are
1758executed in parallel. This functionality is available if the
a3a4a74e 1759@file{unistd.h} file defines the symbol @code{_POSIX_ASYNCHRONOUS_IO}.
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1760
1761These functions are part of the library with realtime functions named
1762@file{librt}. They are not actually part of the @file{libc} binary.
1763The implementation of these functions can be done using support in the
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1764kernel (if available) or using an implementation based on threads at
1765userlevel. In the latter case it might be necessary to link applications
fed8f7f7 1766with the thread library @file{libpthread} in addition to @file{librt}.
b07d03e0 1767
c756c71c 1768All AIO operations operate on files which were opened previously. There
04b9968b 1769might be arbitrarily many operations running for one file. The
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1770asynchronous I/O operations are controlled using a data structure named
1771@code{struct aiocb} (@dfn{AIO control block}). It is defined in
1772@file{aio.h} as follows.
1773
1774@comment aio.h
1775@comment POSIX.1b
1776@deftp {Data Type} {struct aiocb}
1777The POSIX.1b standard mandates that the @code{struct aiocb} structure
1778contains at least the members described in the following table. There
04b9968b 1779might be more elements which are used by the implementation, but
19e4c7dd 1780depending upon these elements is not portable and is highly deprecated.
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1781
1782@table @code
1783@item int aio_fildes
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1784This element specifies the file descriptor to be used for the
1785operation. It must be a legal descriptor, otherwise the operation will
1786fail.
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1787
1788The device on which the file is opened must allow the seek operation.
1789I.e., it is not possible to use any of the AIO operations on devices
1790like terminals where an @code{lseek} call would lead to an error.
1791
1792@item off_t aio_offset
19e4c7dd 1793This element specifies the offset in the file at which the operation (input
fed8f7f7 1794or output) is performed. Since the operations are carried out in arbitrary
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1795order and more than one operation for one file descriptor can be
1796started, one cannot expect a current read/write position of the file
1797descriptor.
1798
1799@item volatile void *aio_buf
1800This is a pointer to the buffer with the data to be written or the place
c756c71c 1801where the read data is stored.
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1802
1803@item size_t aio_nbytes
1804This element specifies the length of the buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}.
1805
1806@item int aio_reqprio
c756c71c 1807If the platform has defined @code{_POSIX_PRIORITIZED_IO} and
19e4c7dd 1808@code{_POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING}, the AIO requests are
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1809processed based on the current scheduling priority. The
1810@code{aio_reqprio} element can then be used to lower the priority of the
1811AIO operation.
1812
1813@item struct sigevent aio_sigevent
1814This element specifies how the calling process is notified once the
fed8f7f7 1815operation terminates. If the @code{sigev_notify} element is
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1816@code{SIGEV_NONE}, no notification is sent. If it is @code{SIGEV_SIGNAL},
1817the signal determined by @code{sigev_signo} is sent. Otherwise,
1818@code{sigev_notify} must be @code{SIGEV_THREAD}. In this case, a thread
c756c71c 1819is created which starts executing the function pointed to by
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1820@code{sigev_notify_function}.
1821
1822@item int aio_lio_opcode
1823This element is only used by the @code{lio_listio} and
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1824@code{lio_listio64} functions. Since these functions allow an
1825arbitrary number of operations to start at once, and each operation can be
1826input or output (or nothing), the information must be stored in the
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1827control block. The possible values are:
1828
1829@vtable @code
1830@item LIO_READ
1831Start a read operation. Read from the file at position
1832@code{aio_offset} and store the next @code{aio_nbytes} bytes in the
1833buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}.
1834
1835@item LIO_WRITE
1836Start a write operation. Write @code{aio_nbytes} bytes starting at
1837@code{aio_buf} into the file starting at position @code{aio_offset}.
1838
1839@item LIO_NOP
1840Do nothing for this control block. This value is useful sometimes when
1841an array of @code{struct aiocb} values contains holes, i.e., some of the
fed8f7f7 1842values must not be handled although the whole array is presented to the
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1843@code{lio_listio} function.
1844@end vtable
1845@end table
a3a4a74e 1846
fed8f7f7 1847When the sources are compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
19e4c7dd 184832 bit machine, this type is in fact @code{struct aiocb64}, since the LFS
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1849interface transparently replaces the @code{struct aiocb} definition.
1850@end deftp
1851
19e4c7dd 1852For use with the AIO functions defined in the LFS, there is a similar type
a3a4a74e 1853defined which replaces the types of the appropriate members with larger
04b9968b 1854types but otherwise is equivalent to @code{struct aiocb}. Particularly,
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1855all member names are the same.
1856
1857@comment aio.h
1858@comment POSIX.1b
1859@deftp {Data Type} {struct aiocb64}
1860@table @code
1861@item int aio_fildes
1862This element specifies the file descriptor which is used for the
1863operation. It must be a legal descriptor since otherwise the operation
1864fails for obvious reasons.
1865
1866The device on which the file is opened must allow the seek operation.
1867I.e., it is not possible to use any of the AIO operations on devices
1868like terminals where an @code{lseek} call would lead to an error.
1869
1870@item off64_t aio_offset
04b9968b 1871This element specifies at which offset in the file the operation (input
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1872or output) is performed. Since the operation are carried in arbitrary
1873order and more than one operation for one file descriptor can be
1874started, one cannot expect a current read/write position of the file
1875descriptor.
1876
1877@item volatile void *aio_buf
1878This is a pointer to the buffer with the data to be written or the place
19e4c7dd 1879where the read data is stored.
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1880
1881@item size_t aio_nbytes
1882This element specifies the length of the buffer pointed to by @code{aio_buf}.
1883
1884@item int aio_reqprio
1885If for the platform @code{_POSIX_PRIORITIZED_IO} and
04b9968b 1886@code{_POSIX_PRIORITY_SCHEDULING} are defined the AIO requests are
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1887processed based on the current scheduling priority. The
1888@code{aio_reqprio} element can then be used to lower the priority of the
1889AIO operation.
1890
1891@item struct sigevent aio_sigevent
1892This element specifies how the calling process is notified once the
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1893operation terminates. If the @code{sigev_notify}, element is
1894@code{SIGEV_NONE} no notification is sent. If it is @code{SIGEV_SIGNAL},
1895the signal determined by @code{sigev_signo} is sent. Otherwise,
a3a4a74e 1896@code{sigev_notify} must be @code{SIGEV_THREAD} in which case a thread
04b9968b 1897which starts executing the function pointed to by
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1898@code{sigev_notify_function}.
1899
1900@item int aio_lio_opcode
1901This element is only used by the @code{lio_listio} and
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1902@code{[lio_listio64} functions. Since these functions allow an
1903arbitrary number of operations to start at once, and since each operation can be
1904input or output (or nothing), the information must be stored in the
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1905control block. See the description of @code{struct aiocb} for a description
1906of the possible values.
1907@end table
1908
1909When the sources are compiled using @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
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191032 bit machine, this type is available under the name @code{struct
1911aiocb64}, since the LFS transparently replaces the old interface.
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1912@end deftp
1913
1914@menu
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1915* Asynchronous Reads/Writes:: Asynchronous Read and Write Operations.
1916* Status of AIO Operations:: Getting the Status of AIO Operations.
1917* Synchronizing AIO Operations:: Getting into a consistent state.
04b9968b 1918* Cancel AIO Operations:: Cancellation of AIO Operations.
a3a4a74e 1919* Configuration of AIO:: How to optimize the AIO implementation.
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1920@end menu
1921
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1922@node Asynchronous Reads/Writes
1923@subsection Asynchronous Read and Write Operations
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1924
1925@comment aio.h
1926@comment POSIX.1b
1927@deftypefun int aio_read (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
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1928This function initiates an asynchronous read operation. It
1929immediately returns after the operation was enqueued or when an
fed8f7f7 1930error was encountered.
b07d03e0 1931
a3a4a74e 1932The first @code{aiocbp->aio_nbytes} bytes of the file for which
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1933@code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} is a descriptor are written to the buffer
1934starting at @code{aiocbp->aio_buf}. Reading starts at the absolute
1935position @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} in the file.
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1936
1937If prioritized I/O is supported by the platform the
1938@code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is used to adjust the priority before
1939the request is actually enqueued.
1940
1941The calling process is notified about the termination of the read
1942request according to the @code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} value.
1943
04b9968b 1944When @code{aio_read} returns, the return value is zero if no error
b07d03e0 1945occurred that can be found before the process is enqueued. If such an
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1946early error is found, the function returns @math{-1} and sets
1947@code{errno} to one of the following values:
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1948
1949@table @code
1950@item EAGAIN
1951The request was not enqueued due to (temporarily) exceeded resource
1952limitations.
1953@item ENOSYS
1954The @code{aio_read} function is not implemented.
1955@item EBADF
1956The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. This condition
04b9968b 1957need not be recognized before enqueueing the request and so this error
fed8f7f7 1958might also be signaled asynchronously.
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1959@item EINVAL
1960The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} or @code{aiocbp->aio_reqpiro} value is
1961invalid. This condition need not be recognized before enqueueing the
49c091e5 1962request and so this error might also be signaled asynchronously.
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1963@end table
1964
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1965If @code{aio_read} returns zero, the current status of the request
1966can be queried using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return} functions.
1967As long as the value returned by @code{aio_error} is @code{EINPROGRESS}
1968the operation has not yet completed. If @code{aio_error} returns zero,
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1969the operation successfully terminated, otherwise the value is to be
1970interpreted as an error code. If the function terminated, the result of
1971the operation can be obtained using a call to @code{aio_return}. The
1972returned value is the same as an equivalent call to @code{read} would
04b9968b 1973have returned. Possible error codes returned by @code{aio_error} are:
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1974
1975@table @code
1976@item EBADF
1977The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid.
1978@item ECANCELED
19e4c7dd 1979The operation was canceled before the operation was finished
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1980(@pxref{Cancel AIO Operations})
1981@item EINVAL
1982The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} value is invalid.
1983@end table
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1984
1985When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
1986function is in fact @code{aio_read64} since the LFS interface transparently
1987replaces the normal implementation.
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1988@end deftypefun
1989
1990@comment aio.h
a3a4a74e 1991@comment Unix98
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1992@deftypefun int aio_read64 (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
1993This function is similar to the @code{aio_read} function. The only
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1994difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines, the file descriptor should
1995be opened in the large file mode. Internally, @code{aio_read64} uses
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1996functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position
1997Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the reading,
fed8f7f7 1998as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in @code{aio_read}.
a3a4a74e 1999
19e4c7dd 2000When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
a3a4a74e 2001function is available under the name @code{aio_read} and so transparently
04b9968b 2002replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit machines.
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2003@end deftypefun
2004
19e4c7dd 2005To write data asynchronously to a file, there exists an equivalent pair
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2006of functions with a very similar interface.
2007
2008@comment aio.h
2009@comment POSIX.1b
2010@deftypefun int aio_write (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2011This function initiates an asynchronous write operation. The function
2012call immediately returns after the operation was enqueued or if before
fed8f7f7 2013this happens an error was encountered.
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2014
2015The first @code{aiocbp->aio_nbytes} bytes from the buffer starting at
2016@code{aiocbp->aio_buf} are written to the file for which
2017@code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} is an descriptor, starting at the absolute
2018position @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} in the file.
2019
19e4c7dd 2020If prioritized I/O is supported by the platform, the
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2021@code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is used to adjust the priority before
2022the request is actually enqueued.
2023
2024The calling process is notified about the termination of the read
2025request according to the @code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} value.
2026
19e4c7dd 2027When @code{aio_write} returns, the return value is zero if no error
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2028occurred that can be found before the process is enqueued. If such an
2029early error is found the function returns @math{-1} and sets
2030@code{errno} to one of the following values.
2031
2032@table @code
2033@item EAGAIN
2034The request was not enqueued due to (temporarily) exceeded resource
2035limitations.
2036@item ENOSYS
2037The @code{aio_write} function is not implemented.
2038@item EBADF
2039The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid. This condition
19e4c7dd 2040may not be recognized before enqueueing the request, and so this error
fed8f7f7 2041might also be signaled asynchronously.
a3a4a74e 2042@item EINVAL
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2043The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} or @code{aiocbp->aio_reqprio} value is
2044invalid. This condition may not be recognized before enqueueing the
fed8f7f7 2045request and so this error might also be signaled asynchronously.
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2046@end table
2047
19e4c7dd 2048In the case @code{aio_write} returns zero, the current status of the
a3a4a74e 2049request can be queried using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return}
c756c71c 2050functions. As long as the value returned by @code{aio_error} is
a3a4a74e 2051@code{EINPROGRESS} the operation has not yet completed. If
19e4c7dd 2052@code{aio_error} returns zero, the operation successfully terminated,
a3a4a74e 2053otherwise the value is to be interpreted as an error code. If the
19e4c7dd 2054function terminated, the result of the operation can be get using a call
a3a4a74e 2055to @code{aio_return}. The returned value is the same as an equivalent
19e4c7dd 2056call to @code{read} would have returned. Possible error codes returned
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2057by @code{aio_error} are:
2058
2059@table @code
2060@item EBADF
2061The @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} descriptor is not valid.
2062@item ECANCELED
19e4c7dd 2063The operation was canceled before the operation was finished.
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2064(@pxref{Cancel AIO Operations})
2065@item EINVAL
2066The @code{aiocbp->aio_offset} value is invalid.
2067@end table
2068
19e4c7dd 2069When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
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2070function is in fact @code{aio_write64} since the LFS interface transparently
2071replaces the normal implementation.
2072@end deftypefun
2073
2074@comment aio.h
2075@comment Unix98
2076@deftypefun int aio_write64 (struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2077This function is similar to the @code{aio_write} function. The only
04b9968b 2078difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines the file descriptor should
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2079be opened in the large file mode. Internally @code{aio_write64} uses
2080functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position
2081Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the writing,
fed8f7f7 2082as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in @code{aio_write}.
a3a4a74e 2083
19e4c7dd 2084When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
a3a4a74e 2085function is available under the name @code{aio_write} and so transparently
04b9968b 2086replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit machines.
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2087@end deftypefun
2088
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2089Besides these functions with the more or less traditional interface,
2090POSIX.1b also defines a function which can initiate more than one
2091operation at a time, and which can handle freely mixed read and write
2092operations. It is therefore similar to a combination of @code{readv} and
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2093@code{writev}.
2094
2095@comment aio.h
2096@comment POSIX.1b
2097@deftypefun int lio_listio (int @var{mode}, struct aiocb *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, struct sigevent *@var{sig})
2098The @code{lio_listio} function can be used to enqueue an arbitrary
2099number of read and write requests at one time. The requests can all be
2100meant for the same file, all for different files or every solution in
2101between.
2102
2103@code{lio_listio} gets the @var{nent} requests from the array pointed to
19e4c7dd 2104by @var{list}. The operation to be performed is determined by the
a3a4a74e 2105@code{aio_lio_opcode} member in each element of @var{list}. If this
19e4c7dd 2106field is @code{LIO_READ} a read operation is enqueued, similar to a call
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2107of @code{aio_read} for this element of the array (except that the way
2108the termination is signalled is different, as we will see below). If
19e4c7dd 2109the @code{aio_lio_opcode} member is @code{LIO_WRITE} a write operation
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2110is enqueued. Otherwise the @code{aio_lio_opcode} must be @code{LIO_NOP}
2111in which case this element of @var{list} is simply ignored. This
2112``operation'' is useful in situations where one has a fixed array of
2113@code{struct aiocb} elements from which only a few need to be handled at
2114a time. Another situation is where the @code{lio_listio} call was
19e4c7dd 2115canceled before all requests are processed (@pxref{Cancel AIO
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2116Operations}) and the remaining requests have to be reissued.
2117
fed8f7f7 2118The other members of each element of the array pointed to by
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2119@code{list} must have values suitable for the operation as described in
2120the documentation for @code{aio_read} and @code{aio_write} above.
2121
2122The @var{mode} argument determines how @code{lio_listio} behaves after
2123having enqueued all the requests. If @var{mode} is @code{LIO_WAIT} it
2124waits until all requests terminated. Otherwise @var{mode} must be
fed8f7f7 2125@code{LIO_NOWAIT} and in this case the function returns immediately after
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2126having enqueued all the requests. In this case the caller gets a
2127notification of the termination of all requests according to the
2128@var{sig} parameter. If @var{sig} is @code{NULL} no notification is
2129send. Otherwise a signal is sent or a thread is started, just as
2130described in the description for @code{aio_read} or @code{aio_write}.
2131
19e4c7dd 2132If @var{mode} is @code{LIO_WAIT}, the return value of @code{lio_listio}
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2133is @math{0} when all requests completed successfully. Otherwise the
2134function return @math{-1} and @code{errno} is set accordingly. To find
2135out which request or requests failed one has to use the @code{aio_error}
2136function on all the elements of the array @var{list}.
2137
19e4c7dd 2138In case @var{mode} is @code{LIO_NOWAIT}, the function returns @math{0} if
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2139all requests were enqueued correctly. The current state of the requests
2140can be found using @code{aio_error} and @code{aio_return} as described
19e4c7dd 2141above. If @code{lio_listio} returns @math{-1} in this mode, the
a3a4a74e 2142global variable @code{errno} is set accordingly. If a request did not
19e4c7dd
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2143yet terminate, a call to @code{aio_error} returns @code{EINPROGRESS}. If
2144the value is different, the request is finished and the error value (or
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2145@math{0}) is returned and the result of the operation can be retrieved
2146using @code{aio_return}.
2147
2148Possible values for @code{errno} are:
2149
2150@table @code
2151@item EAGAIN
19e4c7dd 2152The resources necessary to queue all the requests are not available at
a3a4a74e 2153the moment. The error status for each element of @var{list} must be
19e4c7dd 2154checked to determine which request failed.
a3a4a74e 2155
fed8f7f7 2156Another reason could be that the system wide limit of AIO requests is
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2157exceeded. This cannot be the case for the implementation on GNU systems
2158since no arbitrary limits exist.
2159@item EINVAL
2160The @var{mode} parameter is invalid or @var{nent} is larger than
2161@code{AIO_LISTIO_MAX}.
2162@item EIO
2163One or more of the request's I/O operations failed. The error status of
19e4c7dd 2164each request should be checked to determine which one failed.
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2165@item ENOSYS
2166The @code{lio_listio} function is not supported.
2167@end table
2168
2169If the @var{mode} parameter is @code{LIO_NOWAIT} and the caller cancels
19e4c7dd 2170a request, the error status for this request returned by
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2171@code{aio_error} is @code{ECANCELED}.
2172
19e4c7dd 2173When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
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2174function is in fact @code{lio_listio64} since the LFS interface
2175transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2176@end deftypefun
2177
2178@comment aio.h
2179@comment Unix98
2180@deftypefun int lio_listio64 (int @var{mode}, struct aiocb *const @var{list}, int @var{nent}, struct sigevent *@var{sig})
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2181This function is similar to the @code{lio_listio} function. The only
2182difference is that on @w{32 bit} machines, the file descriptor should
2183be opened in the large file mode. Internally, @code{lio_listio64} uses
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2184functionality equivalent to @code{lseek64} (@pxref{File Position
2185Primitive}) to position the file descriptor correctly for the reading or
fed8f7f7 2186writing, as opposed to @code{lseek} functionality used in
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2187@code{lio_listio}.
2188
19e4c7dd 2189When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
a3a4a74e 2190function is available under the name @code{lio_listio} and so
04b9968b 2191transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
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2192machines.
2193@end deftypefun
2194
2195@node Status of AIO Operations
2196@subsection Getting the Status of AIO Operations
2197
fed8f7f7 2198As already described in the documentation of the functions in the last
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2199section, it must be possible to get information about the status of an I/O
2200request. When the operation is performed truly asynchronously (as with
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2201@code{aio_read} and @code{aio_write} and with @code{lio_listio} when the
2202mode is @code{LIO_NOWAIT}), one sometimes needs to know whether a
2203specific request already terminated and if so, what the result was.
04b9968b 2204The following two functions allow you to get this kind of information.
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2205
2206@comment aio.h
2207@comment POSIX.1b
2208@deftypefun int aio_error (const struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2209This function determines the error state of the request described by the
fed8f7f7 2210@code{struct aiocb} variable pointed to by @var{aiocbp}. If the
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2211request has not yet terminated the value returned is always
2212@code{EINPROGRESS}. Once the request has terminated the value
2213@code{aio_error} returns is either @math{0} if the request completed
fed8f7f7 2214successfully or it returns the value which would be stored in the
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2215@code{errno} variable if the request would have been done using
2216@code{read}, @code{write}, or @code{fsync}.
2217
2218The function can return @code{ENOSYS} if it is not implemented. It
2219could also return @code{EINVAL} if the @var{aiocbp} parameter does not
2220refer to an asynchronous operation whose return status is not yet known.
2221
2222When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2223function is in fact @code{aio_error64} since the LFS interface
2224transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2225@end deftypefun
2226
2227@comment aio.h
2228@comment Unix98
2229@deftypefun int aio_error64 (const struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp})
2230This function is similar to @code{aio_error} with the only difference
2231that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct
2232aiocb64}.
2233
2234When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2235function is available under the name @code{aio_error} and so
04b9968b 2236transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
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2237machines.
2238@end deftypefun
2239
2240@comment aio.h
2241@comment POSIX.1b
2242@deftypefun ssize_t aio_return (const struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2243This function can be used to retrieve the return status of the operation
2244carried out by the request described in the variable pointed to by
2245@var{aiocbp}. As long as the error status of this request as returned
2246by @code{aio_error} is @code{EINPROGRESS} the return of this function is
2247undefined.
2248
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2249Once the request is finished this function can be used exactly once to
2250retrieve the return value. Following calls might lead to undefined
19e4c7dd 2251behavior. The return value itself is the value which would have been
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2252returned by the @code{read}, @code{write}, or @code{fsync} call.
2253
2254The function can return @code{ENOSYS} if it is not implemented. It
2255could also return @code{EINVAL} if the @var{aiocbp} parameter does not
2256refer to an asynchronous operation whose return status is not yet known.
2257
2258When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2259function is in fact @code{aio_return64} since the LFS interface
2260transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2261@end deftypefun
2262
2263@comment aio.h
2264@comment Unix98
2265@deftypefun int aio_return64 (const struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp})
2266This function is similar to @code{aio_return} with the only difference
2267that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct
2268aiocb64}.
2269
2270When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2271function is available under the name @code{aio_return} and so
04b9968b 2272transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
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2273machines.
2274@end deftypefun
2275
2276@node Synchronizing AIO Operations
2277@subsection Getting into a Consistent State
2278
2279When dealing with asynchronous operations it is sometimes necessary to
fed8f7f7 2280get into a consistent state. This would mean for AIO that one wants to
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2281know whether a certain request or a group of request were processed.
2282This could be done by waiting for the notification sent by the system
04b9968b 2283after the operation terminated, but this sometimes would mean wasting
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2284resources (mainly computation time). Instead POSIX.1b defines two
2285functions which will help with most kinds of consistency.
2286
2287The @code{aio_fsync} and @code{aio_fsync64} functions are only available
19e4c7dd 2288if the symbol @code{_POSIX_SYNCHRONIZED_IO} is defined in @file{unistd.h}.
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2289
2290@cindex synchronizing
2291@comment aio.h
2292@comment POSIX.1b
2293@deftypefun int aio_fsync (int @var{op}, struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2294Calling this function forces all I/O operations operating queued at the
fed8f7f7 2295time of the function call operating on the file descriptor
a3a4a74e 2296@code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} into the synchronized I/O completion state
04b9968b 2297(@pxref{Synchronizing I/O}). The @code{aio_fsync} function returns
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2298immediately but the notification through the method described in
2299@code{aiocbp->aio_sigevent} will happen only after all requests for this
04b9968b 2300file descriptor have terminated and the file is synchronized. This also
a3a4a74e 2301means that requests for this very same file descriptor which are queued
04b9968b 2302after the synchronization request are not affected.
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2303
2304If @var{op} is @code{O_DSYNC} the synchronization happens as with a call
2305to @code{fdatasync}. Otherwise @var{op} should be @code{O_SYNC} and
fed8f7f7 2306the synchronization happens as with @code{fsync}.
a3a4a74e 2307
19e4c7dd 2308As long as the synchronization has not happened, a call to
a3a4a74e 2309@code{aio_error} with the reference to the object pointed to by
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2310@var{aiocbp} returns @code{EINPROGRESS}. Once the synchronization is
2311done @code{aio_error} return @math{0} if the synchronization was not
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2312successful. Otherwise the value returned is the value to which the
2313@code{fsync} or @code{fdatasync} function would have set the
2314@code{errno} variable. In this case nothing can be assumed about the
2315consistency for the data written to this file descriptor.
2316
2317The return value of this function is @math{0} if the request was
19e4c7dd 2318successfully enqueued. Otherwise the return value is @math{-1} and
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2319@code{errno} is set to one of the following values:
2320
2321@table @code
2322@item EAGAIN
fed8f7f7 2323The request could not be enqueued due to temporary lack of resources.
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2324@item EBADF
2325The file descriptor @code{aiocbp->aio_fildes} is not valid or not open
2326for writing.
2327@item EINVAL
2328The implementation does not support I/O synchronization or the @var{op}
2329parameter is other than @code{O_DSYNC} and @code{O_SYNC}.
2330@item ENOSYS
2331This function is not implemented.
2332@end table
2333
2334When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
37de3d55 2335function is in fact @code{aio_fsync64} since the LFS interface
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2336transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2337@end deftypefun
2338
2339@comment aio.h
2340@comment Unix98
2341@deftypefun int aio_fsync64 (int @var{op}, struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp})
2342This function is similar to @code{aio_fsync} with the only difference
2343that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct
2344aiocb64}.
2345
2346When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2347function is available under the name @code{aio_fsync} and so
04b9968b 2348transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
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2349machines.
2350@end deftypefun
2351
fed8f7f7 2352Another method of synchronization is to wait until one or more requests of a
a3a4a74e
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2353specific set terminated. This could be achieved by the @code{aio_*}
2354functions to notify the initiating process about the termination but in
2355some situations this is not the ideal solution. In a program which
2356constantly updates clients somehow connected to the server it is not
2357always the best solution to go round robin since some connections might
2358be slow. On the other hand letting the @code{aio_*} function notify the
2359caller might also be not the best solution since whenever the process
2360works on preparing data for on client it makes no sense to be
2361interrupted by a notification since the new client will not be handled
2362before the current client is served. For situations like this
2363@code{aio_suspend} should be used.
2364
2365@comment aio.h
2366@comment POSIX.1b
2367@deftypefun int aio_suspend (const struct aiocb *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, const struct timespec *@var{timeout})
19e4c7dd 2368When calling this function, the calling thread is suspended until at
a3a4a74e 2369least one of the requests pointed to by the @var{nent} elements of the
19e4c7dd
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2370array @var{list} has completed. If any of the requests has already
2371completed at the time @code{aio_suspend} is called, the function returns
2372immediately. Whether a request has terminated or not is determined by
a3a4a74e 2373comparing the error status of the request with @code{EINPROGRESS}. If
19e4c7dd 2374an element of @var{list} is @code{NULL}, the entry is simply ignored.
a3a4a74e 2375
19e4c7dd
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2376If no request has finished, the calling process is suspended. If
2377@var{timeout} is @code{NULL}, the process is not woken until a request
2378has finished. If @var{timeout} is not @code{NULL}, the process remains
2379suspended at least as long as specified in @var{timeout}. In this case,
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2380@code{aio_suspend} returns with an error.
2381
fed8f7f7 2382The return value of the function is @math{0} if one or more requests
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2383from the @var{list} have terminated. Otherwise the function returns
2384@math{-1} and @code{errno} is set to one of the following values:
2385
2386@table @code
2387@item EAGAIN
2388None of the requests from the @var{list} completed in the time specified
2389by @var{timeout}.
2390@item EINTR
2391A signal interrupted the @code{aio_suspend} function. This signal might
2392also be sent by the AIO implementation while signalling the termination
2393of one of the requests.
2394@item ENOSYS
2395The @code{aio_suspend} function is not implemented.
2396@end table
2397
2398When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2399function is in fact @code{aio_suspend64} since the LFS interface
2400transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2401@end deftypefun
2402
2403@comment aio.h
2404@comment Unix98
2405@deftypefun int aio_suspend64 (const struct aiocb64 *const @var{list}[], int @var{nent}, const struct timespec *@var{timeout})
2406This function is similar to @code{aio_suspend} with the only difference
2407that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct
2408aiocb64}.
2409
2410When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} this
2411function is available under the name @code{aio_suspend} and so
04b9968b 2412transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
a3a4a74e
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2413machines.
2414@end deftypefun
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2415
2416@node Cancel AIO Operations
04b9968b 2417@subsection Cancellation of AIO Operations
b07d03e0 2418
19e4c7dd 2419When one or more requests are asynchronously processed, it might be
a3a4a74e 2420useful in some situations to cancel a selected operation, e.g., if it
19e4c7dd
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2421becomes obvious that the written data is no longer accurate and would
2422have to be overwritten soon. As an example, assume an application, which
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2423writes data in files in a situation where new incoming data would have
2424to be written in a file which will be updated by an enqueued request.
19e4c7dd
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2425The POSIX AIO implementation provides such a function, but this function
2426is not capable of forcing the cancellation of the request. It is up to the
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2427implementation to decide whether it is possible to cancel the operation
2428or not. Therefore using this function is merely a hint.
2429
2430@comment aio.h
2431@comment POSIX.1b
2432@deftypefun int aio_cancel (int @var{fildes}, struct aiocb *@var{aiocbp})
2433The @code{aio_cancel} function can be used to cancel one or more
19e4c7dd
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2434outstanding requests. If the @var{aiocbp} parameter is @code{NULL}, the
2435function tries to cancel all of the outstanding requests which would process
2436the file descriptor @var{fildes} (i.e., whose @code{aio_fildes} member
2437is @var{fildes}). If @var{aiocbp} is not @code{NULL}, @code{aio_cancel}
2438attempts to cancel the specific request pointed to by @var{aiocbp}.
a3a4a74e 2439
19e4c7dd 2440For requests which were successfully canceled, the normal notification
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2441about the termination of the request should take place. I.e., depending
2442on the @code{struct sigevent} object which controls this, nothing
2443happens, a signal is sent or a thread is started. If the request cannot
19e4c7dd 2444be canceled, it terminates the usual way after performing the operation.
a3a4a74e 2445
19e4c7dd 2446After a request is successfully canceled, a call to @code{aio_error} with
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2447a reference to this request as the parameter will return
2448@code{ECANCELED} and a call to @code{aio_return} will return @math{-1}.
19e4c7dd 2449If the request wasn't canceled and is still running the error status is
a3a4a74e
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2450still @code{EINPROGRESS}.
2451
2452The return value of the function is @code{AIO_CANCELED} if there were
19e4c7dd
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2453requests which haven't terminated and which were successfully canceled.
2454If there is one or more requests left which couldn't be canceled, the
a3a4a74e 2455return value is @code{AIO_NOTCANCELED}. In this case @code{aio_error}
19e4c7dd
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2456must be used to find out which of the, perhaps multiple, requests (in
2457@var{aiocbp} is @code{NULL}) weren't successfully canceled. If all
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2458requests already terminated at the time @code{aio_cancel} is called the
2459return value is @code{AIO_ALLDONE}.
2460
2461If an error occurred during the execution of @code{aio_cancel} the
2462function returns @math{-1} and sets @code{errno} to one of the following
2463values.
2464
2465@table @code
2466@item EBADF
2467The file descriptor @var{fildes} is not valid.
2468@item ENOSYS
2469@code{aio_cancel} is not implemented.
2470@end table
2471
19e4c7dd 2472When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
a3a4a74e
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2473function is in fact @code{aio_cancel64} since the LFS interface
2474transparently replaces the normal implementation.
2475@end deftypefun
2476
2477@comment aio.h
2478@comment Unix98
19e4c7dd 2479@deftypefun int aio_cancel64 (int @var{fildes}, struct aiocb64 *@var{aiocbp})
a3a4a74e
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2480This function is similar to @code{aio_cancel} with the only difference
2481that the argument is a reference to a variable of type @code{struct
2482aiocb64}.
2483
19e4c7dd 2484When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64}, this
a3a4a74e 2485function is available under the name @code{aio_cancel} and so
04b9968b 2486transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
a3a4a74e
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2487machines.
2488@end deftypefun
2489
2490@node Configuration of AIO
2491@subsection How to optimize the AIO implementation
2492
2493The POSIX standard does not specify how the AIO functions are
19e4c7dd 2494implemented. They could be system calls, but it is also possible to
a3a4a74e
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2495emulate them at userlevel.
2496
19e4c7dd
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2497At the point of this writing, the available implementation is a userlevel
2498implementation which uses threads for handling the enqueued requests.
2499While this implementation requires making some decisions about
2500limitations, hard limitations are something which is best avoided
1f77f049 2501in @theglibc{}. Therefore, @theglibc{} provides a means
19e4c7dd 2502for tuning the AIO implementation according to the individual use.
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2503
2504@comment aio.h
2505@comment GNU
2506@deftp {Data Type} {struct aioinit}
2507This data type is used to pass the configuration or tunable parameters
2508to the implementation. The program has to initialize the members of
2509this struct and pass it to the implementation using the @code{aio_init}
2510function.
2511
2512@table @code
2513@item int aio_threads
19e4c7dd 2514This member specifies the maximal number of threads which may be used
a3a4a74e
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2515at any one time.
2516@item int aio_num
c756c71c 2517This number provides an estimate on the maximal number of simultaneously
a3a4a74e
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2518enqueued requests.
2519@item int aio_locks
19e4c7dd 2520Unused.
a3a4a74e 2521@item int aio_usedba
19e4c7dd 2522Unused.
a3a4a74e 2523@item int aio_debug
19e4c7dd 2524Unused.
a3a4a74e 2525@item int aio_numusers
19e4c7dd 2526Unused.
a3a4a74e 2527@item int aio_reserved[2]
19e4c7dd 2528Unused.
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2529@end table
2530@end deftp
2531
2532@comment aio.h
2533@comment GNU
2534@deftypefun void aio_init (const struct aioinit *@var{init})
2535This function must be called before any other AIO function. Calling it
19e4c7dd
AJ
2536is completely voluntary, as it is only meant to help the AIO
2537implementation perform better.
a3a4a74e 2538
19e4c7dd 2539Before calling the @code{aio_init}, function the members of a variable of
a3a4a74e
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2540type @code{struct aioinit} must be initialized. Then a reference to
2541this variable is passed as the parameter to @code{aio_init} which itself
2542may or may not pay attention to the hints.
2543
c756c71c
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2544The function has no return value and no error cases are defined. It is
2545a extension which follows a proposal from the SGI implementation in
2546@w{Irix 6}. It is not covered by POSIX.1b or Unix98.
a3a4a74e 2547@end deftypefun
b07d03e0 2548
28f540f4
RM
2549@node Control Operations
2550@section Control Operations on Files
2551
2552@cindex control operations on files
2553@cindex @code{fcntl} function
2554This section describes how you can perform various other operations on
2555file descriptors, such as inquiring about or setting flags describing
2556the status of the file descriptor, manipulating record locks, and the
2557like. All of these operations are performed by the function @code{fcntl}.
2558
2559The second argument to the @code{fcntl} function is a command that
2560specifies which operation to perform. The function and macros that name
2561various flags that are used with it are declared in the header file
2562@file{fcntl.h}. Many of these flags are also used by the @code{open}
2563function; see @ref{Opening and Closing Files}.
2564@pindex fcntl.h
2565
2566@comment fcntl.h
2567@comment POSIX.1
2568@deftypefun int fcntl (int @var{filedes}, int @var{command}, @dots{})
2569The @code{fcntl} function performs the operation specified by
2570@var{command} on the file descriptor @var{filedes}. Some commands
2571require additional arguments to be supplied. These additional arguments
2572and the return value and error conditions are given in the detailed
2573descriptions of the individual commands.
2574
2575Briefly, here is a list of what the various commands are.
2576
2577@table @code
2578@item F_DUPFD
2579Duplicate the file descriptor (return another file descriptor pointing
2580to the same open file). @xref{Duplicating Descriptors}.
2581
2582@item F_GETFD
2583Get flags associated with the file descriptor. @xref{Descriptor Flags}.
2584
2585@item F_SETFD
2586Set flags associated with the file descriptor. @xref{Descriptor Flags}.
2587
2588@item F_GETFL
2589Get flags associated with the open file. @xref{File Status Flags}.
2590
2591@item F_SETFL
2592Set flags associated with the open file. @xref{File Status Flags}.
2593
2594@item F_GETLK
2595Get a file lock. @xref{File Locks}.
2596
2597@item F_SETLK
2598Set or clear a file lock. @xref{File Locks}.
2599
2600@item F_SETLKW
2601Like @code{F_SETLK}, but wait for completion. @xref{File Locks}.
2602
2603@item F_GETOWN
2604Get process or process group ID to receive @code{SIGIO} signals.
2605@xref{Interrupt Input}.
2606
2607@item F_SETOWN
2608Set process or process group ID to receive @code{SIGIO} signals.
2609@xref{Interrupt Input}.
2610@end table
dfd2257a 2611
04b9968b 2612This function is a cancellation point in multi-threaded programs. This
dfd2257a
UD
2613is a problem if the thread allocates some resources (like memory, file
2614descriptors, semaphores or whatever) at the time @code{fcntl} is
19e4c7dd 2615called. If the thread gets canceled these resources stay allocated
dfd2257a 2616until the program ends. To avoid this calls to @code{fcntl} should be
04b9968b 2617protected using cancellation handlers.
dfd2257a 2618@c ref pthread_cleanup_push / pthread_cleanup_pop
28f540f4
RM
2619@end deftypefun
2620
2621
2622@node Duplicating Descriptors
2623@section Duplicating Descriptors
2624
2625@cindex duplicating file descriptors
2626@cindex redirecting input and output
2627
2628You can @dfn{duplicate} a file descriptor, or allocate another file
2629descriptor that refers to the same open file as the original. Duplicate
2630descriptors share one file position and one set of file status flags
2631(@pxref{File Status Flags}), but each has its own set of file descriptor
2632flags (@pxref{Descriptor Flags}).
2633
2634The major use of duplicating a file descriptor is to implement
2635@dfn{redirection} of input or output: that is, to change the
2636file or pipe that a particular file descriptor corresponds to.
2637
2638You can perform this operation using the @code{fcntl} function with the
2639@code{F_DUPFD} command, but there are also convenient functions
2640@code{dup} and @code{dup2} for duplicating descriptors.
2641
2642@pindex unistd.h
2643@pindex fcntl.h
2644The @code{fcntl} function and flags are declared in @file{fcntl.h},
2645while prototypes for @code{dup} and @code{dup2} are in the header file
2646@file{unistd.h}.
2647
2648@comment unistd.h
2649@comment POSIX.1
2650@deftypefun int dup (int @var{old})
2651This function copies descriptor @var{old} to the first available
2652descriptor number (the first number not currently open). It is
2653equivalent to @code{fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, 0)}.
2654@end deftypefun
2655
2656@comment unistd.h
2657@comment POSIX.1
2658@deftypefun int dup2 (int @var{old}, int @var{new})
2659This function copies the descriptor @var{old} to descriptor number
2660@var{new}.
2661
2662If @var{old} is an invalid descriptor, then @code{dup2} does nothing; it
2663does not close @var{new}. Otherwise, the new duplicate of @var{old}
2664replaces any previous meaning of descriptor @var{new}, as if @var{new}
2665were closed first.
2666
2667If @var{old} and @var{new} are different numbers, and @var{old} is a
2668valid descriptor number, then @code{dup2} is equivalent to:
2669
2670@smallexample
2671close (@var{new});
2672fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, @var{new})
2673@end smallexample
2674
2675However, @code{dup2} does this atomically; there is no instant in the
2676middle of calling @code{dup2} at which @var{new} is closed and not yet a
2677duplicate of @var{old}.
2678@end deftypefun
2679
2680@comment fcntl.h
2681@comment POSIX.1
2682@deftypevr Macro int F_DUPFD
2683This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
2684copy the file descriptor given as the first argument.
2685
2686The form of the call in this case is:
2687
2688@smallexample
2689fcntl (@var{old}, F_DUPFD, @var{next-filedes})
2690@end smallexample
2691
2692The @var{next-filedes} argument is of type @code{int} and specifies that
2693the file descriptor returned should be the next available one greater
2694than or equal to this value.
2695
2696The return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is normally the value
07435eb4 2697of the new file descriptor. A return value of @math{-1} indicates an
28f540f4
RM
2698error. The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for
2699this command:
2700
2701@table @code
2702@item EBADF
2703The @var{old} argument is invalid.
2704
2705@item EINVAL
2706The @var{next-filedes} argument is invalid.
2707
2708@item EMFILE
2709There are no more file descriptors available---your program is already
2710using the maximum. In BSD and GNU, the maximum is controlled by a
2711resource limit that can be changed; @pxref{Limits on Resources}, for
2712more information about the @code{RLIMIT_NOFILE} limit.
2713@end table
2714
2715@code{ENFILE} is not a possible error code for @code{dup2} because
2716@code{dup2} does not create a new opening of a file; duplicate
2717descriptors do not count toward the limit which @code{ENFILE}
2718indicates. @code{EMFILE} is possible because it refers to the limit on
2719distinct descriptor numbers in use in one process.
2720@end deftypevr
2721
2722Here is an example showing how to use @code{dup2} to do redirection.
2723Typically, redirection of the standard streams (like @code{stdin}) is
2724done by a shell or shell-like program before calling one of the
2725@code{exec} functions (@pxref{Executing a File}) to execute a new
2726program in a child process. When the new program is executed, it
2727creates and initializes the standard streams to point to the
2728corresponding file descriptors, before its @code{main} function is
2729invoked.
2730
2731So, to redirect standard input to a file, the shell could do something
2732like:
2733
2734@smallexample
2735pid = fork ();
2736if (pid == 0)
2737 @{
2738 char *filename;
2739 char *program;
2740 int file;
2741 @dots{}
2742 file = TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (open (filename, O_RDONLY));
2743 dup2 (file, STDIN_FILENO);
2744 TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY (close (file));
2745 execv (program, NULL);
2746 @}
2747@end smallexample
2748
2749There is also a more detailed example showing how to implement redirection
2750in the context of a pipeline of processes in @ref{Launching Jobs}.
2751
2752
2753@node Descriptor Flags
2754@section File Descriptor Flags
2755@cindex file descriptor flags
2756
2757@dfn{File descriptor flags} are miscellaneous attributes of a file
2758descriptor. These flags are associated with particular file
2759descriptors, so that if you have created duplicate file descriptors
2760from a single opening of a file, each descriptor has its own set of flags.
2761
2762Currently there is just one file descriptor flag: @code{FD_CLOEXEC},
2763which causes the descriptor to be closed if you use any of the
2764@code{exec@dots{}} functions (@pxref{Executing a File}).
2765
2766The symbols in this section are defined in the header file
2767@file{fcntl.h}.
2768@pindex fcntl.h
2769
2770@comment fcntl.h
2771@comment POSIX.1
2772@deftypevr Macro int F_GETFD
2773This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
2774specify that it should return the file descriptor flags associated
2c6fe0bd 2775with the @var{filedes} argument.
28f540f4
RM
2776
2777The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is a
2778nonnegative number which can be interpreted as the bitwise OR of the
2779individual flags (except that currently there is only one flag to use).
2780
07435eb4 2781In case of an error, @code{fcntl} returns @math{-1}. The following
28f540f4
RM
2782@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command:
2783
2784@table @code
2785@item EBADF
2786The @var{filedes} argument is invalid.
2787@end table
2788@end deftypevr
2789
2790
2791@comment fcntl.h
2792@comment POSIX.1
2793@deftypevr Macro int F_SETFD
2794This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
2795specify that it should set the file descriptor flags associated with the
2796@var{filedes} argument. This requires a third @code{int} argument to
2797specify the new flags, so the form of the call is:
2798
2799@smallexample
2800fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETFD, @var{new-flags})
2801@end smallexample
2802
2803The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an
07435eb4 2804unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which indicates an error.
28f540f4
RM
2805The flags and error conditions are the same as for the @code{F_GETFD}
2806command.
2807@end deftypevr
2808
2809The following macro is defined for use as a file descriptor flag with
2810the @code{fcntl} function. The value is an integer constant usable
2811as a bit mask value.
2812
2813@comment fcntl.h
2814@comment POSIX.1
2815@deftypevr Macro int FD_CLOEXEC
2816@cindex close-on-exec (file descriptor flag)
2817This flag specifies that the file descriptor should be closed when
2818an @code{exec} function is invoked; see @ref{Executing a File}. When
2819a file descriptor is allocated (as with @code{open} or @code{dup}),
2820this bit is initially cleared on the new file descriptor, meaning that
2821descriptor will survive into the new program after @code{exec}.
2822@end deftypevr
2823
2824If you want to modify the file descriptor flags, you should get the
2825current flags with @code{F_GETFD} and modify the value. Don't assume
2826that the flags listed here are the only ones that are implemented; your
2827program may be run years from now and more flags may exist then. For
2828example, here is a function to set or clear the flag @code{FD_CLOEXEC}
2829without altering any other flags:
2830
2831@smallexample
2832/* @r{Set the @code{FD_CLOEXEC} flag of @var{desc} if @var{value} is nonzero,}
2833 @r{or clear the flag if @var{value} is 0.}
2c6fe0bd 2834 @r{Return 0 on success, or -1 on error with @code{errno} set.} */
28f540f4
RM
2835
2836int
2837set_cloexec_flag (int desc, int value)
2838@{
2839 int oldflags = fcntl (desc, F_GETFD, 0);
8e96ae1a 2840 /* @r{If reading the flags failed, return error indication now.} */
28f540f4
RM
2841 if (oldflags < 0)
2842 return oldflags;
2843 /* @r{Set just the flag we want to set.} */
2844 if (value != 0)
2845 oldflags |= FD_CLOEXEC;
2846 else
2847 oldflags &= ~FD_CLOEXEC;
2848 /* @r{Store modified flag word in the descriptor.} */
2849 return fcntl (desc, F_SETFD, oldflags);
2850@}
2851@end smallexample
2852
2853@node File Status Flags
2854@section File Status Flags
2855@cindex file status flags
2856
2857@dfn{File status flags} are used to specify attributes of the opening of a
2858file. Unlike the file descriptor flags discussed in @ref{Descriptor
2859Flags}, the file status flags are shared by duplicated file descriptors
2860resulting from a single opening of the file. The file status flags are
2861specified with the @var{flags} argument to @code{open};
2862@pxref{Opening and Closing Files}.
2863
2864File status flags fall into three categories, which are described in the
2865following sections.
2866
2867@itemize @bullet
2868@item
2869@ref{Access Modes}, specify what type of access is allowed to the
2870file: reading, writing, or both. They are set by @code{open} and are
2871returned by @code{fcntl}, but cannot be changed.
2872
2873@item
2874@ref{Open-time Flags}, control details of what @code{open} will do.
2875These flags are not preserved after the @code{open} call.
2876
2877@item
2878@ref{Operating Modes}, affect how operations such as @code{read} and
2879@code{write} are done. They are set by @code{open}, and can be fetched or
2880changed with @code{fcntl}.
2881@end itemize
2882
2883The symbols in this section are defined in the header file
2884@file{fcntl.h}.
2885@pindex fcntl.h
2886
2887@menu
2888* Access Modes:: Whether the descriptor can read or write.
2889* Open-time Flags:: Details of @code{open}.
2890* Operating Modes:: Special modes to control I/O operations.
2891* Getting File Status Flags:: Fetching and changing these flags.
2892@end menu
2893
2894@node Access Modes
2895@subsection File Access Modes
2896
2897The file access modes allow a file descriptor to be used for reading,
2898writing, or both. (In the GNU system, they can also allow none of these,
2899and allow execution of the file as a program.) The access modes are chosen
2900when the file is opened, and never change.
2901
2902@comment fcntl.h
2903@comment POSIX.1
2904@deftypevr Macro int O_RDONLY
2905Open the file for read access.
2906@end deftypevr
2907
2908@comment fcntl.h
2909@comment POSIX.1
2910@deftypevr Macro int O_WRONLY
2911Open the file for write access.
2912@end deftypevr
2913
2914@comment fcntl.h
2915@comment POSIX.1
2916@deftypevr Macro int O_RDWR
2917Open the file for both reading and writing.
2918@end deftypevr
2919
2920In the GNU system (and not in other systems), @code{O_RDONLY} and
2921@code{O_WRONLY} are independent bits that can be bitwise-ORed together,
2922and it is valid for either bit to be set or clear. This means that
2923@code{O_RDWR} is the same as @code{O_RDONLY|O_WRONLY}. A file access
2924mode of zero is permissible; it allows no operations that do input or
2925output to the file, but does allow other operations such as
2926@code{fchmod}. On the GNU system, since ``read-only'' or ``write-only''
2927is a misnomer, @file{fcntl.h} defines additional names for the file
2928access modes. These names are preferred when writing GNU-specific code.
2929But most programs will want to be portable to other POSIX.1 systems and
2930should use the POSIX.1 names above instead.
2931
2932@comment fcntl.h
2933@comment GNU
2934@deftypevr Macro int O_READ
c2835376 2935Open the file for reading. Same as @code{O_RDONLY}; only defined on GNU.
28f540f4
RM
2936@end deftypevr
2937
2938@comment fcntl.h
2939@comment GNU
2940@deftypevr Macro int O_WRITE
c2835376 2941Open the file for writing. Same as @code{O_WRONLY}; only defined on GNU.
28f540f4
RM
2942@end deftypevr
2943
2944@comment fcntl.h
2945@comment GNU
2946@deftypevr Macro int O_EXEC
2947Open the file for executing. Only defined on GNU.
2948@end deftypevr
2949
2950To determine the file access mode with @code{fcntl}, you must extract
2951the access mode bits from the retrieved file status flags. In the GNU
2952system, you can just test the @code{O_READ} and @code{O_WRITE} bits in
2953the flags word. But in other POSIX.1 systems, reading and writing
2954access modes are not stored as distinct bit flags. The portable way to
2955extract the file access mode bits is with @code{O_ACCMODE}.
2956
2957@comment fcntl.h
2958@comment POSIX.1
2959@deftypevr Macro int O_ACCMODE
2960This macro stands for a mask that can be bitwise-ANDed with the file
2961status flag value to produce a value representing the file access mode.
2962The mode will be @code{O_RDONLY}, @code{O_WRONLY}, or @code{O_RDWR}.
2963(In the GNU system it could also be zero, and it never includes the
2964@code{O_EXEC} bit.)
2965@end deftypevr
2966
2967@node Open-time Flags
2968@subsection Open-time Flags
2969
2970The open-time flags specify options affecting how @code{open} will behave.
2971These options are not preserved once the file is open. The exception to
2972this is @code{O_NONBLOCK}, which is also an I/O operating mode and so it
2973@emph{is} saved. @xref{Opening and Closing Files}, for how to call
2974@code{open}.
2975
2976There are two sorts of options specified by open-time flags.
2977
2978@itemize @bullet
2979@item
2980@dfn{File name translation flags} affect how @code{open} looks up the
2981file name to locate the file, and whether the file can be created.
2982@cindex file name translation flags
2983@cindex flags, file name translation
2984
2985@item
2986@dfn{Open-time action flags} specify extra operations that @code{open} will
2987perform on the file once it is open.
2988@cindex open-time action flags
2989@cindex flags, open-time action
2990@end itemize
2991
2992Here are the file name translation flags.
2993
2994@comment fcntl.h
2995@comment POSIX.1
2996@deftypevr Macro int O_CREAT
2997If set, the file will be created if it doesn't already exist.
2998@c !!! mode arg, umask
2999@cindex create on open (file status flag)
3000@end deftypevr
3001
3002@comment fcntl.h
3003@comment POSIX.1
3004@deftypevr Macro int O_EXCL
3005If both @code{O_CREAT} and @code{O_EXCL} are set, then @code{open} fails
3006if the specified file already exists. This is guaranteed to never
3007clobber an existing file.
3008@end deftypevr
3009
3010@comment fcntl.h
3011@comment POSIX.1
3012@deftypevr Macro int O_NONBLOCK
3013@cindex non-blocking open
3014This prevents @code{open} from blocking for a ``long time'' to open the
3015file. This is only meaningful for some kinds of files, usually devices
3016such as serial ports; when it is not meaningful, it is harmless and
3017ignored. Often opening a port to a modem blocks until the modem reports
3018carrier detection; if @code{O_NONBLOCK} is specified, @code{open} will
3019return immediately without a carrier.
3020
3021Note that the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is overloaded as both an I/O operating
3022mode and a file name translation flag. This means that specifying
3023@code{O_NONBLOCK} in @code{open} also sets nonblocking I/O mode;
3024@pxref{Operating Modes}. To open the file without blocking but do normal
3025I/O that blocks, you must call @code{open} with @code{O_NONBLOCK} set and
3026then call @code{fcntl} to turn the bit off.
3027@end deftypevr
3028
3029@comment fcntl.h
3030@comment POSIX.1
3031@deftypevr Macro int O_NOCTTY
3032If the named file is a terminal device, don't make it the controlling
3033terminal for the process. @xref{Job Control}, for information about
3034what it means to be the controlling terminal.
3035
3036In the GNU system and 4.4 BSD, opening a file never makes it the
3037controlling terminal and @code{O_NOCTTY} is zero. However, other
3038systems may use a nonzero value for @code{O_NOCTTY} and set the
3039controlling terminal when you open a file that is a terminal device; so
3040to be portable, use @code{O_NOCTTY} when it is important to avoid this.
3041@cindex controlling terminal, setting
3042@end deftypevr
3043
3044The following three file name translation flags exist only in the GNU system.
3045
3046@comment fcntl.h
3047@comment GNU
3048@deftypevr Macro int O_IGNORE_CTTY
3049Do not recognize the named file as the controlling terminal, even if it
3050refers to the process's existing controlling terminal device. Operations
3051on the new file descriptor will never induce job control signals.
3052@xref{Job Control}.
3053@end deftypevr
3054
3055@comment fcntl.h
3056@comment GNU
3057@deftypevr Macro int O_NOLINK
3058If the named file is a symbolic link, open the link itself instead of
3059the file it refers to. (@code{fstat} on the new file descriptor will
3060return the information returned by @code{lstat} on the link's name.)
3061@cindex symbolic link, opening
3062@end deftypevr
3063
3064@comment fcntl.h
3065@comment GNU
3066@deftypevr Macro int O_NOTRANS
3067If the named file is specially translated, do not invoke the translator.
3068Open the bare file the translator itself sees.
3069@end deftypevr
3070
3071
3072The open-time action flags tell @code{open} to do additional operations
3073which are not really related to opening the file. The reason to do them
3074as part of @code{open} instead of in separate calls is that @code{open}
3075can do them @i{atomically}.
3076
3077@comment fcntl.h
3078@comment POSIX.1
3079@deftypevr Macro int O_TRUNC
3080Truncate the file to zero length. This option is only useful for
3081regular files, not special files such as directories or FIFOs. POSIX.1
3082requires that you open the file for writing to use @code{O_TRUNC}. In
3083BSD and GNU you must have permission to write the file to truncate it,
3084but you need not open for write access.
3085
3086This is the only open-time action flag specified by POSIX.1. There is
3087no good reason for truncation to be done by @code{open}, instead of by
3088calling @code{ftruncate} afterwards. The @code{O_TRUNC} flag existed in
3089Unix before @code{ftruncate} was invented, and is retained for backward
3090compatibility.
3091@end deftypevr
3092
27e309c1
UD
3093The remaining operating modes are BSD extensions. They exist only
3094on some systems. On other systems, these macros are not defined.
3095
28f540f4
RM
3096@comment fcntl.h
3097@comment BSD
3098@deftypevr Macro int O_SHLOCK
3099Acquire a shared lock on the file, as with @code{flock}.
3100@xref{File Locks}.
3101
3102If @code{O_CREAT} is specified, the locking is done atomically when
3103creating the file. You are guaranteed that no other process will get
3104the lock on the new file first.
3105@end deftypevr
3106
3107@comment fcntl.h
3108@comment BSD
3109@deftypevr Macro int O_EXLOCK
3110Acquire an exclusive lock on the file, as with @code{flock}.
3111@xref{File Locks}. This is atomic like @code{O_SHLOCK}.
3112@end deftypevr
3113
3114@node Operating Modes
3115@subsection I/O Operating Modes
3116
3117The operating modes affect how input and output operations using a file
3118descriptor work. These flags are set by @code{open} and can be fetched
3119and changed with @code{fcntl}.
3120
3121@comment fcntl.h
3122@comment POSIX.1
3123@deftypevr Macro int O_APPEND
3124The bit that enables append mode for the file. If set, then all
3125@code{write} operations write the data at the end of the file, extending
3126it, regardless of the current file position. This is the only reliable
3127way to append to a file. In append mode, you are guaranteed that the
3128data you write will always go to the current end of the file, regardless
3129of other processes writing to the file. Conversely, if you simply set
3130the file position to the end of file and write, then another process can
3131extend the file after you set the file position but before you write,
3132resulting in your data appearing someplace before the real end of file.
3133@end deftypevr
3134
3135@comment fcntl.h
3136@comment POSIX.1
2c6fe0bd 3137@deftypevr Macro int O_NONBLOCK
28f540f4
RM
3138The bit that enables nonblocking mode for the file. If this bit is set,
3139@code{read} requests on the file can return immediately with a failure
3140status if there is no input immediately available, instead of blocking.
3141Likewise, @code{write} requests can also return immediately with a
3142failure status if the output can't be written immediately.
3143
3144Note that the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag is overloaded as both an I/O
3145operating mode and a file name translation flag; @pxref{Open-time Flags}.
3146@end deftypevr
3147
3148@comment fcntl.h
3149@comment BSD
3150@deftypevr Macro int O_NDELAY
3151This is an obsolete name for @code{O_NONBLOCK}, provided for
3152compatibility with BSD. It is not defined by the POSIX.1 standard.
3153@end deftypevr
3154
3155The remaining operating modes are BSD and GNU extensions. They exist only
3156on some systems. On other systems, these macros are not defined.
3157
3158@comment fcntl.h
3159@comment BSD
3160@deftypevr Macro int O_ASYNC
3161The bit that enables asynchronous input mode. If set, then @code{SIGIO}
3162signals will be generated when input is available. @xref{Interrupt Input}.
3163
3164Asynchronous input mode is a BSD feature.
3165@end deftypevr
3166
3167@comment fcntl.h
3168@comment BSD
3169@deftypevr Macro int O_FSYNC
3170The bit that enables synchronous writing for the file. If set, each
3171@code{write} call will make sure the data is reliably stored on disk before
3172returning. @c !!! xref fsync
3173
3174Synchronous writing is a BSD feature.
3175@end deftypevr
3176
3177@comment fcntl.h
3178@comment BSD
3179@deftypevr Macro int O_SYNC
3180This is another name for @code{O_FSYNC}. They have the same value.
3181@end deftypevr
3182
3183@comment fcntl.h
3184@comment GNU
3185@deftypevr Macro int O_NOATIME
3186If this bit is set, @code{read} will not update the access time of the
3187file. @xref{File Times}. This is used by programs that do backups, so
3188that backing a file up does not count as reading it.
3189Only the owner of the file or the superuser may use this bit.
3190
3191This is a GNU extension.
3192@end deftypevr
3193
3194@node Getting File Status Flags
3195@subsection Getting and Setting File Status Flags
3196
3197The @code{fcntl} function can fetch or change file status flags.
3198
3199@comment fcntl.h
3200@comment POSIX.1
3201@deftypevr Macro int F_GETFL
3202This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3203read the file status flags for the open file with descriptor
3204@var{filedes}.
3205
3206The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is a
3207nonnegative number which can be interpreted as the bitwise OR of the
3208individual flags. Since the file access modes are not single-bit values,
3209you can mask off other bits in the returned flags with @code{O_ACCMODE}
3210to compare them.
3211
07435eb4 3212In case of an error, @code{fcntl} returns @math{-1}. The following
28f540f4
RM
3213@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command:
3214
3215@table @code
3216@item EBADF
3217The @var{filedes} argument is invalid.
3218@end table
3219@end deftypevr
3220
3221@comment fcntl.h
3222@comment POSIX.1
3223@deftypevr Macro int F_SETFL
3224This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to set
3225the file status flags for the open file corresponding to the
3226@var{filedes} argument. This command requires a third @code{int}
3227argument to specify the new flags, so the call looks like this:
3228
3229@smallexample
3230fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETFL, @var{new-flags})
3231@end smallexample
3232
3233You can't change the access mode for the file in this way; that is,
3234whether the file descriptor was opened for reading or writing.
3235
3236The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an
07435eb4 3237unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which indicates an error. The
28f540f4
RM
3238error conditions are the same as for the @code{F_GETFL} command.
3239@end deftypevr
3240
3241If you want to modify the file status flags, you should get the current
3242flags with @code{F_GETFL} and modify the value. Don't assume that the
3243flags listed here are the only ones that are implemented; your program
3244may be run years from now and more flags may exist then. For example,
3245here is a function to set or clear the flag @code{O_NONBLOCK} without
3246altering any other flags:
3247
3248@smallexample
3249@group
3250/* @r{Set the @code{O_NONBLOCK} flag of @var{desc} if @var{value} is nonzero,}
3251 @r{or clear the flag if @var{value} is 0.}
2c6fe0bd 3252 @r{Return 0 on success, or -1 on error with @code{errno} set.} */
28f540f4
RM
3253
3254int
3255set_nonblock_flag (int desc, int value)
3256@{
3257 int oldflags = fcntl (desc, F_GETFL, 0);
3258 /* @r{If reading the flags failed, return error indication now.} */
3259 if (oldflags == -1)
3260 return -1;
3261 /* @r{Set just the flag we want to set.} */
3262 if (value != 0)
3263 oldflags |= O_NONBLOCK;
3264 else
3265 oldflags &= ~O_NONBLOCK;
3266 /* @r{Store modified flag word in the descriptor.} */
3267 return fcntl (desc, F_SETFL, oldflags);
3268@}
3269@end group
3270@end smallexample
3271
3272@node File Locks
3273@section File Locks
3274
3275@cindex file locks
3276@cindex record locking
3277The remaining @code{fcntl} commands are used to support @dfn{record
3278locking}, which permits multiple cooperating programs to prevent each
3279other from simultaneously accessing parts of a file in error-prone
3280ways.
3281
3282@cindex exclusive lock
3283@cindex write lock
3284An @dfn{exclusive} or @dfn{write} lock gives a process exclusive access
3285for writing to the specified part of the file. While a write lock is in
3286place, no other process can lock that part of the file.
3287
3288@cindex shared lock
3289@cindex read lock
3290A @dfn{shared} or @dfn{read} lock prohibits any other process from
3291requesting a write lock on the specified part of the file. However,
3292other processes can request read locks.
3293
3294The @code{read} and @code{write} functions do not actually check to see
3295whether there are any locks in place. If you want to implement a
3296locking protocol for a file shared by multiple processes, your application
3297must do explicit @code{fcntl} calls to request and clear locks at the
3298appropriate points.
3299
3300Locks are associated with processes. A process can only have one kind
3301of lock set for each byte of a given file. When any file descriptor for
3302that file is closed by the process, all of the locks that process holds
3303on that file are released, even if the locks were made using other
3304descriptors that remain open. Likewise, locks are released when a
3305process exits, and are not inherited by child processes created using
3306@code{fork} (@pxref{Creating a Process}).
3307
3308When making a lock, use a @code{struct flock} to specify what kind of
3309lock and where. This data type and the associated macros for the
3310@code{fcntl} function are declared in the header file @file{fcntl.h}.
3311@pindex fcntl.h
3312
3313@comment fcntl.h
3314@comment POSIX.1
3315@deftp {Data Type} {struct flock}
3316This structure is used with the @code{fcntl} function to describe a file
3317lock. It has these members:
3318
3319@table @code
3320@item short int l_type
3321Specifies the type of the lock; one of @code{F_RDLCK}, @code{F_WRLCK}, or
3322@code{F_UNLCK}.
3323
3324@item short int l_whence
3325This corresponds to the @var{whence} argument to @code{fseek} or
3326@code{lseek}, and specifies what the offset is relative to. Its value
3327can be one of @code{SEEK_SET}, @code{SEEK_CUR}, or @code{SEEK_END}.
3328
3329@item off_t l_start
3330This specifies the offset of the start of the region to which the lock
3331applies, and is given in bytes relative to the point specified by
3332@code{l_whence} member.
3333
3334@item off_t l_len
3335This specifies the length of the region to be locked. A value of
3336@code{0} is treated specially; it means the region extends to the end of
3337the file.
3338
3339@item pid_t l_pid
3340This field is the process ID (@pxref{Process Creation Concepts}) of the
3341process holding the lock. It is filled in by calling @code{fcntl} with
3342the @code{F_GETLK} command, but is ignored when making a lock.
3343@end table
3344@end deftp
3345
3346@comment fcntl.h
3347@comment POSIX.1
3348@deftypevr Macro int F_GETLK
3349This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3350specify that it should get information about a lock. This command
3351requires a third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed
3352to @code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is:
3353
3354@smallexample
3355fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_GETLK, @var{lockp})
3356@end smallexample
3357
3358If there is a lock already in place that would block the lock described
3359by the @var{lockp} argument, information about that lock overwrites
3360@code{*@var{lockp}}. Existing locks are not reported if they are
3361compatible with making a new lock as specified. Thus, you should
3362specify a lock type of @code{F_WRLCK} if you want to find out about both
3363read and write locks, or @code{F_RDLCK} if you want to find out about
3364write locks only.
3365
3366There might be more than one lock affecting the region specified by the
3367@var{lockp} argument, but @code{fcntl} only returns information about
3368one of them. The @code{l_whence} member of the @var{lockp} structure is
3369set to @code{SEEK_SET} and the @code{l_start} and @code{l_len} fields
3370set to identify the locked region.
3371
3372If no lock applies, the only change to the @var{lockp} structure is to
3373update the @code{l_type} to a value of @code{F_UNLCK}.
3374
3375The normal return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is an
07435eb4 3376unspecified value other than @math{-1}, which is reserved to indicate an
28f540f4
RM
3377error. The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for
3378this command:
3379
3380@table @code
3381@item EBADF
3382The @var{filedes} argument is invalid.
3383
3384@item EINVAL
3385Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information,
3386or the file associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks.
3387@end table
3388@end deftypevr
3389
3390@comment fcntl.h
3391@comment POSIX.1
3392@deftypevr Macro int F_SETLK
3393This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3394specify that it should set or clear a lock. This command requires a
3395third argument of type @w{@code{struct flock *}} to be passed to
3396@code{fcntl}, so that the form of the call is:
3397
3398@smallexample
3399fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETLK, @var{lockp})
3400@end smallexample
3401
3402If the process already has a lock on any part of the region, the old lock
3403on that part is replaced with the new lock. You can remove a lock
3404by specifying a lock type of @code{F_UNLCK}.
3405
3406If the lock cannot be set, @code{fcntl} returns immediately with a value
07435eb4 3407of @math{-1}. This function does not block waiting for other processes
28f540f4 3408to release locks. If @code{fcntl} succeeds, it return a value other
07435eb4 3409than @math{-1}.
28f540f4
RM
3410
3411The following @code{errno} error conditions are defined for this
3412function:
3413
3414@table @code
3415@item EAGAIN
3416@itemx EACCES
3417The lock cannot be set because it is blocked by an existing lock on the
3418file. Some systems use @code{EAGAIN} in this case, and other systems
3419use @code{EACCES}; your program should treat them alike, after
3420@code{F_SETLK}. (The GNU system always uses @code{EAGAIN}.)
3421
3422@item EBADF
3423Either: the @var{filedes} argument is invalid; you requested a read lock
3424but the @var{filedes} is not open for read access; or, you requested a
3425write lock but the @var{filedes} is not open for write access.
3426
3427@item EINVAL
3428Either the @var{lockp} argument doesn't specify valid lock information,
3429or the file associated with @var{filedes} doesn't support locks.
3430
3431@item ENOLCK
3432The system has run out of file lock resources; there are already too
3433many file locks in place.
3434
3435Well-designed file systems never report this error, because they have no
3436limitation on the number of locks. However, you must still take account
3437of the possibility of this error, as it could result from network access
3438to a file system on another machine.
3439@end table
3440@end deftypevr
3441
3442@comment fcntl.h
3443@comment POSIX.1
3444@deftypevr Macro int F_SETLKW
3445This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3446specify that it should set or clear a lock. It is just like the
3447@code{F_SETLK} command, but causes the process to block (or wait)
3448until the request can be specified.
3449
3450This command requires a third argument of type @code{struct flock *}, as
3451for the @code{F_SETLK} command.
3452
3453The @code{fcntl} return values and errors are the same as for the
3454@code{F_SETLK} command, but these additional @code{errno} error conditions
3455are defined for this command:
3456
3457@table @code
3458@item EINTR
3459The function was interrupted by a signal while it was waiting.
3460@xref{Interrupted Primitives}.
3461
3462@item EDEADLK
3463The specified region is being locked by another process. But that
3464process is waiting to lock a region which the current process has
3465locked, so waiting for the lock would result in deadlock. The system
3466does not guarantee that it will detect all such conditions, but it lets
3467you know if it notices one.
3468@end table
3469@end deftypevr
3470
3471
3472The following macros are defined for use as values for the @code{l_type}
3473member of the @code{flock} structure. The values are integer constants.
3474
3475@table @code
3476@comment fcntl.h
3477@comment POSIX.1
3478@vindex F_RDLCK
3479@item F_RDLCK
3480This macro is used to specify a read (or shared) lock.
3481
3482@comment fcntl.h
3483@comment POSIX.1
3484@vindex F_WRLCK
3485@item F_WRLCK
3486This macro is used to specify a write (or exclusive) lock.
3487
3488@comment fcntl.h
3489@comment POSIX.1
3490@vindex F_UNLCK
3491@item F_UNLCK
3492This macro is used to specify that the region is unlocked.
3493@end table
3494
3495As an example of a situation where file locking is useful, consider a
3496program that can be run simultaneously by several different users, that
3497logs status information to a common file. One example of such a program
3498might be a game that uses a file to keep track of high scores. Another
3499example might be a program that records usage or accounting information
3500for billing purposes.
3501
3502Having multiple copies of the program simultaneously writing to the
3503file could cause the contents of the file to become mixed up. But
3504you can prevent this kind of problem by setting a write lock on the
2c6fe0bd 3505file before actually writing to the file.
28f540f4
RM
3506
3507If the program also needs to read the file and wants to make sure that
3508the contents of the file are in a consistent state, then it can also use
3509a read lock. While the read lock is set, no other process can lock
3510that part of the file for writing.
3511
3512@c ??? This section could use an example program.
3513
3514Remember that file locks are only a @emph{voluntary} protocol for
3515controlling access to a file. There is still potential for access to
3516the file by programs that don't use the lock protocol.
3517
3518@node Interrupt Input
3519@section Interrupt-Driven Input
3520
3521@cindex interrupt-driven input
3522If you set the @code{O_ASYNC} status flag on a file descriptor
3523(@pxref{File Status Flags}), a @code{SIGIO} signal is sent whenever
3524input or output becomes possible on that file descriptor. The process
3525or process group to receive the signal can be selected by using the
3526@code{F_SETOWN} command to the @code{fcntl} function. If the file
3527descriptor is a socket, this also selects the recipient of @code{SIGURG}
3528signals that are delivered when out-of-band data arrives on that socket;
3529see @ref{Out-of-Band Data}. (@code{SIGURG} is sent in any situation
3530where @code{select} would report the socket as having an ``exceptional
3531condition''. @xref{Waiting for I/O}.)
3532
3533If the file descriptor corresponds to a terminal device, then @code{SIGIO}
2c6fe0bd 3534signals are sent to the foreground process group of the terminal.
28f540f4
RM
3535@xref{Job Control}.
3536
3537@pindex fcntl.h
3538The symbols in this section are defined in the header file
3539@file{fcntl.h}.
3540
3541@comment fcntl.h
3542@comment BSD
3543@deftypevr Macro int F_GETOWN
3544This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3545specify that it should get information about the process or process
3546group to which @code{SIGIO} signals are sent. (For a terminal, this is
3547actually the foreground process group ID, which you can get using
3548@code{tcgetpgrp}; see @ref{Terminal Access Functions}.)
3549
3550The return value is interpreted as a process ID; if negative, its
3551absolute value is the process group ID.
3552
3553The following @code{errno} error condition is defined for this command:
3554
3555@table @code
3556@item EBADF
3557The @var{filedes} argument is invalid.
3558@end table
3559@end deftypevr
3560
3561@comment fcntl.h
3562@comment BSD
3563@deftypevr Macro int F_SETOWN
3564This macro is used as the @var{command} argument to @code{fcntl}, to
3565specify that it should set the process or process group to which
3566@code{SIGIO} signals are sent. This command requires a third argument
3567of type @code{pid_t} to be passed to @code{fcntl}, so that the form of
3568the call is:
3569
3570@smallexample
3571fcntl (@var{filedes}, F_SETOWN, @var{pid})
3572@end smallexample
3573
3574The @var{pid} argument should be a process ID. You can also pass a
3575negative number whose absolute value is a process group ID.
3576
07435eb4 3577The return value from @code{fcntl} with this command is @math{-1}
28f540f4
RM
3578in case of error and some other value if successful. The following
3579@code{errno} error conditions are defined for this command:
3580
3581@table @code
3582@item EBADF
3583The @var{filedes} argument is invalid.
3584
3585@item ESRCH
3586There is no process or process group corresponding to @var{pid}.
3587@end table
3588@end deftypevr
3589
3590@c ??? This section could use an example program.
07435eb4
UD
3591
3592@node IOCTLs
3593@section Generic I/O Control operations
3594@cindex generic i/o control operations
3595@cindex IOCTLs
3596
3597The GNU system can handle most input/output operations on many different
3598devices and objects in terms of a few file primitives - @code{read},
3599@code{write} and @code{lseek}. However, most devices also have a few
3600peculiar operations which do not fit into this model. Such as:
3601
3602@itemize @bullet
3603
3604@item
3605Changing the character font used on a terminal.
3606
3607@item
3608Telling a magnetic tape system to rewind or fast forward. (Since they
3609cannot move in byte increments, @code{lseek} is inapplicable).
3610
3611@item
3612Ejecting a disk from a drive.
3613
3614@item
3615Playing an audio track from a CD-ROM drive.
3616
3617@item
3618Maintaining routing tables for a network.
3619
3620@end itemize
3621
3622Although some such objects such as sockets and terminals
3623@footnote{Actually, the terminal-specific functions are implemented with
3624IOCTLs on many platforms.} have special functions of their own, it would
3625not be practical to create functions for all these cases.
3626
3627Instead these minor operations, known as @dfn{IOCTL}s, are assigned code
3628numbers and multiplexed through the @code{ioctl} function, defined in
3629@code{sys/ioctl.h}. The code numbers themselves are defined in many
3630different headers.
3631
b2e3d177
UD
3632@comment sys/ioctl.h
3633@comment BSD
07435eb4
UD
3634@deftypefun int ioctl (int @var{filedes}, int @var{command}, @dots{})
3635
3636The @code{ioctl} function performs the generic I/O operation
3637@var{command} on @var{filedes}.
3638
3639A third argument is usually present, either a single number or a pointer
3640to a structure. The meaning of this argument, the returned value, and
3641any error codes depends upon the command used. Often @math{-1} is
3642returned for a failure.
3643
3644@end deftypefun
3645
3646On some systems, IOCTLs used by different devices share the same numbers.
3647Thus, although use of an inappropriate IOCTL @emph{usually} only produces
3648an error, you should not attempt to use device-specific IOCTLs on an
3649unknown device.
3650
3651Most IOCTLs are OS-specific and/or only used in special system utilities,
3652and are thus beyond the scope of this document. For an example of the use
8b7fb588 3653of an IOCTL, see @ref{Out-of-Band Data}.