When dealing with asynchronous operations it is sometimes necessary to get into a consistent state. This would mean for AIO that one wants to know whether a certain request or a group of requests were processed. This could be done by waiting for the notification sent by the system after the operation terminated, but this sometimes would mean wasting resources (mainly computation time). Instead POSIX.1b defines two functions which will help with most kinds of consistency.
The aio_fsync
and aio_fsync64
functions are only available
if the symbol _POSIX_SYNCHRONIZED_IO
is defined in unistd.h.
int
aio_fsync (int op, struct aiocb *aiocbp)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock heap | AC-Unsafe lock mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Calling this function forces all I/O operations queued at the
time of the function call operating on the file descriptor
aiocbp->aio_fildes
into the synchronized I/O completion state
(see Synchronizing I/O operations). The aio_fsync
function returns
immediately but the notification through the method described in
aiocbp->aio_sigevent
will happen only after all requests for this
file descriptor have terminated and the file is synchronized. This also
means that requests for this very same file descriptor which are queued
after the synchronization request are not affected.
If op is O_DSYNC
the synchronization happens as with a call
to fdatasync
. Otherwise op should be O_SYNC
and
the synchronization happens as with fsync
.
As long as the synchronization has not happened, a call to
aio_error
with the reference to the object pointed to by
aiocbp returns EINPROGRESS
. Once the synchronization is
done aio_error
return 0 if the synchronization was not
successful. Otherwise the value returned is the value to which the
fsync
or fdatasync
function would have set the
errno
variable. In this case nothing can be assumed about the
consistency of the data written to this file descriptor.
The return value of this function is 0 if the request was
successfully enqueued. Otherwise the return value is -1 and
errno
is set to one of the following values:
EAGAIN
The request could not be enqueued due to temporary lack of resources.
EBADF
The file descriptor aiocbp->aio_fildes
is not valid.
EINVAL
The implementation does not support I/O synchronization or the op
parameter is other than O_DSYNC
and O_SYNC
.
ENOSYS
This function is not implemented.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
this
function is in fact aio_fsync64
since the LFS interface
transparently replaces the normal implementation.
int
aio_fsync64 (int op, struct aiocb64 *aiocbp)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock heap | AC-Unsafe lock mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is similar to aio_fsync
with the only difference
that the argument is a reference to a variable of type struct
aiocb64
.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
this
function is available under the name aio_fsync
and so
transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
machines.
Another method of synchronization is to wait until one or more requests of a
specific set terminated. This could be achieved by the aio_*
functions to notify the initiating process about the termination but in
some situations this is not the ideal solution. In a program which
constantly updates clients somehow connected to the server it is not
always the best solution to go round robin since some connections might
be slow. On the other hand letting the aio_*
functions notify the
caller might also be not the best solution since whenever the process
works on preparing data for a client it makes no sense to be
interrupted by a notification since the new client will not be handled
before the current client is served. For situations like this
aio_suspend
should be used.
int
aio_suspend (const struct aiocb *const list[], int nent, const struct timespec *timeout)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
When calling this function, the calling thread is suspended until at
least one of the requests pointed to by the nent elements of the
array list has completed. If any of the requests has already
completed at the time aio_suspend
is called, the function returns
immediately. Whether a request has terminated or not is determined by
comparing the error status of the request with EINPROGRESS
. If
an element of list is NULL
, the entry is simply ignored.
If no request has finished, the calling process is suspended. If
timeout is NULL
, the process is not woken until a request
has finished. If timeout is not NULL
, the process remains
suspended at least as long as specified in timeout. In this case,
aio_suspend
returns with an error.
The return value of the function is 0 if one or more requests
from the list have terminated. Otherwise the function returns
-1 and errno
is set to one of the following values:
EAGAIN
None of the requests from the list completed in the time specified by timeout.
EINTR
A signal interrupted the aio_suspend
function. This signal might
also be sent by the AIO implementation while signalling the termination
of one of the requests.
ENOSYS
The aio_suspend
function is not implemented.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
this
function is in fact aio_suspend64
since the LFS interface
transparently replaces the normal implementation.
int
aio_suspend64 (const struct aiocb64 *const list[], int nent, const struct timespec *timeout)
¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe lock | AC-Unsafe lock | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is similar to aio_suspend
with the only difference
that the argument is a reference to a variable of type struct
aiocb64
.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
this
function is available under the name aio_suspend
and so
transparently replaces the interface for small files on 32 bit
machines.