ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File
/cvs/IO-AIO/AIO.pm
Revision: 1.272
Committed: Fri Jun 23 22:09:50 2017 UTC (6 years, 11 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.271: +2 -2 lines
Log Message:
*** empty log message ***

File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 IO::AIO - Asynchronous/Advanced Input/Output
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use IO::AIO;
8
9 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
10 my $fh = shift
11 or die "/etc/passwd: $!";
12 ...
13 };
14
15 aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
16
17 aio_read $fh, 30000, 1024, $buffer, 0, sub {
18 $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
19 };
20
21 # version 2+ has request and group objects
22 use IO::AIO 2;
23
24 aioreq_pri 4; # give next request a very high priority
25 my $req = aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
26 $req->cancel; # cancel request if still in queue
27
28 my $grp = aio_group sub { print "all stats done\n" };
29 add $grp aio_stat "..." for ...;
30
31 =head1 DESCRIPTION
32
33 This module implements asynchronous I/O using whatever means your
34 operating system supports. It is implemented as an interface to C<libeio>
35 (L<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libeio.html>).
36
37 Asynchronous means that operations that can normally block your program
38 (e.g. reading from disk) will be done asynchronously: the operation
39 will still block, but you can do something else in the meantime. This
40 is extremely useful for programs that need to stay interactive even
41 when doing heavy I/O (GUI programs, high performance network servers
42 etc.), but can also be used to easily do operations in parallel that are
43 normally done sequentially, e.g. stat'ing many files, which is much faster
44 on a RAID volume or over NFS when you do a number of stat operations
45 concurrently.
46
47 While most of this works on all types of file descriptors (for
48 example sockets), using these functions on file descriptors that
49 support nonblocking operation (again, sockets, pipes etc.) is
50 very inefficient. Use an event loop for that (such as the L<EV>
51 module): IO::AIO will naturally fit into such an event loop itself.
52
53 In this version, a number of threads are started that execute your
54 requests and signal their completion. You don't need thread support
55 in perl, and the threads created by this module will not be visible
56 to perl. In the future, this module might make use of the native aio
57 functions available on many operating systems. However, they are often
58 not well-supported or restricted (GNU/Linux doesn't allow them on normal
59 files currently, for example), and they would only support aio_read and
60 aio_write, so the remaining functionality would have to be implemented
61 using threads anyway.
62
63 In addition to asynchronous I/O, this module also exports some rather
64 arcane interfaces, such as C<madvise> or linux's C<splice> system call,
65 which is why the C<A> in C<AIO> can also mean I<advanced>.
66
67 Although the module will work in the presence of other (Perl-) threads,
68 it is currently not reentrant in any way, so use appropriate locking
69 yourself, always call C<poll_cb> from within the same thread, or never
70 call C<poll_cb> (or other C<aio_> functions) recursively.
71
72 =head2 EXAMPLE
73
74 This is a simple example that uses the EV module and loads
75 F</etc/passwd> asynchronously:
76
77 use EV;
78 use IO::AIO;
79
80 # register the IO::AIO callback with EV
81 my $aio_w = EV::io IO::AIO::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&IO::AIO::poll_cb;
82
83 # queue the request to open /etc/passwd
84 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
85 my $fh = shift
86 or die "error while opening: $!";
87
88 # stat'ing filehandles is generally non-blocking
89 my $size = -s $fh;
90
91 # queue a request to read the file
92 my $contents;
93 aio_read $fh, 0, $size, $contents, 0, sub {
94 $_[0] == $size
95 or die "short read: $!";
96
97 close $fh;
98
99 # file contents now in $contents
100 print $contents;
101
102 # exit event loop and program
103 EV::break;
104 };
105 };
106
107 # possibly queue up other requests, or open GUI windows,
108 # check for sockets etc. etc.
109
110 # process events as long as there are some:
111 EV::run;
112
113 =head1 REQUEST ANATOMY AND LIFETIME
114
115 Every C<aio_*> function creates a request. which is a C data structure not
116 directly visible to Perl.
117
118 If called in non-void context, every request function returns a Perl
119 object representing the request. In void context, nothing is returned,
120 which saves a bit of memory.
121
122 The perl object is a fairly standard ref-to-hash object. The hash contents
123 are not used by IO::AIO so you are free to store anything you like in it.
124
125 During their existance, aio requests travel through the following states,
126 in order:
127
128 =over 4
129
130 =item ready
131
132 Immediately after a request is created it is put into the ready state,
133 waiting for a thread to execute it.
134
135 =item execute
136
137 A thread has accepted the request for processing and is currently
138 executing it (e.g. blocking in read).
139
140 =item pending
141
142 The request has been executed and is waiting for result processing.
143
144 While request submission and execution is fully asynchronous, result
145 processing is not and relies on the perl interpreter calling C<poll_cb>
146 (or another function with the same effect).
147
148 =item result
149
150 The request results are processed synchronously by C<poll_cb>.
151
152 The C<poll_cb> function will process all outstanding aio requests by
153 calling their callbacks, freeing memory associated with them and managing
154 any groups they are contained in.
155
156 =item done
157
158 Request has reached the end of its lifetime and holds no resources anymore
159 (except possibly for the Perl object, but its connection to the actual
160 aio request is severed and calling its methods will either do nothing or
161 result in a runtime error).
162
163 =back
164
165 =cut
166
167 package IO::AIO;
168
169 use Carp ();
170
171 use common::sense;
172
173 use base 'Exporter';
174
175 BEGIN {
176 our $VERSION = 4.35;
177
178 our @AIO_REQ = qw(aio_sendfile aio_seek aio_read aio_write aio_open aio_close
179 aio_stat aio_lstat aio_unlink aio_rmdir aio_readdir aio_readdirx
180 aio_scandir aio_symlink aio_readlink aio_realpath aio_fcntl aio_ioctl
181 aio_sync aio_fsync aio_syncfs aio_fdatasync aio_sync_file_range
182 aio_pathsync aio_readahead aio_fiemap aio_allocate
183 aio_rename aio_rename2 aio_link aio_move aio_copy aio_group
184 aio_nop aio_mknod aio_load aio_rmtree aio_mkdir aio_chown
185 aio_chmod aio_utime aio_truncate
186 aio_msync aio_mtouch aio_mlock aio_mlockall
187 aio_statvfs
188 aio_wd);
189
190 our @EXPORT = (@AIO_REQ, qw(aioreq_pri aioreq_nice));
191 our @EXPORT_OK = qw(poll_fileno poll_cb poll_wait flush
192 min_parallel max_parallel max_idle idle_timeout
193 nreqs nready npending nthreads
194 max_poll_time max_poll_reqs
195 sendfile fadvise madvise
196 mmap munmap munlock munlockall);
197
198 push @AIO_REQ, qw(aio_busy); # not exported
199
200 @IO::AIO::GRP::ISA = 'IO::AIO::REQ';
201
202 require XSLoader;
203 XSLoader::load ("IO::AIO", $VERSION);
204 }
205
206 =head1 FUNCTIONS
207
208 =head2 QUICK OVERVIEW
209
210 This section simply lists the prototypes most of the functions for
211 quick reference. See the following sections for function-by-function
212 documentation.
213
214 aio_wd $pathname, $callback->($wd)
215 aio_open $pathname, $flags, $mode, $callback->($fh)
216 aio_close $fh, $callback->($status)
217 aio_seek $fh,$offset,$whence, $callback->($offs)
218 aio_read $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
219 aio_write $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
220 aio_sendfile $out_fh, $in_fh, $in_offset, $length, $callback->($retval)
221 aio_readahead $fh,$offset,$length, $callback->($retval)
222 aio_stat $fh_or_path, $callback->($status)
223 aio_lstat $fh, $callback->($status)
224 aio_statvfs $fh_or_path, $callback->($statvfs)
225 aio_utime $fh_or_path, $atime, $mtime, $callback->($status)
226 aio_chown $fh_or_path, $uid, $gid, $callback->($status)
227 aio_chmod $fh_or_path, $mode, $callback->($status)
228 aio_truncate $fh_or_path, $offset, $callback->($status)
229 aio_allocate $fh, $mode, $offset, $len, $callback->($status)
230 aio_fiemap $fh, $start, $length, $flags, $count, $cb->(\@extents)
231 aio_unlink $pathname, $callback->($status)
232 aio_mknod $pathname, $mode, $dev, $callback->($status)
233 aio_link $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
234 aio_symlink $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
235 aio_readlink $pathname, $callback->($link)
236 aio_realpath $pathname, $callback->($path)
237 aio_rename $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
238 aio_rename2 $srcpath, $dstpath, $flags, $callback->($status)
239 aio_mkdir $pathname, $mode, $callback->($status)
240 aio_rmdir $pathname, $callback->($status)
241 aio_readdir $pathname, $callback->($entries)
242 aio_readdirx $pathname, $flags, $callback->($entries, $flags)
243 IO::AIO::READDIR_DENTS IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST
244 IO::AIO::READDIR_STAT_ORDER IO::AIO::READDIR_FOUND_UNKNOWN
245 aio_scandir $pathname, $maxreq, $callback->($dirs, $nondirs)
246 aio_load $pathname, $data, $callback->($status)
247 aio_copy $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
248 aio_move $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
249 aio_rmtree $pathname, $callback->($status)
250 aio_fcntl $fh, $cmd, $arg, $callback->($status)
251 aio_ioctl $fh, $request, $buf, $callback->($status)
252 aio_sync $callback->($status)
253 aio_syncfs $fh, $callback->($status)
254 aio_fsync $fh, $callback->($status)
255 aio_fdatasync $fh, $callback->($status)
256 aio_sync_file_range $fh, $offset, $nbytes, $flags, $callback->($status)
257 aio_pathsync $pathname, $callback->($status)
258 aio_msync $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = MS_SYNC, $callback->($status)
259 aio_mtouch $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0, $callback->($status)
260 aio_mlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, $callback->($status)
261 aio_mlockall $flags, $callback->($status)
262 aio_group $callback->(...)
263 aio_nop $callback->()
264
265 $prev_pri = aioreq_pri [$pri]
266 aioreq_nice $pri_adjust
267
268 IO::AIO::poll_wait
269 IO::AIO::poll_cb
270 IO::AIO::poll
271 IO::AIO::flush
272 IO::AIO::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
273 IO::AIO::max_poll_time $seconds
274 IO::AIO::min_parallel $nthreads
275 IO::AIO::max_parallel $nthreads
276 IO::AIO::max_idle $nthreads
277 IO::AIO::idle_timeout $seconds
278 IO::AIO::max_outstanding $maxreqs
279 IO::AIO::nreqs
280 IO::AIO::nready
281 IO::AIO::npending
282
283 IO::AIO::sendfile $ofh, $ifh, $offset, $count
284 IO::AIO::fadvise $fh, $offset, $len, $advice
285 IO::AIO::mmap $scalar, $length, $prot, $flags[, $fh[, $offset]]
286 IO::AIO::munmap $scalar
287 IO::AIO::madvise $scalar, $offset, $length, $advice
288 IO::AIO::mprotect $scalar, $offset, $length, $protect
289 IO::AIO::munlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef
290 IO::AIO::munlockall
291
292 =head2 API NOTES
293
294 All the C<aio_*> calls are more or less thin wrappers around the syscall
295 with the same name (sans C<aio_>). The arguments are similar or identical,
296 and they all accept an additional (and optional) C<$callback> argument
297 which must be a code reference. This code reference will be called after
298 the syscall has been executed in an asynchronous fashion. The results
299 of the request will be passed as arguments to the callback (and, if an
300 error occured, in C<$!>) - for most requests the syscall return code (e.g.
301 most syscalls return C<-1> on error, unlike perl, which usually delivers
302 "false").
303
304 Some requests (such as C<aio_readdir>) pass the actual results and
305 communicate failures by passing C<undef>.
306
307 All functions expecting a filehandle keep a copy of the filehandle
308 internally until the request has finished.
309
310 All functions return request objects of type L<IO::AIO::REQ> that allow
311 further manipulation of those requests while they are in-flight.
312
313 The pathnames you pass to these routines I<should> be absolute. The
314 reason for this is that at the time the request is being executed, the
315 current working directory could have changed. Alternatively, you can
316 make sure that you never change the current working directory anywhere
317 in the program and then use relative paths. You can also take advantage
318 of IO::AIOs working directory abstraction, that lets you specify paths
319 relative to some previously-opened "working directory object" - see the
320 description of the C<IO::AIO::WD> class later in this document.
321
322 To encode pathnames as octets, either make sure you either: a) always pass
323 in filenames you got from outside (command line, readdir etc.) without
324 tinkering, b) are in your native filesystem encoding, c) use the Encode
325 module and encode your pathnames to the locale (or other) encoding in
326 effect in the user environment, d) use Glib::filename_from_unicode on
327 unicode filenames or e) use something else to ensure your scalar has the
328 correct contents.
329
330 This works, btw. independent of the internal UTF-8 bit, which IO::AIO
331 handles correctly whether it is set or not.
332
333 =head2 AIO REQUEST FUNCTIONS
334
335 =over 4
336
337 =item $prev_pri = aioreq_pri [$pri]
338
339 Returns the priority value that would be used for the next request and, if
340 C<$pri> is given, sets the priority for the next aio request.
341
342 The default priority is C<0>, the minimum and maximum priorities are C<-4>
343 and C<4>, respectively. Requests with higher priority will be serviced
344 first.
345
346 The priority will be reset to C<0> after each call to one of the C<aio_*>
347 functions.
348
349 Example: open a file with low priority, then read something from it with
350 higher priority so the read request is serviced before other low priority
351 open requests (potentially spamming the cache):
352
353 aioreq_pri -3;
354 aio_open ..., sub {
355 return unless $_[0];
356
357 aioreq_pri -2;
358 aio_read $_[0], ..., sub {
359 ...
360 };
361 };
362
363
364 =item aioreq_nice $pri_adjust
365
366 Similar to C<aioreq_pri>, but subtracts the given value from the current
367 priority, so the effect is cumulative.
368
369
370 =item aio_open $pathname, $flags, $mode, $callback->($fh)
371
372 Asynchronously open or create a file and call the callback with a newly
373 created filehandle for the file (or C<undef> in case of an error).
374
375 The pathname passed to C<aio_open> must be absolute. See API NOTES, above,
376 for an explanation.
377
378 The C<$flags> argument is a bitmask. See the C<Fcntl> module for a
379 list. They are the same as used by C<sysopen>.
380
381 Likewise, C<$mode> specifies the mode of the newly created file, if it
382 didn't exist and C<O_CREAT> has been given, just like perl's C<sysopen>,
383 except that it is mandatory (i.e. use C<0> if you don't create new files,
384 and C<0666> or C<0777> if you do). Note that the C<$mode> will be modified
385 by the umask in effect then the request is being executed, so better never
386 change the umask.
387
388 Example:
389
390 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
391 if ($_[0]) {
392 print "open successful, fh is $_[0]\n";
393 ...
394 } else {
395 die "open failed: $!\n";
396 }
397 };
398
399 In addition to all the common open modes/flags (C<O_RDONLY>, C<O_WRONLY>,
400 C<O_RDWR>, C<O_CREAT>, C<O_TRUNC>, C<O_EXCL> and C<O_APPEND>), the
401 following POSIX and non-POSIX constants are available (missing ones on
402 your system are, as usual, C<0>):
403
404 C<O_ASYNC>, C<O_DIRECT>, C<O_NOATIME>, C<O_CLOEXEC>, C<O_NOCTTY>, C<O_NOFOLLOW>,
405 C<O_NONBLOCK>, C<O_EXEC>, C<O_SEARCH>, C<O_DIRECTORY>, C<O_DSYNC>,
406 C<O_RSYNC>, C<O_SYNC>, C<O_PATH>, C<O_TMPFILE>, and C<O_TTY_INIT>.
407
408
409 =item aio_close $fh, $callback->($status)
410
411 Asynchronously close a file and call the callback with the result
412 code.
413
414 Unfortunately, you can't do this to perl. Perl I<insists> very strongly on
415 closing the file descriptor associated with the filehandle itself.
416
417 Therefore, C<aio_close> will not close the filehandle - instead it will
418 use dup2 to overwrite the file descriptor with the write-end of a pipe
419 (the pipe fd will be created on demand and will be cached).
420
421 Or in other words: the file descriptor will be closed, but it will not be
422 free for reuse until the perl filehandle is closed.
423
424 =cut
425
426 =item aio_seek $fh, $offset, $whence, $callback->($offs)
427
428 Seeks the filehandle to the new C<$offset>, similarly to perl's
429 C<sysseek>. The C<$whence> can use the traditional values (C<0> for
430 C<IO::AIO::SEEK_SET>, C<1> for C<IO::AIO::SEEK_CUR> or C<2> for
431 C<IO::AIO::SEEK_END>).
432
433 The resulting absolute offset will be passed to the callback, or C<-1> in
434 case of an error.
435
436 In theory, the C<$whence> constants could be different than the
437 corresponding values from L<Fcntl>, but perl guarantees they are the same,
438 so don't panic.
439
440 As a GNU/Linux (and maybe Solaris) extension, also the constants
441 C<IO::AIO::SEEK_DATA> and C<IO::AIO::SEEK_HOLE> are available, if they
442 could be found. No guarantees about suitability for use in C<aio_seek> or
443 Perl's C<sysseek> can be made though, although I would naively assume they
444 "just work".
445
446 =item aio_read $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
447
448 =item aio_write $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
449
450 Reads or writes C<$length> bytes from or to the specified C<$fh> and
451 C<$offset> into the scalar given by C<$data> and offset C<$dataoffset> and
452 calls the callback with the actual number of bytes transferred (or -1 on
453 error, just like the syscall).
454
455 C<aio_read> will, like C<sysread>, shrink or grow the C<$data> scalar to
456 offset plus the actual number of bytes read.
457
458 If C<$offset> is undefined, then the current file descriptor offset will
459 be used (and updated), otherwise the file descriptor offset will not be
460 changed by these calls.
461
462 If C<$length> is undefined in C<aio_write>, use the remaining length of
463 C<$data>.
464
465 If C<$dataoffset> is less than zero, it will be counted from the end of
466 C<$data>.
467
468 The C<$data> scalar I<MUST NOT> be modified in any way while the request
469 is outstanding. Modifying it can result in segfaults or World War III (if
470 the necessary/optional hardware is installed).
471
472 Example: Read 15 bytes at offset 7 into scalar C<$buffer>, starting at
473 offset C<0> within the scalar:
474
475 aio_read $fh, 7, 15, $buffer, 0, sub {
476 $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
477 print "read $_[0] bytes: <$buffer>\n";
478 };
479
480
481 =item aio_sendfile $out_fh, $in_fh, $in_offset, $length, $callback->($retval)
482
483 Tries to copy C<$length> bytes from C<$in_fh> to C<$out_fh>. It starts
484 reading at byte offset C<$in_offset>, and starts writing at the current
485 file offset of C<$out_fh>. Because of that, it is not safe to issue more
486 than one C<aio_sendfile> per C<$out_fh>, as they will interfere with each
487 other. The same C<$in_fh> works fine though, as this function does not
488 move or use the file offset of C<$in_fh>.
489
490 Please note that C<aio_sendfile> can read more bytes from C<$in_fh> than
491 are written, and there is no way to find out how many more bytes have been
492 read from C<aio_sendfile> alone, as C<aio_sendfile> only provides the
493 number of bytes written to C<$out_fh>. Only if the result value equals
494 C<$length> one can assume that C<$length> bytes have been read.
495
496 Unlike with other C<aio_> functions, it makes a lot of sense to use
497 C<aio_sendfile> on non-blocking sockets, as long as one end (typically
498 the C<$in_fh>) is a file - the file I/O will then be asynchronous, while
499 the socket I/O will be non-blocking. Note, however, that you can run
500 into a trap where C<aio_sendfile> reads some data with readahead, then
501 fails to write all data, and when the socket is ready the next time, the
502 data in the cache is already lost, forcing C<aio_sendfile> to again hit
503 the disk. Explicit C<aio_read> + C<aio_write> let's you better control
504 resource usage.
505
506 This call tries to make use of a native C<sendfile>-like syscall to
507 provide zero-copy operation. For this to work, C<$out_fh> should refer to
508 a socket, and C<$in_fh> should refer to an mmap'able file.
509
510 If a native sendfile cannot be found or it fails with C<ENOSYS>,
511 C<EINVAL>, C<ENOTSUP>, C<EOPNOTSUPP>, C<EAFNOSUPPORT>, C<EPROTOTYPE> or
512 C<ENOTSOCK>, it will be emulated, so you can call C<aio_sendfile> on any
513 type of filehandle regardless of the limitations of the operating system.
514
515 As native sendfile syscalls (as practically any non-POSIX interface hacked
516 together in a hurry to improve benchmark numbers) tend to be rather buggy
517 on many systems, this implementation tries to work around some known bugs
518 in Linux and FreeBSD kernels (probably others, too), but that might fail,
519 so you really really should check the return value of C<aio_sendfile> -
520 fewer bytes than expected might have been transferred.
521
522
523 =item aio_readahead $fh,$offset,$length, $callback->($retval)
524
525 C<aio_readahead> populates the page cache with data from a file so that
526 subsequent reads from that file will not block on disk I/O. The C<$offset>
527 argument specifies the starting point from which data is to be read and
528 C<$length> specifies the number of bytes to be read. I/O is performed in
529 whole pages, so that offset is effectively rounded down to a page boundary
530 and bytes are read up to the next page boundary greater than or equal to
531 (off-set+length). C<aio_readahead> does not read beyond the end of the
532 file. The current file offset of the file is left unchanged.
533
534 If that syscall doesn't exist (likely if your kernel isn't Linux) it will
535 be emulated by simply reading the data, which would have a similar effect.
536
537
538 =item aio_stat $fh_or_path, $callback->($status)
539
540 =item aio_lstat $fh, $callback->($status)
541
542 Works like perl's C<stat> or C<lstat> in void context. The callback will
543 be called after the stat and the results will be available using C<stat _>
544 or C<-s _> etc...
545
546 The pathname passed to C<aio_stat> must be absolute. See API NOTES, above,
547 for an explanation.
548
549 Currently, the stats are always 64-bit-stats, i.e. instead of returning an
550 error when stat'ing a large file, the results will be silently truncated
551 unless perl itself is compiled with large file support.
552
553 To help interpret the mode and dev/rdev stat values, IO::AIO offers the
554 following constants and functions (if not implemented, the constants will
555 be C<0> and the functions will either C<croak> or fall back on traditional
556 behaviour).
557
558 C<S_IFMT>, C<S_IFIFO>, C<S_IFCHR>, C<S_IFBLK>, C<S_IFLNK>, C<S_IFREG>,
559 C<S_IFDIR>, C<S_IFWHT>, C<S_IFSOCK>, C<IO::AIO::major $dev_t>,
560 C<IO::AIO::minor $dev_t>, C<IO::AIO::makedev $major, $minor>.
561
562 Example: Print the length of F</etc/passwd>:
563
564 aio_stat "/etc/passwd", sub {
565 $_[0] and die "stat failed: $!";
566 print "size is ", -s _, "\n";
567 };
568
569
570 =item aio_statvfs $fh_or_path, $callback->($statvfs)
571
572 Works like the POSIX C<statvfs> or C<fstatvfs> syscalls, depending on
573 whether a file handle or path was passed.
574
575 On success, the callback is passed a hash reference with the following
576 members: C<bsize>, C<frsize>, C<blocks>, C<bfree>, C<bavail>, C<files>,
577 C<ffree>, C<favail>, C<fsid>, C<flag> and C<namemax>. On failure, C<undef>
578 is passed.
579
580 The following POSIX IO::AIO::ST_* constants are defined: C<ST_RDONLY> and
581 C<ST_NOSUID>.
582
583 The following non-POSIX IO::AIO::ST_* flag masks are defined to
584 their correct value when available, or to C<0> on systems that do
585 not support them: C<ST_NODEV>, C<ST_NOEXEC>, C<ST_SYNCHRONOUS>,
586 C<ST_MANDLOCK>, C<ST_WRITE>, C<ST_APPEND>, C<ST_IMMUTABLE>, C<ST_NOATIME>,
587 C<ST_NODIRATIME> and C<ST_RELATIME>.
588
589 Example: stat C</wd> and dump out the data if successful.
590
591 aio_statvfs "/wd", sub {
592 my $f = $_[0]
593 or die "statvfs: $!";
594
595 use Data::Dumper;
596 say Dumper $f;
597 };
598
599 # result:
600 {
601 bsize => 1024,
602 bfree => 4333064312,
603 blocks => 10253828096,
604 files => 2050765568,
605 flag => 4096,
606 favail => 2042092649,
607 bavail => 4333064312,
608 ffree => 2042092649,
609 namemax => 255,
610 frsize => 1024,
611 fsid => 1810
612 }
613
614 Here is a (likely partial - send me updates!) list of fsid values used by
615 Linux - it is safe to hardcode these when C<$^O> is C<linux>:
616
617 0x0000adf5 adfs
618 0x0000adff affs
619 0x5346414f afs
620 0x09041934 anon-inode filesystem
621 0x00000187 autofs
622 0x42465331 befs
623 0x1badface bfs
624 0x42494e4d binfmt_misc
625 0x9123683e btrfs
626 0x0027e0eb cgroupfs
627 0xff534d42 cifs
628 0x73757245 coda
629 0x012ff7b7 coh
630 0x28cd3d45 cramfs
631 0x453dcd28 cramfs-wend (wrong endianness)
632 0x64626720 debugfs
633 0x00001373 devfs
634 0x00001cd1 devpts
635 0x0000f15f ecryptfs
636 0x00414a53 efs
637 0x0000137d ext
638 0x0000ef53 ext2/ext3/ext4
639 0x0000ef51 ext2
640 0xf2f52010 f2fs
641 0x00004006 fat
642 0x65735546 fuseblk
643 0x65735543 fusectl
644 0x0bad1dea futexfs
645 0x01161970 gfs2
646 0x47504653 gpfs
647 0x00004244 hfs
648 0xf995e849 hpfs
649 0x00c0ffee hostfs
650 0x958458f6 hugetlbfs
651 0x2bad1dea inotifyfs
652 0x00009660 isofs
653 0x000072b6 jffs2
654 0x3153464a jfs
655 0x6b414653 k-afs
656 0x0bd00bd0 lustre
657 0x0000137f minix
658 0x0000138f minix 30 char names
659 0x00002468 minix v2
660 0x00002478 minix v2 30 char names
661 0x00004d5a minix v3
662 0x19800202 mqueue
663 0x00004d44 msdos
664 0x0000564c novell
665 0x00006969 nfs
666 0x6e667364 nfsd
667 0x00003434 nilfs
668 0x5346544e ntfs
669 0x00009fa1 openprom
670 0x7461636F ocfs2
671 0x00009fa0 proc
672 0x6165676c pstorefs
673 0x0000002f qnx4
674 0x68191122 qnx6
675 0x858458f6 ramfs
676 0x52654973 reiserfs
677 0x00007275 romfs
678 0x67596969 rpc_pipefs
679 0x73636673 securityfs
680 0xf97cff8c selinux
681 0x0000517b smb
682 0x534f434b sockfs
683 0x73717368 squashfs
684 0x62656572 sysfs
685 0x012ff7b6 sysv2
686 0x012ff7b5 sysv4
687 0x01021994 tmpfs
688 0x15013346 udf
689 0x00011954 ufs
690 0x54190100 ufs byteswapped
691 0x00009fa2 usbdevfs
692 0x01021997 v9fs
693 0xa501fcf5 vxfs
694 0xabba1974 xenfs
695 0x012ff7b4 xenix
696 0x58465342 xfs
697 0x012fd16d xia
698
699 =item aio_utime $fh_or_path, $atime, $mtime, $callback->($status)
700
701 Works like perl's C<utime> function (including the special case of $atime
702 and $mtime being undef). Fractional times are supported if the underlying
703 syscalls support them.
704
705 When called with a pathname, uses utimes(2) if available, otherwise
706 utime(2). If called on a file descriptor, uses futimes(2) if available,
707 otherwise returns ENOSYS, so this is not portable.
708
709 Examples:
710
711 # set atime and mtime to current time (basically touch(1)):
712 aio_utime "path", undef, undef;
713 # set atime to current time and mtime to beginning of the epoch:
714 aio_utime "path", time, undef; # undef==0
715
716
717 =item aio_chown $fh_or_path, $uid, $gid, $callback->($status)
718
719 Works like perl's C<chown> function, except that C<undef> for either $uid
720 or $gid is being interpreted as "do not change" (but -1 can also be used).
721
722 Examples:
723
724 # same as "chown root path" in the shell:
725 aio_chown "path", 0, -1;
726 # same as above:
727 aio_chown "path", 0, undef;
728
729
730 =item aio_truncate $fh_or_path, $offset, $callback->($status)
731
732 Works like truncate(2) or ftruncate(2).
733
734
735 =item aio_allocate $fh, $mode, $offset, $len, $callback->($status)
736
737 Allocates or frees disk space according to the C<$mode> argument. See the
738 linux C<fallocate> documentation for details.
739
740 C<$mode> is usually C<0> or C<IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE> to allocate
741 space, or C<IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE | IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE>,
742 to deallocate a file range.
743
744 IO::AIO also supports C<FALLOC_FL_COLLAPSE_RANGE>, to remove a range
745 (without leaving a hole) and C<FALLOC_FL_ZERO_RANGE>, to zero a range (see
746 your L<fallocate(2)> manpage).
747
748 The file system block size used by C<fallocate> is presumably the
749 C<f_bsize> returned by C<statvfs>.
750
751 If C<fallocate> isn't available or cannot be emulated (currently no
752 emulation will be attempted), passes C<-1> and sets C<$!> to C<ENOSYS>.
753
754
755 =item aio_chmod $fh_or_path, $mode, $callback->($status)
756
757 Works like perl's C<chmod> function.
758
759
760 =item aio_unlink $pathname, $callback->($status)
761
762 Asynchronously unlink (delete) a file and call the callback with the
763 result code.
764
765
766 =item aio_mknod $pathname, $mode, $dev, $callback->($status)
767
768 [EXPERIMENTAL]
769
770 Asynchronously create a device node (or fifo). See mknod(2).
771
772 The only (POSIX-) portable way of calling this function is:
773
774 aio_mknod $pathname, IO::AIO::S_IFIFO | $mode, 0, sub { ...
775
776 See C<aio_stat> for info about some potentially helpful extra constants
777 and functions.
778
779 =item aio_link $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
780
781 Asynchronously create a new link to the existing object at C<$srcpath> at
782 the path C<$dstpath> and call the callback with the result code.
783
784
785 =item aio_symlink $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
786
787 Asynchronously create a new symbolic link to the existing object at C<$srcpath> at
788 the path C<$dstpath> and call the callback with the result code.
789
790
791 =item aio_readlink $pathname, $callback->($link)
792
793 Asynchronously read the symlink specified by C<$path> and pass it to
794 the callback. If an error occurs, nothing or undef gets passed to the
795 callback.
796
797
798 =item aio_realpath $pathname, $callback->($path)
799
800 Asynchronously make the path absolute and resolve any symlinks in
801 C<$path>. The resulting path only consists of directories (same as
802 L<Cwd::realpath>).
803
804 This request can be used to get the absolute path of the current working
805 directory by passing it a path of F<.> (a single dot).
806
807
808 =item aio_rename $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
809
810 Asynchronously rename the object at C<$srcpath> to C<$dstpath>, just as
811 rename(2) and call the callback with the result code.
812
813 On systems that support the AIO::WD working directory abstraction
814 natively, the case C<[$wd, "."]> as C<$srcpath> is specialcased - instead
815 of failing, C<rename> is called on the absolute path of C<$wd>.
816
817
818 =item aio_rename2 $srcpath, $dstpath, $flags, $callback->($status)
819
820 Basically a version of C<aio_rename> with an additional C<$flags>
821 argument. Calling this with C<$flags=0> is the same as calling
822 C<aio_rename>.
823
824 Non-zero flags are currently only supported on GNU/Linux systems that
825 support renameat2. Other systems fail with C<ENOSYS> in this case.
826
827 The following constants are available (missing ones are, as usual C<0>),
828 see renameat2(2) for details:
829
830 C<IO::AIO::RENAME_NOREPLACE>, C<IO::AIO::RENAME_EXCHANGE>
831 and C<IO::AIO::RENAME_WHITEOUT>.
832
833
834 =item aio_mkdir $pathname, $mode, $callback->($status)
835
836 Asynchronously mkdir (create) a directory and call the callback with
837 the result code. C<$mode> will be modified by the umask at the time the
838 request is executed, so do not change your umask.
839
840
841 =item aio_rmdir $pathname, $callback->($status)
842
843 Asynchronously rmdir (delete) a directory and call the callback with the
844 result code.
845
846 On systems that support the AIO::WD working directory abstraction
847 natively, the case C<[$wd, "."]> is specialcased - instead of failing,
848 C<rmdir> is called on the absolute path of C<$wd>.
849
850
851 =item aio_readdir $pathname, $callback->($entries)
852
853 Unlike the POSIX call of the same name, C<aio_readdir> reads an entire
854 directory (i.e. opendir + readdir + closedir). The entries will not be
855 sorted, and will B<NOT> include the C<.> and C<..> entries.
856
857 The callback is passed a single argument which is either C<undef> or an
858 array-ref with the filenames.
859
860
861 =item aio_readdirx $pathname, $flags, $callback->($entries, $flags)
862
863 Quite similar to C<aio_readdir>, but the C<$flags> argument allows one to
864 tune behaviour and output format. In case of an error, C<$entries> will be
865 C<undef>.
866
867 The flags are a combination of the following constants, ORed together (the
868 flags will also be passed to the callback, possibly modified):
869
870 =over 4
871
872 =item IO::AIO::READDIR_DENTS
873
874 When this flag is off, then the callback gets an arrayref consisting of
875 names only (as with C<aio_readdir>), otherwise it gets an arrayref with
876 C<[$name, $type, $inode]> arrayrefs, each describing a single directory
877 entry in more detail.
878
879 C<$name> is the name of the entry.
880
881 C<$type> is one of the C<IO::AIO::DT_xxx> constants:
882
883 C<IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN>, C<IO::AIO::DT_FIFO>, C<IO::AIO::DT_CHR>, C<IO::AIO::DT_DIR>,
884 C<IO::AIO::DT_BLK>, C<IO::AIO::DT_REG>, C<IO::AIO::DT_LNK>, C<IO::AIO::DT_SOCK>,
885 C<IO::AIO::DT_WHT>.
886
887 C<IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN> means just that: readdir does not know. If you need to
888 know, you have to run stat yourself. Also, for speed reasons, the C<$type>
889 scalars are read-only: you can not modify them.
890
891 C<$inode> is the inode number (which might not be exact on systems with 64
892 bit inode numbers and 32 bit perls). This field has unspecified content on
893 systems that do not deliver the inode information.
894
895 =item IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST
896
897 When this flag is set, then the names will be returned in an order where
898 likely directories come first, in optimal stat order. This is useful when
899 you need to quickly find directories, or you want to find all directories
900 while avoiding to stat() each entry.
901
902 If the system returns type information in readdir, then this is used
903 to find directories directly. Otherwise, likely directories are names
904 beginning with ".", or otherwise names with no dots, of which names with
905 short names are tried first.
906
907 =item IO::AIO::READDIR_STAT_ORDER
908
909 When this flag is set, then the names will be returned in an order
910 suitable for stat()'ing each one. That is, when you plan to stat()
911 all files in the given directory, then the returned order will likely
912 be fastest.
913
914 If both this flag and C<IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST> are specified, then
915 the likely dirs come first, resulting in a less optimal stat order.
916
917 =item IO::AIO::READDIR_FOUND_UNKNOWN
918
919 This flag should not be set when calling C<aio_readdirx>. Instead, it
920 is being set by C<aio_readdirx>, when any of the C<$type>'s found were
921 C<IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN>. The absence of this flag therefore indicates that all
922 C<$type>'s are known, which can be used to speed up some algorithms.
923
924 =back
925
926
927 =item aio_load $pathname, $data, $callback->($status)
928
929 This is a composite request that tries to fully load the given file into
930 memory. Status is the same as with aio_read.
931
932 =cut
933
934 sub aio_load($$;$) {
935 my ($path, undef, $cb) = @_;
936 my $data = \$_[1];
937
938 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
939 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
940
941 aioreq_pri $pri;
942 add $grp aio_open $path, O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
943 my $fh = shift
944 or return $grp->result (-1);
945
946 aioreq_pri $pri;
947 add $grp aio_read $fh, 0, (-s $fh), $$data, 0, sub {
948 $grp->result ($_[0]);
949 };
950 };
951
952 $grp
953 }
954
955 =item aio_copy $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
956
957 Try to copy the I<file> (directories not supported as either source or
958 destination) from C<$srcpath> to C<$dstpath> and call the callback with
959 a status of C<0> (ok) or C<-1> (error, see C<$!>).
960
961 This is a composite request that creates the destination file with
962 mode 0200 and copies the contents of the source file into it using
963 C<aio_sendfile>, followed by restoring atime, mtime, access mode and
964 uid/gid, in that order.
965
966 If an error occurs, the partial destination file will be unlinked, if
967 possible, except when setting atime, mtime, access mode and uid/gid, where
968 errors are being ignored.
969
970 =cut
971
972 sub aio_copy($$;$) {
973 my ($src, $dst, $cb) = @_;
974
975 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
976 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
977
978 aioreq_pri $pri;
979 add $grp aio_open $src, O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
980 if (my $src_fh = $_[0]) {
981 my @stat = stat $src_fh; # hmm, might block over nfs?
982
983 aioreq_pri $pri;
984 add $grp aio_open $dst, O_CREAT | O_WRONLY | O_TRUNC, 0200, sub {
985 if (my $dst_fh = $_[0]) {
986 aioreq_pri $pri;
987 add $grp aio_sendfile $dst_fh, $src_fh, 0, $stat[7], sub {
988 if ($_[0] == $stat[7]) {
989 $grp->result (0);
990 close $src_fh;
991
992 my $ch = sub {
993 aioreq_pri $pri;
994 add $grp aio_chmod $dst_fh, $stat[2] & 07777, sub {
995 aioreq_pri $pri;
996 add $grp aio_chown $dst_fh, $stat[4], $stat[5], sub {
997 aioreq_pri $pri;
998 add $grp aio_close $dst_fh;
999 }
1000 };
1001 };
1002
1003 aioreq_pri $pri;
1004 add $grp aio_utime $dst_fh, $stat[8], $stat[9], sub {
1005 if ($_[0] < 0 && $! == ENOSYS) {
1006 aioreq_pri $pri;
1007 add $grp aio_utime $dst, $stat[8], $stat[9], $ch;
1008 } else {
1009 $ch->();
1010 }
1011 };
1012 } else {
1013 $grp->result (-1);
1014 close $src_fh;
1015 close $dst_fh;
1016
1017 aioreq $pri;
1018 add $grp aio_unlink $dst;
1019 }
1020 };
1021 } else {
1022 $grp->result (-1);
1023 }
1024 },
1025
1026 } else {
1027 $grp->result (-1);
1028 }
1029 };
1030
1031 $grp
1032 }
1033
1034 =item aio_move $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
1035
1036 Try to move the I<file> (directories not supported as either source or
1037 destination) from C<$srcpath> to C<$dstpath> and call the callback with
1038 a status of C<0> (ok) or C<-1> (error, see C<$!>).
1039
1040 This is a composite request that tries to rename(2) the file first; if
1041 rename fails with C<EXDEV>, it copies the file with C<aio_copy> and, if
1042 that is successful, unlinks the C<$srcpath>.
1043
1044 =cut
1045
1046 sub aio_move($$;$) {
1047 my ($src, $dst, $cb) = @_;
1048
1049 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
1050 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
1051
1052 aioreq_pri $pri;
1053 add $grp aio_rename $src, $dst, sub {
1054 if ($_[0] && $! == EXDEV) {
1055 aioreq_pri $pri;
1056 add $grp aio_copy $src, $dst, sub {
1057 $grp->result ($_[0]);
1058
1059 unless ($_[0]) {
1060 aioreq_pri $pri;
1061 add $grp aio_unlink $src;
1062 }
1063 };
1064 } else {
1065 $grp->result ($_[0]);
1066 }
1067 };
1068
1069 $grp
1070 }
1071
1072 =item aio_scandir $pathname, $maxreq, $callback->($dirs, $nondirs)
1073
1074 Scans a directory (similar to C<aio_readdir>) but additionally tries to
1075 efficiently separate the entries of directory C<$path> into two sets of
1076 names, directories you can recurse into (directories), and ones you cannot
1077 recurse into (everything else, including symlinks to directories).
1078
1079 C<aio_scandir> is a composite request that creates of many sub requests_
1080 C<$maxreq> specifies the maximum number of outstanding aio requests that
1081 this function generates. If it is C<< <= 0 >>, then a suitable default
1082 will be chosen (currently 4).
1083
1084 On error, the callback is called without arguments, otherwise it receives
1085 two array-refs with path-relative entry names.
1086
1087 Example:
1088
1089 aio_scandir $dir, 0, sub {
1090 my ($dirs, $nondirs) = @_;
1091 print "real directories: @$dirs\n";
1092 print "everything else: @$nondirs\n";
1093 };
1094
1095 Implementation notes.
1096
1097 The C<aio_readdir> cannot be avoided, but C<stat()>'ing every entry can.
1098
1099 If readdir returns file type information, then this is used directly to
1100 find directories.
1101
1102 Otherwise, after reading the directory, the modification time, size etc.
1103 of the directory before and after the readdir is checked, and if they
1104 match (and isn't the current time), the link count will be used to decide
1105 how many entries are directories (if >= 2). Otherwise, no knowledge of the
1106 number of subdirectories will be assumed.
1107
1108 Then entries will be sorted into likely directories a non-initial dot
1109 currently) and likely non-directories (see C<aio_readdirx>). Then every
1110 entry plus an appended C</.> will be C<stat>'ed, likely directories first,
1111 in order of their inode numbers. If that succeeds, it assumes that the
1112 entry is a directory or a symlink to directory (which will be checked
1113 separately). This is often faster than stat'ing the entry itself because
1114 filesystems might detect the type of the entry without reading the inode
1115 data (e.g. ext2fs filetype feature), even on systems that cannot return
1116 the filetype information on readdir.
1117
1118 If the known number of directories (link count - 2) has been reached, the
1119 rest of the entries is assumed to be non-directories.
1120
1121 This only works with certainty on POSIX (= UNIX) filesystems, which
1122 fortunately are the vast majority of filesystems around.
1123
1124 It will also likely work on non-POSIX filesystems with reduced efficiency
1125 as those tend to return 0 or 1 as link counts, which disables the
1126 directory counting heuristic.
1127
1128 =cut
1129
1130 sub aio_scandir($$;$) {
1131 my ($path, $maxreq, $cb) = @_;
1132
1133 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
1134
1135 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
1136
1137 $maxreq = 4 if $maxreq <= 0;
1138
1139 # get a wd object
1140 aioreq_pri $pri;
1141 add $grp aio_wd $path, sub {
1142 $_[0]
1143 or return $grp->result ();
1144
1145 my $wd = [shift, "."];
1146
1147 # stat once
1148 aioreq_pri $pri;
1149 add $grp aio_stat $wd, sub {
1150 return $grp->result () if $_[0];
1151 my $now = time;
1152 my $hash1 = join ":", (stat _)[0,1,3,7,9];
1153
1154 # read the directory entries
1155 aioreq_pri $pri;
1156 add $grp aio_readdirx $wd, READDIR_DIRS_FIRST, sub {
1157 my $entries = shift
1158 or return $grp->result ();
1159
1160 # stat the dir another time
1161 aioreq_pri $pri;
1162 add $grp aio_stat $wd, sub {
1163 my $hash2 = join ":", (stat _)[0,1,3,7,9];
1164
1165 my $ndirs;
1166
1167 # take the slow route if anything looks fishy
1168 if ($hash1 ne $hash2 or (stat _)[9] == $now) {
1169 $ndirs = -1;
1170 } else {
1171 # if nlink == 2, we are finished
1172 # for non-posix-fs's, we rely on nlink < 2
1173 $ndirs = (stat _)[3] - 2
1174 or return $grp->result ([], $entries);
1175 }
1176
1177 my (@dirs, @nondirs);
1178
1179 my $statgrp = add $grp aio_group sub {
1180 $grp->result (\@dirs, \@nondirs);
1181 };
1182
1183 limit $statgrp $maxreq;
1184 feed $statgrp sub {
1185 return unless @$entries;
1186 my $entry = shift @$entries;
1187
1188 aioreq_pri $pri;
1189 $wd->[1] = "$entry/.";
1190 add $statgrp aio_stat $wd, sub {
1191 if ($_[0] < 0) {
1192 push @nondirs, $entry;
1193 } else {
1194 # need to check for real directory
1195 aioreq_pri $pri;
1196 $wd->[1] = $entry;
1197 add $statgrp aio_lstat $wd, sub {
1198 if (-d _) {
1199 push @dirs, $entry;
1200
1201 unless (--$ndirs) {
1202 push @nondirs, @$entries;
1203 feed $statgrp;
1204 }
1205 } else {
1206 push @nondirs, $entry;
1207 }
1208 }
1209 }
1210 };
1211 };
1212 };
1213 };
1214 };
1215 };
1216
1217 $grp
1218 }
1219
1220 =item aio_rmtree $pathname, $callback->($status)
1221
1222 Delete a directory tree starting (and including) C<$path>, return the
1223 status of the final C<rmdir> only. This is a composite request that
1224 uses C<aio_scandir> to recurse into and rmdir directories, and unlink
1225 everything else.
1226
1227 =cut
1228
1229 sub aio_rmtree;
1230 sub aio_rmtree($;$) {
1231 my ($path, $cb) = @_;
1232
1233 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
1234 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
1235
1236 aioreq_pri $pri;
1237 add $grp aio_scandir $path, 0, sub {
1238 my ($dirs, $nondirs) = @_;
1239
1240 my $dirgrp = aio_group sub {
1241 add $grp aio_rmdir $path, sub {
1242 $grp->result ($_[0]);
1243 };
1244 };
1245
1246 (aioreq_pri $pri), add $dirgrp aio_rmtree "$path/$_" for @$dirs;
1247 (aioreq_pri $pri), add $dirgrp aio_unlink "$path/$_" for @$nondirs;
1248
1249 add $grp $dirgrp;
1250 };
1251
1252 $grp
1253 }
1254
1255 =item aio_fcntl $fh, $cmd, $arg, $callback->($status)
1256
1257 =item aio_ioctl $fh, $request, $buf, $callback->($status)
1258
1259 These work just like the C<fcntl> and C<ioctl> built-in functions, except
1260 they execute asynchronously and pass the return value to the callback.
1261
1262 Both calls can be used for a lot of things, some of which make more sense
1263 to run asynchronously in their own thread, while some others make less
1264 sense. For example, calls that block waiting for external events, such
1265 as locking, will also lock down an I/O thread while it is waiting, which
1266 can deadlock the whole I/O system. At the same time, there might be no
1267 alternative to using a thread to wait.
1268
1269 So in general, you should only use these calls for things that do
1270 (filesystem) I/O, not for things that wait for other events (network,
1271 other processes), although if you are careful and know what you are doing,
1272 you still can.
1273
1274 The following constants are available (missing ones are, as usual C<0>):
1275
1276 C<F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC>,
1277
1278 C<F_OFD_GETLK>, C<F_OFD_SETLK>, C<F_OFD_GETLKW>,
1279
1280 C<FIFREEZE>, C<FITHAW>, C<FITRIM>, C<FICLONE>, C<FICLONERANGE>, C<FIDEDUPERANGE>.
1281
1282 C<FS_IOC_GETFLAGS>, C<FS_IOC_SETFLAGS>, C<FS_IOC_GETVERSION>, C<FS_IOC_SETVERSION>,
1283 C<FS_IOC_FIEMAP>.
1284
1285 C<FS_IOC_FSGETXATTR>, C<FS_IOC_FSSETXATTR>, C<FS_IOC_SET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY>,
1286 C<FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_PWSALT>, C<FS_IOC_GET_ENCRYPTION_POLICY>, C<FS_KEY_DESCRIPTOR_SIZE>.
1287
1288 C<FS_SECRM_FL>, C<FS_UNRM_FL>, C<FS_COMPR_FL>, C<FS_SYNC_FL>, C<FS_IMMUTABLE_FL>,
1289 C<FS_APPEND_FL>, C<FS_NODUMP_FL>, C<FS_NOATIME_FL>, C<FS_DIRTY_FL>,
1290 C<FS_COMPRBLK_FL>, C<FS_NOCOMP_FL>, C<FS_ENCRYPT_FL>, C<FS_BTREE_FL>,
1291 C<FS_INDEX_FL>, C<FS_JOURNAL_DATA_FL>, C<FS_NOTAIL_FL>, C<FS_DIRSYNC_FL>, C<FS_TOPDIR_FL>,
1292 C<FS_FL_USER_MODIFIABLE>.
1293
1294 C<FS_XFLAG_REALTIME>, C<FS_XFLAG_PREALLOC>, C<FS_XFLAG_IMMUTABLE>, C<FS_XFLAG_APPEND>,
1295 C<FS_XFLAG_SYNC>, C<FS_XFLAG_NOATIME>, C<FS_XFLAG_NODUMP>, C<FS_XFLAG_RTINHERIT>,
1296 C<FS_XFLAG_PROJINHERIT>, C<FS_XFLAG_NOSYMLINKS>, C<FS_XFLAG_EXTSIZE>, C<FS_XFLAG_EXTSZINHERIT>,
1297 C<FS_XFLAG_NODEFRAG>, C<FS_XFLAG_FILESTREAM>, C<FS_XFLAG_DAX>, C<FS_XFLAG_HASATTR>,
1298
1299 =item aio_sync $callback->($status)
1300
1301 Asynchronously call sync and call the callback when finished.
1302
1303 =item aio_fsync $fh, $callback->($status)
1304
1305 Asynchronously call fsync on the given filehandle and call the callback
1306 with the fsync result code.
1307
1308 =item aio_fdatasync $fh, $callback->($status)
1309
1310 Asynchronously call fdatasync on the given filehandle and call the
1311 callback with the fdatasync result code.
1312
1313 If this call isn't available because your OS lacks it or it couldn't be
1314 detected, it will be emulated by calling C<fsync> instead.
1315
1316 =item aio_syncfs $fh, $callback->($status)
1317
1318 Asynchronously call the syncfs syscall to sync the filesystem associated
1319 to the given filehandle and call the callback with the syncfs result
1320 code. If syncfs is not available, calls sync(), but returns C<-1> and sets
1321 errno to C<ENOSYS> nevertheless.
1322
1323 =item aio_sync_file_range $fh, $offset, $nbytes, $flags, $callback->($status)
1324
1325 Sync the data portion of the file specified by C<$offset> and C<$length>
1326 to disk (but NOT the metadata), by calling the Linux-specific
1327 sync_file_range call. If sync_file_range is not available or it returns
1328 ENOSYS, then fdatasync or fsync is being substituted.
1329
1330 C<$flags> can be a combination of C<IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE>,
1331 C<IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE> and
1332 C<IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_AFTER>: refer to the sync_file_range
1333 manpage for details.
1334
1335 =item aio_pathsync $pathname, $callback->($status)
1336
1337 This request tries to open, fsync and close the given path. This is a
1338 composite request intended to sync directories after directory operations
1339 (E.g. rename). This might not work on all operating systems or have any
1340 specific effect, but usually it makes sure that directory changes get
1341 written to disc. It works for anything that can be opened for read-only,
1342 not just directories.
1343
1344 Future versions of this function might fall back to other methods when
1345 C<fsync> on the directory fails (such as calling C<sync>).
1346
1347 Passes C<0> when everything went ok, and C<-1> on error.
1348
1349 =cut
1350
1351 sub aio_pathsync($;$) {
1352 my ($path, $cb) = @_;
1353
1354 my $pri = aioreq_pri;
1355 my $grp = aio_group $cb;
1356
1357 aioreq_pri $pri;
1358 add $grp aio_open $path, O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
1359 my ($fh) = @_;
1360 if ($fh) {
1361 aioreq_pri $pri;
1362 add $grp aio_fsync $fh, sub {
1363 $grp->result ($_[0]);
1364
1365 aioreq_pri $pri;
1366 add $grp aio_close $fh;
1367 };
1368 } else {
1369 $grp->result (-1);
1370 }
1371 };
1372
1373 $grp
1374 }
1375
1376 =item aio_msync $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = MS_SYNC, $callback->($status)
1377
1378 This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which only works on mmap(2)ed
1379 scalars (see the C<IO::AIO::mmap> function, although it also works on data
1380 scalars managed by the L<Sys::Mmap> or L<Mmap> modules, note that the
1381 scalar must only be modified in-place while an aio operation is pending on
1382 it).
1383
1384 It calls the C<msync> function of your OS, if available, with the memory
1385 area starting at C<$offset> in the string and ending C<$length> bytes
1386 later. If C<$length> is negative, counts from the end, and if C<$length>
1387 is C<undef>, then it goes till the end of the string. The flags can be
1388 either C<IO::AIO::MS_ASYNC> or C<IO::AIO::MS_SYNC>, plus an optional
1389 C<IO::AIO::MS_INVALIDATE>.
1390
1391 =item aio_mtouch $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0, $callback->($status)
1392
1393 This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which works best on mmap(2)ed
1394 scalars.
1395
1396 It touches (reads or writes) all memory pages in the specified
1397 range inside the scalar. All caveats and parameters are the same
1398 as for C<aio_msync>, above, except for flags, which must be either
1399 C<0> (which reads all pages and ensures they are instantiated) or
1400 C<IO::AIO::MT_MODIFY>, which modifies the memory pages (by reading and
1401 writing an octet from it, which dirties the page).
1402
1403 =item aio_mlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, $callback->($status)
1404
1405 This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which works best on mmap(2)ed
1406 scalars.
1407
1408 It reads in all the pages of the underlying storage into memory (if any)
1409 and locks them, so they are not getting swapped/paged out or removed.
1410
1411 If C<$length> is undefined, then the scalar will be locked till the end.
1412
1413 On systems that do not implement C<mlock>, this function returns C<-1>
1414 and sets errno to C<ENOSYS>.
1415
1416 Note that the corresponding C<munlock> is synchronous and is
1417 documented under L<MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS>.
1418
1419 Example: open a file, mmap and mlock it - both will be undone when
1420 C<$data> gets destroyed.
1421
1422 open my $fh, "<", $path or die "$path: $!";
1423 my $data;
1424 IO::AIO::mmap $data, -s $fh, IO::AIO::PROT_READ, IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED, $fh;
1425 aio_mlock $data; # mlock in background
1426
1427 =item aio_mlockall $flags, $callback->($status)
1428
1429 Calls the C<mlockall> function with the given C<$flags> (a combination of
1430 C<IO::AIO::MCL_CURRENT> and C<IO::AIO::MCL_FUTURE>).
1431
1432 On systems that do not implement C<mlockall>, this function returns C<-1>
1433 and sets errno to C<ENOSYS>.
1434
1435 Note that the corresponding C<munlockall> is synchronous and is
1436 documented under L<MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS>.
1437
1438 Example: asynchronously lock all current and future pages into memory.
1439
1440 aio_mlockall IO::AIO::MCL_FUTURE;
1441
1442 =item aio_fiemap $fh, $start, $length, $flags, $count, $cb->(\@extents)
1443
1444 Queries the extents of the given file (by calling the Linux C<FIEMAP>
1445 ioctl, see L<http://cvs.schmorp.de/IO-AIO/doc/fiemap.txt> for details). If
1446 the ioctl is not available on your OS, then this request will fail with
1447 C<ENOSYS>.
1448
1449 C<$start> is the starting offset to query extents for, C<$length> is the
1450 size of the range to query - if it is C<undef>, then the whole file will
1451 be queried.
1452
1453 C<$flags> is a combination of flags (C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC> or
1454 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_XATTR> - C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAGS_COMPAT> is also
1455 exported), and is normally C<0> or C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC> to query
1456 the data portion.
1457
1458 C<$count> is the maximum number of extent records to return. If it is
1459 C<undef>, then IO::AIO queries all extents of the range. As a very special
1460 case, if it is C<0>, then the callback receives the number of extents
1461 instead of the extents themselves (which is unreliable, see below).
1462
1463 If an error occurs, the callback receives no arguments. The special
1464 C<errno> value C<IO::AIO::EBADR> is available to test for flag errors.
1465
1466 Otherwise, the callback receives an array reference with extent
1467 structures. Each extent structure is an array reference itself, with the
1468 following members:
1469
1470 [$logical, $physical, $length, $flags]
1471
1472 Flags is any combination of the following flag values (typically either C<0>
1473 or C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST> (1)):
1474
1475 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST>, C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNKNOWN>,
1476 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DELALLOC>, C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_ENCODED>,
1477 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_ENCRYPTED>, C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED>,
1478 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_INLINE>, C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_TAIL>,
1479 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNWRITTEN>, C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_MERGED> or
1480 C<IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_SHARED>.
1481
1482 At the time of this writing (Linux 3.2), this requets is unreliable unless
1483 C<$count> is C<undef>, as the kernel has all sorts of bugs preventing
1484 it to return all extents of a range for files with large number of
1485 extents. The code works around all these issues if C<$count> is undef.
1486
1487 =item aio_group $callback->(...)
1488
1489 This is a very special aio request: Instead of doing something, it is a
1490 container for other aio requests, which is useful if you want to bundle
1491 many requests into a single, composite, request with a definite callback
1492 and the ability to cancel the whole request with its subrequests.
1493
1494 Returns an object of class L<IO::AIO::GRP>. See its documentation below
1495 for more info.
1496
1497 Example:
1498
1499 my $grp = aio_group sub {
1500 print "all stats done\n";
1501 };
1502
1503 add $grp
1504 (aio_stat ...),
1505 (aio_stat ...),
1506 ...;
1507
1508 =item aio_nop $callback->()
1509
1510 This is a special request - it does nothing in itself and is only used for
1511 side effects, such as when you want to add a dummy request to a group so
1512 that finishing the requests in the group depends on executing the given
1513 code.
1514
1515 While this request does nothing, it still goes through the execution
1516 phase and still requires a worker thread. Thus, the callback will not
1517 be executed immediately but only after other requests in the queue have
1518 entered their execution phase. This can be used to measure request
1519 latency.
1520
1521 =item IO::AIO::aio_busy $fractional_seconds, $callback->() *NOT EXPORTED*
1522
1523 Mainly used for debugging and benchmarking, this aio request puts one of
1524 the request workers to sleep for the given time.
1525
1526 While it is theoretically handy to have simple I/O scheduling requests
1527 like sleep and file handle readable/writable, the overhead this creates is
1528 immense (it blocks a thread for a long time) so do not use this function
1529 except to put your application under artificial I/O pressure.
1530
1531 =back
1532
1533
1534 =head2 IO::AIO::WD - multiple working directories
1535
1536 Your process only has one current working directory, which is used by all
1537 threads. This makes it hard to use relative paths (some other component
1538 could call C<chdir> at any time, and it is hard to control when the path
1539 will be used by IO::AIO).
1540
1541 One solution for this is to always use absolute paths. This usually works,
1542 but can be quite slow (the kernel has to walk the whole path on every
1543 access), and can also be a hassle to implement.
1544
1545 Newer POSIX systems have a number of functions (openat, fdopendir,
1546 futimensat and so on) that make it possible to specify working directories
1547 per operation.
1548
1549 For portability, and because the clowns who "designed", or shall I write,
1550 perpetrated this new interface were obviously half-drunk, this abstraction
1551 cannot be perfect, though.
1552
1553 IO::AIO allows you to convert directory paths into a so-called IO::AIO::WD
1554 object. This object stores the canonicalised, absolute version of the
1555 path, and on systems that allow it, also a directory file descriptor.
1556
1557 Everywhere where a pathname is accepted by IO::AIO (e.g. in C<aio_stat>
1558 or C<aio_unlink>), one can specify an array reference with an IO::AIO::WD
1559 object and a pathname instead (or the IO::AIO::WD object alone, which
1560 gets interpreted as C<[$wd, "."]>). If the pathname is absolute, the
1561 IO::AIO::WD object is ignored, otherwise the pathname is resolved relative
1562 to that IO::AIO::WD object.
1563
1564 For example, to get a wd object for F</etc> and then stat F<passwd>
1565 inside, you would write:
1566
1567 aio_wd "/etc", sub {
1568 my $etcdir = shift;
1569
1570 # although $etcdir can be undef on error, there is generally no reason
1571 # to check for errors here, as aio_stat will fail with ENOENT
1572 # when $etcdir is undef.
1573
1574 aio_stat [$etcdir, "passwd"], sub {
1575 # yay
1576 };
1577 };
1578
1579 The fact that C<aio_wd> is a request and not a normal function shows that
1580 creating an IO::AIO::WD object is itself a potentially blocking operation,
1581 which is why it is done asynchronously.
1582
1583 To stat the directory obtained with C<aio_wd> above, one could write
1584 either of the following three request calls:
1585
1586 aio_lstat "/etc" , sub { ... # pathname as normal string
1587 aio_lstat [$wd, "."], sub { ... # "." relative to $wd (i.e. $wd itself)
1588 aio_lstat $wd , sub { ... # shorthand for the previous
1589
1590 As with normal pathnames, IO::AIO keeps a copy of the working directory
1591 object and the pathname string, so you could write the following without
1592 causing any issues due to C<$path> getting reused:
1593
1594 my $path = [$wd, undef];
1595
1596 for my $name (qw(abc def ghi)) {
1597 $path->[1] = $name;
1598 aio_stat $path, sub {
1599 # ...
1600 };
1601 }
1602
1603 There are some caveats: when directories get renamed (or deleted), the
1604 pathname string doesn't change, so will point to the new directory (or
1605 nowhere at all), while the directory fd, if available on the system,
1606 will still point to the original directory. Most functions accepting a
1607 pathname will use the directory fd on newer systems, and the string on
1608 older systems. Some functions (such as realpath) will always rely on the
1609 string form of the pathname.
1610
1611 So this functionality is mainly useful to get some protection against
1612 C<chdir>, to easily get an absolute path out of a relative path for future
1613 reference, and to speed up doing many operations in the same directory
1614 (e.g. when stat'ing all files in a directory).
1615
1616 The following functions implement this working directory abstraction:
1617
1618 =over 4
1619
1620 =item aio_wd $pathname, $callback->($wd)
1621
1622 Asynchonously canonicalise the given pathname and convert it to an
1623 IO::AIO::WD object representing it. If possible and supported on the
1624 system, also open a directory fd to speed up pathname resolution relative
1625 to this working directory.
1626
1627 If something goes wrong, then C<undef> is passwd to the callback instead
1628 of a working directory object and C<$!> is set appropriately. Since
1629 passing C<undef> as working directory component of a pathname fails the
1630 request with C<ENOENT>, there is often no need for error checking in the
1631 C<aio_wd> callback, as future requests using the value will fail in the
1632 expected way.
1633
1634 =item IO::AIO::CWD
1635
1636 This is a compiletime constant (object) that represents the process
1637 current working directory.
1638
1639 Specifying this object as working directory object for a pathname is as if
1640 the pathname would be specified directly, without a directory object. For
1641 example, these calls are functionally identical:
1642
1643 aio_stat "somefile", sub { ... };
1644 aio_stat [IO::AIO::CWD, "somefile"], sub { ... };
1645
1646 =back
1647
1648 To recover the path associated with an IO::AIO::WD object, you can use
1649 C<aio_realpath>:
1650
1651 aio_realpath $wd, sub {
1652 warn "path is $_[0]\n";
1653 };
1654
1655 Currently, C<aio_statvfs> always, and C<aio_rename> and C<aio_rmdir>
1656 sometimes, fall back to using an absolue path.
1657
1658 =head2 IO::AIO::REQ CLASS
1659
1660 All non-aggregate C<aio_*> functions return an object of this class when
1661 called in non-void context.
1662
1663 =over 4
1664
1665 =item cancel $req
1666
1667 Cancels the request, if possible. Has the effect of skipping execution
1668 when entering the B<execute> state and skipping calling the callback when
1669 entering the the B<result> state, but will leave the request otherwise
1670 untouched (with the exception of readdir). That means that requests that
1671 currently execute will not be stopped and resources held by the request
1672 will not be freed prematurely.
1673
1674 =item cb $req $callback->(...)
1675
1676 Replace (or simply set) the callback registered to the request.
1677
1678 =back
1679
1680 =head2 IO::AIO::GRP CLASS
1681
1682 This class is a subclass of L<IO::AIO::REQ>, so all its methods apply to
1683 objects of this class, too.
1684
1685 A IO::AIO::GRP object is a special request that can contain multiple other
1686 aio requests.
1687
1688 You create one by calling the C<aio_group> constructing function with a
1689 callback that will be called when all contained requests have entered the
1690 C<done> state:
1691
1692 my $grp = aio_group sub {
1693 print "all requests are done\n";
1694 };
1695
1696 You add requests by calling the C<add> method with one or more
1697 C<IO::AIO::REQ> objects:
1698
1699 $grp->add (aio_unlink "...");
1700
1701 add $grp aio_stat "...", sub {
1702 $_[0] or return $grp->result ("error");
1703
1704 # add another request dynamically, if first succeeded
1705 add $grp aio_open "...", sub {
1706 $grp->result ("ok");
1707 };
1708 };
1709
1710 This makes it very easy to create composite requests (see the source of
1711 C<aio_move> for an application) that work and feel like simple requests.
1712
1713 =over 4
1714
1715 =item * The IO::AIO::GRP objects will be cleaned up during calls to
1716 C<IO::AIO::poll_cb>, just like any other request.
1717
1718 =item * They can be canceled like any other request. Canceling will cancel not
1719 only the request itself, but also all requests it contains.
1720
1721 =item * They can also can also be added to other IO::AIO::GRP objects.
1722
1723 =item * You must not add requests to a group from within the group callback (or
1724 any later time).
1725
1726 =back
1727
1728 Their lifetime, simplified, looks like this: when they are empty, they
1729 will finish very quickly. If they contain only requests that are in the
1730 C<done> state, they will also finish. Otherwise they will continue to
1731 exist.
1732
1733 That means after creating a group you have some time to add requests
1734 (precisely before the callback has been invoked, which is only done within
1735 the C<poll_cb>). And in the callbacks of those requests, you can add
1736 further requests to the group. And only when all those requests have
1737 finished will the the group itself finish.
1738
1739 =over 4
1740
1741 =item add $grp ...
1742
1743 =item $grp->add (...)
1744
1745 Add one or more requests to the group. Any type of L<IO::AIO::REQ> can
1746 be added, including other groups, as long as you do not create circular
1747 dependencies.
1748
1749 Returns all its arguments.
1750
1751 =item $grp->cancel_subs
1752
1753 Cancel all subrequests and clears any feeder, but not the group request
1754 itself. Useful when you queued a lot of events but got a result early.
1755
1756 The group request will finish normally (you cannot add requests to the
1757 group).
1758
1759 =item $grp->result (...)
1760
1761 Set the result value(s) that will be passed to the group callback when all
1762 subrequests have finished and set the groups errno to the current value
1763 of errno (just like calling C<errno> without an error number). By default,
1764 no argument will be passed and errno is zero.
1765
1766 =item $grp->errno ([$errno])
1767
1768 Sets the group errno value to C<$errno>, or the current value of errno
1769 when the argument is missing.
1770
1771 Every aio request has an associated errno value that is restored when
1772 the callback is invoked. This method lets you change this value from its
1773 default (0).
1774
1775 Calling C<result> will also set errno, so make sure you either set C<$!>
1776 before the call to C<result>, or call c<errno> after it.
1777
1778 =item feed $grp $callback->($grp)
1779
1780 Sets a feeder/generator on this group: every group can have an attached
1781 generator that generates requests if idle. The idea behind this is that,
1782 although you could just queue as many requests as you want in a group,
1783 this might starve other requests for a potentially long time. For example,
1784 C<aio_scandir> might generate hundreds of thousands of C<aio_stat>
1785 requests, delaying any later requests for a long time.
1786
1787 To avoid this, and allow incremental generation of requests, you can
1788 instead a group and set a feeder on it that generates those requests. The
1789 feed callback will be called whenever there are few enough (see C<limit>,
1790 below) requests active in the group itself and is expected to queue more
1791 requests.
1792
1793 The feed callback can queue as many requests as it likes (i.e. C<add> does
1794 not impose any limits).
1795
1796 If the feed does not queue more requests when called, it will be
1797 automatically removed from the group.
1798
1799 If the feed limit is C<0> when this method is called, it will be set to
1800 C<2> automatically.
1801
1802 Example:
1803
1804 # stat all files in @files, but only ever use four aio requests concurrently:
1805
1806 my $grp = aio_group sub { print "finished\n" };
1807 limit $grp 4;
1808 feed $grp sub {
1809 my $file = pop @files
1810 or return;
1811
1812 add $grp aio_stat $file, sub { ... };
1813 };
1814
1815 =item limit $grp $num
1816
1817 Sets the feeder limit for the group: The feeder will be called whenever
1818 the group contains less than this many requests.
1819
1820 Setting the limit to C<0> will pause the feeding process.
1821
1822 The default value for the limit is C<0>, but note that setting a feeder
1823 automatically bumps it up to C<2>.
1824
1825 =back
1826
1827 =head2 SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
1828
1829 =head3 EVENT PROCESSING AND EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
1830
1831 =over 4
1832
1833 =item $fileno = IO::AIO::poll_fileno
1834
1835 Return the I<request result pipe file descriptor>. This filehandle must be
1836 polled for reading by some mechanism outside this module (e.g. EV, Glib,
1837 select and so on, see below or the SYNOPSIS). If the pipe becomes readable
1838 you have to call C<poll_cb> to check the results.
1839
1840 See C<poll_cb> for an example.
1841
1842 =item IO::AIO::poll_cb
1843
1844 Process some requests that have reached the result phase (i.e. they have
1845 been executed but the results are not yet reported). You have to call
1846 this "regularly" to finish outstanding requests.
1847
1848 Returns C<0> if all events could be processed (or there were no
1849 events to process), or C<-1> if it returned earlier for whatever
1850 reason. Returns immediately when no events are outstanding. The amount
1851 of events processed depends on the settings of C<IO::AIO::max_poll_req>,
1852 C<IO::AIO::max_poll_time> and C<IO::AIO::max_outstanding>.
1853
1854 If not all requests were processed for whatever reason, the poll file
1855 descriptor will still be ready when C<poll_cb> returns, so normally you
1856 don't have to do anything special to have it called later.
1857
1858 Apart from calling C<IO::AIO::poll_cb> when the event filehandle becomes
1859 ready, it can be beneficial to call this function from loops which submit
1860 a lot of requests, to make sure the results get processed when they become
1861 available and not just when the loop is finished and the event loop takes
1862 over again. This function returns very fast when there are no outstanding
1863 requests.
1864
1865 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
1866 IO::AIO::poll_cb with high priority (more examples can be found in the
1867 SYNOPSIS section, at the top of this document):
1868
1869 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1870 poll => 'r', async => 1,
1871 cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1872
1873 =item IO::AIO::poll_wait
1874
1875 Wait until either at least one request is in the result phase or no
1876 requests are outstanding anymore.
1877
1878 This is useful if you want to synchronously wait for some requests to
1879 become ready, without actually handling them.
1880
1881 See C<nreqs> for an example.
1882
1883 =item IO::AIO::poll
1884
1885 Waits until some requests have been handled.
1886
1887 Returns the number of requests processed, but is otherwise strictly
1888 equivalent to:
1889
1890 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
1891
1892 =item IO::AIO::flush
1893
1894 Wait till all outstanding AIO requests have been handled.
1895
1896 Strictly equivalent to:
1897
1898 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
1899 while IO::AIO::nreqs;
1900
1901 =item IO::AIO::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
1902
1903 =item IO::AIO::max_poll_time $seconds
1904
1905 These set the maximum number of requests (default C<0>, meaning infinity)
1906 that are being processed by C<IO::AIO::poll_cb> in one call, respectively
1907 the maximum amount of time (default C<0>, meaning infinity) spent in
1908 C<IO::AIO::poll_cb> to process requests (more correctly the mininum amount
1909 of time C<poll_cb> is allowed to use).
1910
1911 Setting C<max_poll_time> to a non-zero value creates an overhead of one
1912 syscall per request processed, which is not normally a problem unless your
1913 callbacks are really really fast or your OS is really really slow (I am
1914 not mentioning Solaris here). Using C<max_poll_reqs> incurs no overhead.
1915
1916 Setting these is useful if you want to ensure some level of
1917 interactiveness when perl is not fast enough to process all requests in
1918 time.
1919
1920 For interactive programs, values such as C<0.01> to C<0.1> should be fine.
1921
1922 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
1923 IO::AIO::poll_cb with low priority, to ensure that other parts of the
1924 program get the CPU sometimes even under high AIO load.
1925
1926 # try not to spend much more than 0.1s in poll_cb
1927 IO::AIO::max_poll_time 0.1;
1928
1929 # use a low priority so other tasks have priority
1930 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1931 poll => 'r', nice => 1,
1932 cb => &IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1933
1934 =back
1935
1936 =head3 CONTROLLING THE NUMBER OF THREADS
1937
1938 =over
1939
1940 =item IO::AIO::min_parallel $nthreads
1941
1942 Set the minimum number of AIO threads to C<$nthreads>. The current
1943 default is C<8>, which means eight asynchronous operations can execute
1944 concurrently at any one time (the number of outstanding requests,
1945 however, is unlimited).
1946
1947 IO::AIO starts threads only on demand, when an AIO request is queued and
1948 no free thread exists. Please note that queueing up a hundred requests can
1949 create demand for a hundred threads, even if it turns out that everything
1950 is in the cache and could have been processed faster by a single thread.
1951
1952 It is recommended to keep the number of threads relatively low, as some
1953 Linux kernel versions will scale negatively with the number of threads
1954 (higher parallelity => MUCH higher latency). With current Linux 2.6
1955 versions, 4-32 threads should be fine.
1956
1957 Under most circumstances you don't need to call this function, as the
1958 module selects a default that is suitable for low to moderate load.
1959
1960 =item IO::AIO::max_parallel $nthreads
1961
1962 Sets the maximum number of AIO threads to C<$nthreads>. If more than the
1963 specified number of threads are currently running, this function kills
1964 them. This function blocks until the limit is reached.
1965
1966 While C<$nthreads> are zero, aio requests get queued but not executed
1967 until the number of threads has been increased again.
1968
1969 This module automatically runs C<max_parallel 0> at program end, to ensure
1970 that all threads are killed and that there are no outstanding requests.
1971
1972 Under normal circumstances you don't need to call this function.
1973
1974 =item IO::AIO::max_idle $nthreads
1975
1976 Limit the number of threads (default: 4) that are allowed to idle
1977 (i.e., threads that did not get a request to process within the idle
1978 timeout (default: 10 seconds). That means if a thread becomes idle while
1979 C<$nthreads> other threads are also idle, it will free its resources and
1980 exit.
1981
1982 This is useful when you allow a large number of threads (e.g. 100 or 1000)
1983 to allow for extremely high load situations, but want to free resources
1984 under normal circumstances (1000 threads can easily consume 30MB of RAM).
1985
1986 The default is probably ok in most situations, especially if thread
1987 creation is fast. If thread creation is very slow on your system you might
1988 want to use larger values.
1989
1990 =item IO::AIO::idle_timeout $seconds
1991
1992 Sets the minimum idle timeout (default 10) after which worker threads are
1993 allowed to exit. SEe C<IO::AIO::max_idle>.
1994
1995 =item IO::AIO::max_outstanding $maxreqs
1996
1997 Sets the maximum number of outstanding requests to C<$nreqs>. If
1998 you do queue up more than this number of requests, the next call to
1999 C<IO::AIO::poll_cb> (and other functions calling C<poll_cb>, such as
2000 C<IO::AIO::flush> or C<IO::AIO::poll>) will block until the limit is no
2001 longer exceeded.
2002
2003 In other words, this setting does not enforce a queue limit, but can be
2004 used to make poll functions block if the limit is exceeded.
2005
2006 This is a very bad function to use in interactive programs because it
2007 blocks, and a bad way to reduce concurrency because it is inexact: Better
2008 use an C<aio_group> together with a feed callback.
2009
2010 Its main use is in scripts without an event loop - when you want to stat
2011 a lot of files, you can write somehting like this:
2012
2013 IO::AIO::max_outstanding 32;
2014
2015 for my $path (...) {
2016 aio_stat $path , ...;
2017 IO::AIO::poll_cb;
2018 }
2019
2020 IO::AIO::flush;
2021
2022 The call to C<poll_cb> inside the loop will normally return instantly, but
2023 as soon as more thna C<32> reqeusts are in-flight, it will block until
2024 some requests have been handled. This keeps the loop from pushing a large
2025 number of C<aio_stat> requests onto the queue.
2026
2027 The default value for C<max_outstanding> is very large, so there is no
2028 practical limit on the number of outstanding requests.
2029
2030 =back
2031
2032 =head3 STATISTICAL INFORMATION
2033
2034 =over
2035
2036 =item IO::AIO::nreqs
2037
2038 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready, execute or pending
2039 states (i.e. for which their callback has not been invoked yet).
2040
2041 Example: wait till there are no outstanding requests anymore:
2042
2043 IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
2044 while IO::AIO::nreqs;
2045
2046 =item IO::AIO::nready
2047
2048 Returns the number of requests currently in the ready state (not yet
2049 executed).
2050
2051 =item IO::AIO::npending
2052
2053 Returns the number of requests currently in the pending state (executed,
2054 but not yet processed by poll_cb).
2055
2056 =back
2057
2058 =head3 MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS
2059
2060 IO::AIO implements some functions that are useful when you want to use
2061 some "Advanced I/O" function not available to in Perl, without going the
2062 "Asynchronous I/O" route. Many of these have an asynchronous C<aio_*>
2063 counterpart.
2064
2065 =over 4
2066
2067 =item IO::AIO::sendfile $ofh, $ifh, $offset, $count
2068
2069 Calls the C<eio_sendfile_sync> function, which is like C<aio_sendfile>,
2070 but is blocking (this makes most sense if you know the input data is
2071 likely cached already and the output filehandle is set to non-blocking
2072 operations).
2073
2074 Returns the number of bytes copied, or C<-1> on error.
2075
2076 =item IO::AIO::fadvise $fh, $offset, $len, $advice
2077
2078 Simply calls the C<posix_fadvise> function (see its
2079 manpage for details). The following advice constants are
2080 available: C<IO::AIO::FADV_NORMAL>, C<IO::AIO::FADV_SEQUENTIAL>,
2081 C<IO::AIO::FADV_RANDOM>, C<IO::AIO::FADV_NOREUSE>,
2082 C<IO::AIO::FADV_WILLNEED>, C<IO::AIO::FADV_DONTNEED>.
2083
2084 On systems that do not implement C<posix_fadvise>, this function returns
2085 ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of C<posix_fadvise>.
2086
2087 =item IO::AIO::madvise $scalar, $offset, $len, $advice
2088
2089 Simply calls the C<posix_madvise> function (see its
2090 manpage for details). The following advice constants are
2091 available: C<IO::AIO::MADV_NORMAL>, C<IO::AIO::MADV_SEQUENTIAL>,
2092 C<IO::AIO::MADV_RANDOM>, C<IO::AIO::MADV_WILLNEED>,
2093 C<IO::AIO::MADV_DONTNEED>.
2094
2095 If C<$offset> is negative, counts from the end. If C<$length> is negative,
2096 the remaining length of the C<$scalar> is used. If possible, C<$length>
2097 will be reduced to fit into the C<$scalar>.
2098
2099 On systems that do not implement C<posix_madvise>, this function returns
2100 ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of C<posix_madvise>.
2101
2102 =item IO::AIO::mprotect $scalar, $offset, $len, $protect
2103
2104 Simply calls the C<mprotect> function on the preferably AIO::mmap'ed
2105 $scalar (see its manpage for details). The following protect
2106 constants are available: C<IO::AIO::PROT_NONE>, C<IO::AIO::PROT_READ>,
2107 C<IO::AIO::PROT_WRITE>, C<IO::AIO::PROT_EXEC>.
2108
2109 If C<$offset> is negative, counts from the end. If C<$length> is negative,
2110 the remaining length of the C<$scalar> is used. If possible, C<$length>
2111 will be reduced to fit into the C<$scalar>.
2112
2113 On systems that do not implement C<mprotect>, this function returns
2114 ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of C<mprotect>.
2115
2116 =item IO::AIO::mmap $scalar, $length, $prot, $flags, $fh[, $offset]
2117
2118 Memory-maps a file (or anonymous memory range) and attaches it to the
2119 given C<$scalar>, which will act like a string scalar. Returns true on
2120 success, and false otherwise.
2121
2122 The scalar must exist, but its contents do not matter - this means you
2123 cannot use a nonexistant array or hash element. When in doubt, C<undef>
2124 the scalar first.
2125
2126 The only operations allowed on the mmapped scalar are C<substr>/C<vec>,
2127 which don't change the string length, and most read-only operations such
2128 as copying it or searching it with regexes and so on.
2129
2130 Anything else is unsafe and will, at best, result in memory leaks.
2131
2132 The memory map associated with the C<$scalar> is automatically removed
2133 when the C<$scalar> is undef'd or destroyed, or when the C<IO::AIO::mmap>
2134 or C<IO::AIO::munmap> functions are called on it.
2135
2136 This calls the C<mmap>(2) function internally. See your system's manual
2137 page for details on the C<$length>, C<$prot> and C<$flags> parameters.
2138
2139 The C<$length> must be larger than zero and smaller than the actual
2140 filesize.
2141
2142 C<$prot> is a combination of C<IO::AIO::PROT_NONE>, C<IO::AIO::PROT_EXEC>,
2143 C<IO::AIO::PROT_READ> and/or C<IO::AIO::PROT_WRITE>,
2144
2145 C<$flags> can be a combination of
2146 C<IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED> or
2147 C<IO::AIO::MAP_PRIVATE>,
2148 or a number of system-specific flags (when not available, the are C<0>):
2149 C<IO::AIO::MAP_ANONYMOUS> (which is set to C<MAP_ANON> if your system only provides this constant),
2150 C<IO::AIO::MAP_LOCKED>,
2151 C<IO::AIO::MAP_NORESERVE>,
2152 C<IO::AIO::MAP_POPULATE>,
2153 C<IO::AIO::MAP_NONBLOCK>,
2154 C<IO::AIO::MAP_FIXED>,
2155 C<IO::AIO::MAP_GROWSDOWN>,
2156 C<IO::AIO::MAP_32BIT>,
2157 C<IO::AIO::MAP_HUGETLB> or
2158 C<IO::AIO::MAP_STACK>.
2159
2160 If C<$fh> is C<undef>, then a file descriptor of C<-1> is passed.
2161
2162 C<$offset> is the offset from the start of the file - it generally must be
2163 a multiple of C<IO::AIO::PAGESIZE> and defaults to C<0>.
2164
2165 Example:
2166
2167 use Digest::MD5;
2168 use IO::AIO;
2169
2170 open my $fh, "<verybigfile"
2171 or die "$!";
2172
2173 IO::AIO::mmap my $data, -s $fh, IO::AIO::PROT_READ, IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED, $fh
2174 or die "verybigfile: $!";
2175
2176 my $fast_md5 = md5 $data;
2177
2178 =item IO::AIO::munmap $scalar
2179
2180 Removes a previous mmap and undefines the C<$scalar>.
2181
2182 =item IO::AIO::munlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef
2183
2184 Calls the C<munlock> function, undoing the effects of a previous
2185 C<aio_mlock> call (see its description for details).
2186
2187 =item IO::AIO::munlockall
2188
2189 Calls the C<munlockall> function.
2190
2191 On systems that do not implement C<munlockall>, this function returns
2192 ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of C<munlockall>.
2193
2194 =item IO::AIO::splice $r_fh, $r_off, $w_fh, $w_off, $length, $flags
2195
2196 Calls the GNU/Linux C<splice(2)> syscall, if available. If C<$r_off> or
2197 C<$w_off> are C<undef>, then C<NULL> is passed for these, otherwise they
2198 should be the file offset.
2199
2200 C<$r_fh> and C<$w_fh> should not refer to the same file, as splice might
2201 silently corrupt the data in this case.
2202
2203 The following symbol flag values are available: C<IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_MOVE>,
2204 C<IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_NONBLOCK>, C<IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_MORE> and
2205 C<IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_GIFT>.
2206
2207 See the C<splice(2)> manpage for details.
2208
2209 =item IO::AIO::tee $r_fh, $w_fh, $length, $flags
2210
2211 Calls the GNU/Linux C<tee(2)> syscall, see its manpage and the
2212 description for C<IO::AIO::splice> above for details.
2213
2214 =item $actual_size = IO::AIO::pipesize $r_fh[, $new_size]
2215
2216 Attempts to query or change the pipe buffer size. Obviously works only
2217 on pipes, and currently works only on GNU/Linux systems, and fails with
2218 C<-1>/C<ENOSYS> everywhere else. If anybody knows how to influence pipe buffer
2219 size on other systems, drop me a note.
2220
2221 =item ($rfh, $wfh) = IO::AIO::pipe2 [$flags]
2222
2223 This is a direct interface to the Linux L<pipe2(2)> system call. If
2224 C<$flags> is missing or C<0>, then this should be the same as a call to
2225 perl's built-in C<pipe> function and create a new pipe, and works on
2226 systems that lack the pipe2 syscall. On win32, this case invokes C<_pipe
2227 (..., 4096, O_BINARY)>.
2228
2229 If C<$flags> is non-zero, it tries to invoke the pipe2 system call with
2230 the given flags (Linux 2.6.27, glibc 2.9).
2231
2232 On success, the read and write file handles are returned.
2233
2234 On error, nothing will be returned. If the pipe2 syscall is missing and
2235 C<$flags> is non-zero, fails with C<ENOSYS>.
2236
2237 Please refer to L<pipe2(2)> for more info on the C<$flags>, but at the
2238 time of this writing, C<IO::AIO::O_CLOEXEC>, C<IO::AIO::O_NONBLOCK> and
2239 C<IO::AIO::O_DIRECT> (Linux 3.4, for packet-based pipes) were supported.
2240
2241 =back
2242
2243 =cut
2244
2245 min_parallel 8;
2246
2247 END { flush }
2248
2249 1;
2250
2251 =head1 EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
2252
2253 It is recommended to use L<AnyEvent::AIO> to integrate IO::AIO
2254 automatically into many event loops:
2255
2256 # AnyEvent integration (EV, Event, Glib, Tk, POE, urxvt, pureperl...)
2257 use AnyEvent::AIO;
2258
2259 You can also integrate IO::AIO manually into many event loops, here are
2260 some examples of how to do this:
2261
2262 # EV integration
2263 my $aio_w = EV::io IO::AIO::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&IO::AIO::poll_cb;
2264
2265 # Event integration
2266 Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
2267 poll => 'r',
2268 cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
2269
2270 # Glib/Gtk2 integration
2271 add_watch Glib::IO IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
2272 in => sub { IO::AIO::poll_cb; 1 };
2273
2274 # Tk integration
2275 Tk::Event::IO->fileevent (IO::AIO::poll_fileno, "",
2276 readable => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
2277
2278 # Danga::Socket integration
2279 Danga::Socket->AddOtherFds (IO::AIO::poll_fileno =>
2280 \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
2281
2282 =head2 FORK BEHAVIOUR
2283
2284 Usage of pthreads in a program changes the semantics of fork
2285 considerably. Specifically, only async-safe functions can be called after
2286 fork. Perl doesn't know about this, so in general, you cannot call fork
2287 with defined behaviour in perl if pthreads are involved. IO::AIO uses
2288 pthreads, so this applies, but many other extensions and (for inexplicable
2289 reasons) perl itself often is linked against pthreads, so this limitation
2290 applies to quite a lot of perls.
2291
2292 This module no longer tries to fight your OS, or POSIX. That means IO::AIO
2293 only works in the process that loaded it. Forking is fully supported, but
2294 using IO::AIO in the child is not.
2295
2296 You might get around by not I<using> IO::AIO before (or after)
2297 forking. You could also try to call the L<IO::AIO::reinit> function in the
2298 child:
2299
2300 =over 4
2301
2302 =item IO::AIO::reinit
2303
2304 Abandons all current requests and I/O threads and simply reinitialises all
2305 data structures. This is not an operation supported by any standards, but
2306 happens to work on GNU/Linux and some newer BSD systems.
2307
2308 The only reasonable use for this function is to call it after forking, if
2309 C<IO::AIO> was used in the parent. Calling it while IO::AIO is active in
2310 the process will result in undefined behaviour. Calling it at any time
2311 will also result in any undefined (by POSIX) behaviour.
2312
2313 =back
2314
2315 =head2 MEMORY USAGE
2316
2317 Per-request usage:
2318
2319 Each aio request uses - depending on your architecture - around 100-200
2320 bytes of memory. In addition, stat requests need a stat buffer (possibly
2321 a few hundred bytes), readdir requires a result buffer and so on. Perl
2322 scalars and other data passed into aio requests will also be locked and
2323 will consume memory till the request has entered the done state.
2324
2325 This is not awfully much, so queuing lots of requests is not usually a
2326 problem.
2327
2328 Per-thread usage:
2329
2330 In the execution phase, some aio requests require more memory for
2331 temporary buffers, and each thread requires a stack and other data
2332 structures (usually around 16k-128k, depending on the OS).
2333
2334 =head1 KNOWN BUGS
2335
2336 Known bugs will be fixed in the next release.
2337
2338 =head1 SEE ALSO
2339
2340 L<AnyEvent::AIO> for easy integration into event loops, L<Coro::AIO> for a
2341 more natural syntax.
2342
2343 =head1 AUTHOR
2344
2345 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
2346 http://home.schmorp.de/
2347
2348 =cut
2349