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Revision: 1.54
Committed: Sun Jan 6 11:48:14 2013 UTC (11 years, 4 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: rel-4_19
Changes since 1.53: +41 -18 lines
Log Message:
4.19

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 root 1.1 NAME
2     IO::AIO - Asynchronous Input/Output
3    
4     SYNOPSIS
5     use IO::AIO;
6    
7 root 1.44 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
8 root 1.21 my $fh = shift
9     or die "/etc/passwd: $!";
10 root 1.5 ...
11     };
12    
13     aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
14    
15     aio_read $fh, 30000, 1024, $buffer, 0, sub {
16     $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
17     };
18    
19 root 1.18 # version 2+ has request and group objects
20     use IO::AIO 2;
21    
22     aioreq_pri 4; # give next request a very high priority
23     my $req = aio_unlink "/tmp/file", sub { };
24     $req->cancel; # cancel request if still in queue
25    
26     my $grp = aio_group sub { print "all stats done\n" };
27     add $grp aio_stat "..." for ...;
28    
29 root 1.1 DESCRIPTION
30     This module implements asynchronous I/O using whatever means your
31 root 1.38 operating system supports. It is implemented as an interface to "libeio"
32     (<http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libeio.html>).
33 root 1.1
34 root 1.19 Asynchronous means that operations that can normally block your program
35     (e.g. reading from disk) will be done asynchronously: the operation will
36     still block, but you can do something else in the meantime. This is
37     extremely useful for programs that need to stay interactive even when
38     doing heavy I/O (GUI programs, high performance network servers etc.),
39     but can also be used to easily do operations in parallel that are
40     normally done sequentially, e.g. stat'ing many files, which is much
41     faster on a RAID volume or over NFS when you do a number of stat
42     operations concurrently.
43    
44 root 1.20 While most of this works on all types of file descriptors (for example
45     sockets), using these functions on file descriptors that support
46 root 1.24 nonblocking operation (again, sockets, pipes etc.) is very inefficient.
47 root 1.38 Use an event loop for that (such as the EV module): IO::AIO will
48 root 1.24 naturally fit into such an event loop itself.
49 root 1.19
50 root 1.18 In this version, a number of threads are started that execute your
51     requests and signal their completion. You don't need thread support in
52     perl, and the threads created by this module will not be visible to
53     perl. In the future, this module might make use of the native aio
54     functions available on many operating systems. However, they are often
55 root 1.19 not well-supported or restricted (GNU/Linux doesn't allow them on normal
56 root 1.18 files currently, for example), and they would only support aio_read and
57 root 1.2 aio_write, so the remaining functionality would have to be implemented
58     using threads anyway.
59 root 1.1
60 root 1.24 Although the module will work in the presence of other (Perl-) threads,
61     it is currently not reentrant in any way, so use appropriate locking
62     yourself, always call "poll_cb" from within the same thread, or never
63     call "poll_cb" (or other "aio_" functions) recursively.
64 root 1.18
65 root 1.19 EXAMPLE
66 root 1.38 This is a simple example that uses the EV module and loads /etc/passwd
67     asynchronously:
68 root 1.19
69     use Fcntl;
70 root 1.38 use EV;
71 root 1.19 use IO::AIO;
72    
73 root 1.38 # register the IO::AIO callback with EV
74     my $aio_w = EV::io IO::AIO::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&IO::AIO::poll_cb;
75 root 1.19
76     # queue the request to open /etc/passwd
77 root 1.44 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
78 root 1.21 my $fh = shift
79 root 1.19 or die "error while opening: $!";
80    
81     # stat'ing filehandles is generally non-blocking
82     my $size = -s $fh;
83    
84     # queue a request to read the file
85     my $contents;
86     aio_read $fh, 0, $size, $contents, 0, sub {
87     $_[0] == $size
88     or die "short read: $!";
89    
90     close $fh;
91    
92     # file contents now in $contents
93     print $contents;
94    
95     # exit event loop and program
96 root 1.38 EV::unloop;
97 root 1.19 };
98     };
99    
100     # possibly queue up other requests, or open GUI windows,
101     # check for sockets etc. etc.
102    
103     # process events as long as there are some:
104 root 1.38 EV::loop;
105 root 1.19
106 root 1.18 REQUEST ANATOMY AND LIFETIME
107     Every "aio_*" function creates a request. which is a C data structure
108     not directly visible to Perl.
109    
110     If called in non-void context, every request function returns a Perl
111     object representing the request. In void context, nothing is returned,
112     which saves a bit of memory.
113    
114     The perl object is a fairly standard ref-to-hash object. The hash
115     contents are not used by IO::AIO so you are free to store anything you
116     like in it.
117    
118     During their existance, aio requests travel through the following
119     states, in order:
120    
121     ready
122     Immediately after a request is created it is put into the ready
123     state, waiting for a thread to execute it.
124    
125     execute
126     A thread has accepted the request for processing and is currently
127     executing it (e.g. blocking in read).
128    
129     pending
130     The request has been executed and is waiting for result processing.
131    
132     While request submission and execution is fully asynchronous, result
133     processing is not and relies on the perl interpreter calling
134     "poll_cb" (or another function with the same effect).
135    
136     result
137     The request results are processed synchronously by "poll_cb".
138    
139     The "poll_cb" function will process all outstanding aio requests by
140     calling their callbacks, freeing memory associated with them and
141     managing any groups they are contained in.
142    
143     done
144     Request has reached the end of its lifetime and holds no resources
145     anymore (except possibly for the Perl object, but its connection to
146     the actual aio request is severed and calling its methods will
147     either do nothing or result in a runtime error).
148 root 1.1
149 root 1.4 FUNCTIONS
150 root 1.43 QUICK OVERVIEW
151 root 1.53 This section simply lists the prototypes most of the functions for quick
152     reference. See the following sections for function-by-function
153 root 1.43 documentation.
154    
155 root 1.50 aio_wd $pathname, $callback->($wd)
156 root 1.43 aio_open $pathname, $flags, $mode, $callback->($fh)
157     aio_close $fh, $callback->($status)
158 root 1.51 aio_seek $fh,$offset,$whence, $callback->($offs)
159 root 1.43 aio_read $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
160     aio_write $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
161     aio_sendfile $out_fh, $in_fh, $in_offset, $length, $callback->($retval)
162     aio_readahead $fh,$offset,$length, $callback->($retval)
163     aio_stat $fh_or_path, $callback->($status)
164     aio_lstat $fh, $callback->($status)
165     aio_statvfs $fh_or_path, $callback->($statvfs)
166     aio_utime $fh_or_path, $atime, $mtime, $callback->($status)
167     aio_chown $fh_or_path, $uid, $gid, $callback->($status)
168 root 1.51 aio_chmod $fh_or_path, $mode, $callback->($status)
169 root 1.43 aio_truncate $fh_or_path, $offset, $callback->($status)
170 root 1.53 aio_allocate $fh, $mode, $offset, $len, $callback->($status)
171     aio_fiemap $fh, $start, $length, $flags, $count, $cb->(\@extents)
172 root 1.43 aio_unlink $pathname, $callback->($status)
173 root 1.50 aio_mknod $pathname, $mode, $dev, $callback->($status)
174 root 1.43 aio_link $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
175     aio_symlink $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
176 root 1.50 aio_readlink $pathname, $callback->($link)
177     aio_realpath $pathname, $callback->($link)
178 root 1.43 aio_rename $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
179     aio_mkdir $pathname, $mode, $callback->($status)
180     aio_rmdir $pathname, $callback->($status)
181     aio_readdir $pathname, $callback->($entries)
182     aio_readdirx $pathname, $flags, $callback->($entries, $flags)
183     IO::AIO::READDIR_DENTS IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST
184     IO::AIO::READDIR_STAT_ORDER IO::AIO::READDIR_FOUND_UNKNOWN
185 root 1.50 aio_scandir $pathname, $maxreq, $callback->($dirs, $nondirs)
186     aio_load $pathname, $data, $callback->($status)
187 root 1.43 aio_copy $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
188     aio_move $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
189 root 1.50 aio_rmtree $pathname, $callback->($status)
190 root 1.43 aio_sync $callback->($status)
191 root 1.50 aio_syncfs $fh, $callback->($status)
192 root 1.43 aio_fsync $fh, $callback->($status)
193     aio_fdatasync $fh, $callback->($status)
194     aio_sync_file_range $fh, $offset, $nbytes, $flags, $callback->($status)
195 root 1.50 aio_pathsync $pathname, $callback->($status)
196 root 1.43 aio_msync $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0, $callback->($status)
197     aio_mtouch $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0, $callback->($status)
198 root 1.44 aio_mlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, $callback->($status)
199     aio_mlockall $flags, $callback->($status)
200 root 1.43 aio_group $callback->(...)
201     aio_nop $callback->()
202    
203     $prev_pri = aioreq_pri [$pri]
204     aioreq_nice $pri_adjust
205    
206     IO::AIO::poll_wait
207     IO::AIO::poll_cb
208     IO::AIO::poll
209     IO::AIO::flush
210     IO::AIO::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
211     IO::AIO::max_poll_time $seconds
212     IO::AIO::min_parallel $nthreads
213     IO::AIO::max_parallel $nthreads
214     IO::AIO::max_idle $nthreads
215 root 1.46 IO::AIO::idle_timeout $seconds
216 root 1.43 IO::AIO::max_outstanding $maxreqs
217     IO::AIO::nreqs
218     IO::AIO::nready
219     IO::AIO::npending
220    
221     IO::AIO::sendfile $ofh, $ifh, $offset, $count
222     IO::AIO::fadvise $fh, $offset, $len, $advice
223 root 1.53 IO::AIO::mmap $scalar, $length, $prot, $flags[, $fh[, $offset]]
224     IO::AIO::munmap $scalar
225 root 1.44 IO::AIO::madvise $scalar, $offset, $length, $advice
226     IO::AIO::mprotect $scalar, $offset, $length, $protect
227     IO::AIO::munlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef
228 root 1.43 IO::AIO::munlockall
229    
230 root 1.51 API NOTES
231 root 1.20 All the "aio_*" calls are more or less thin wrappers around the syscall
232     with the same name (sans "aio_"). The arguments are similar or
233     identical, and they all accept an additional (and optional) $callback
234 root 1.50 argument which must be a code reference. This code reference will be
235     called after the syscall has been executed in an asynchronous fashion.
236     The results of the request will be passed as arguments to the callback
237     (and, if an error occured, in $!) - for most requests the syscall return
238     code (e.g. most syscalls return -1 on error, unlike perl, which usually
239     delivers "false").
240    
241     Some requests (such as "aio_readdir") pass the actual results and
242     communicate failures by passing "undef".
243 root 1.20
244     All functions expecting a filehandle keep a copy of the filehandle
245     internally until the request has finished.
246    
247     All functions return request objects of type IO::AIO::REQ that allow
248     further manipulation of those requests while they are in-flight.
249    
250 root 1.50 The pathnames you pass to these routines *should* be absolute. The
251     reason for this is that at the time the request is being executed, the
252     current working directory could have changed. Alternatively, you can
253     make sure that you never change the current working directory anywhere
254     in the program and then use relative paths. You can also take advantage
255     of IO::AIOs working directory abstraction, that lets you specify paths
256     relative to some previously-opened "working directory object" - see the
257     description of the "IO::AIO::WD" class later in this document.
258 root 1.20
259     To encode pathnames as octets, either make sure you either: a) always
260     pass in filenames you got from outside (command line, readdir etc.)
261 root 1.50 without tinkering, b) are in your native filesystem encoding, c) use the
262     Encode module and encode your pathnames to the locale (or other)
263     encoding in effect in the user environment, d) use
264     Glib::filename_from_unicode on unicode filenames or e) use something
265     else to ensure your scalar has the correct contents.
266 root 1.20
267     This works, btw. independent of the internal UTF-8 bit, which IO::AIO
268 root 1.32 handles correctly whether it is set or not.
269 root 1.20
270 root 1.51 AIO REQUEST FUNCTIONS
271 root 1.20 $prev_pri = aioreq_pri [$pri]
272     Returns the priority value that would be used for the next request
273     and, if $pri is given, sets the priority for the next aio request.
274    
275     The default priority is 0, the minimum and maximum priorities are -4
276     and 4, respectively. Requests with higher priority will be serviced
277     first.
278    
279     The priority will be reset to 0 after each call to one of the
280     "aio_*" functions.
281    
282     Example: open a file with low priority, then read something from it
283     with higher priority so the read request is serviced before other
284     low priority open requests (potentially spamming the cache):
285    
286     aioreq_pri -3;
287     aio_open ..., sub {
288     return unless $_[0];
289    
290     aioreq_pri -2;
291     aio_read $_[0], ..., sub {
292     ...
293     };
294     };
295    
296     aioreq_nice $pri_adjust
297     Similar to "aioreq_pri", but subtracts the given value from the
298     current priority, so the effect is cumulative.
299    
300     aio_open $pathname, $flags, $mode, $callback->($fh)
301     Asynchronously open or create a file and call the callback with a
302 root 1.53 newly created filehandle for the file (or "undef" in case of an
303     error).
304 root 1.20
305     The pathname passed to "aio_open" must be absolute. See API NOTES,
306     above, for an explanation.
307    
308     The $flags argument is a bitmask. See the "Fcntl" module for a list.
309     They are the same as used by "sysopen".
310    
311     Likewise, $mode specifies the mode of the newly created file, if it
312     didn't exist and "O_CREAT" has been given, just like perl's
313     "sysopen", except that it is mandatory (i.e. use 0 if you don't
314 root 1.23 create new files, and 0666 or 0777 if you do). Note that the $mode
315     will be modified by the umask in effect then the request is being
316     executed, so better never change the umask.
317 root 1.20
318     Example:
319    
320 root 1.44 aio_open "/etc/passwd", IO::AIO::O_RDONLY, 0, sub {
321 root 1.20 if ($_[0]) {
322     print "open successful, fh is $_[0]\n";
323     ...
324     } else {
325     die "open failed: $!\n";
326     }
327     };
328    
329 root 1.47 In addition to all the common open modes/flags ("O_RDONLY",
330     "O_WRONLY", "O_RDWR", "O_CREAT", "O_TRUNC", "O_EXCL" and
331     "O_APPEND"), the following POSIX and non-POSIX constants are
332     available (missing ones on your system are, as usual, 0):
333    
334     "O_ASYNC", "O_DIRECT", "O_NOATIME", "O_CLOEXEC", "O_NOCTTY",
335     "O_NOFOLLOW", "O_NONBLOCK", "O_EXEC", "O_SEARCH", "O_DIRECTORY",
336     "O_DSYNC", "O_RSYNC", "O_SYNC" and "O_TTY_INIT".
337    
338 root 1.20 aio_close $fh, $callback->($status)
339     Asynchronously close a file and call the callback with the result
340 root 1.26 code.
341 root 1.20
342 root 1.27 Unfortunately, you can't do this to perl. Perl *insists* very
343     strongly on closing the file descriptor associated with the
344 root 1.29 filehandle itself.
345 root 1.27
346 root 1.29 Therefore, "aio_close" will not close the filehandle - instead it
347     will use dup2 to overwrite the file descriptor with the write-end of
348     a pipe (the pipe fd will be created on demand and will be cached).
349 root 1.27
350 root 1.29 Or in other words: the file descriptor will be closed, but it will
351     not be free for reuse until the perl filehandle is closed.
352 root 1.20
353 root 1.51 aio_seek $fh, $offset, $whence, $callback->($offs)
354     Seeks the filehandle to the new $offset, similarly to perl's
355     "sysseek". The $whence can use the traditional values (0 for
356     "IO::AIO::SEEK_SET", 1 for "IO::AIO::SEEK_CUR" or 2 for
357     "IO::AIO::SEEK_END").
358    
359     The resulting absolute offset will be passed to the callback, or -1
360     in case of an error.
361    
362     In theory, the $whence constants could be different than the
363     corresponding values from Fcntl, but perl guarantees they are the
364     same, so don't panic.
365    
366 root 1.52 As a GNU/Linux (and maybe Solaris) extension, also the constants
367     "IO::AIO::SEEK_DATA" and "IO::AIO::SEEK_HOLE" are available, if they
368     could be found. No guarantees about suitability for use in
369     "aio_seek" or Perl's "sysseek" can be made though, although I would
370     naively assume they "just work".
371    
372 root 1.20 aio_read $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
373     aio_write $fh,$offset,$length, $data,$dataoffset, $callback->($retval)
374 root 1.35 Reads or writes $length bytes from or to the specified $fh and
375     $offset into the scalar given by $data and offset $dataoffset and
376     calls the callback without the actual number of bytes read (or -1 on
377     error, just like the syscall).
378    
379     "aio_read" will, like "sysread", shrink or grow the $data scalar to
380     offset plus the actual number of bytes read.
381 root 1.24
382 root 1.25 If $offset is undefined, then the current file descriptor offset
383     will be used (and updated), otherwise the file descriptor offset
384     will not be changed by these calls.
385 root 1.24
386     If $length is undefined in "aio_write", use the remaining length of
387     $data.
388    
389     If $dataoffset is less than zero, it will be counted from the end of
390     $data.
391 root 1.20
392     The $data scalar *MUST NOT* be modified in any way while the request
393 root 1.24 is outstanding. Modifying it can result in segfaults or World War
394     III (if the necessary/optional hardware is installed).
395 root 1.20
396     Example: Read 15 bytes at offset 7 into scalar $buffer, starting at
397     offset 0 within the scalar:
398    
399     aio_read $fh, 7, 15, $buffer, 0, sub {
400     $_[0] > 0 or die "read error: $!";
401     print "read $_[0] bytes: <$buffer>\n";
402     };
403    
404     aio_sendfile $out_fh, $in_fh, $in_offset, $length, $callback->($retval)
405     Tries to copy $length bytes from $in_fh to $out_fh. It starts
406     reading at byte offset $in_offset, and starts writing at the current
407     file offset of $out_fh. Because of that, it is not safe to issue
408     more than one "aio_sendfile" per $out_fh, as they will interfere
409 root 1.48 with each other. The same $in_fh works fine though, as this function
410     does not move or use the file offset of $in_fh.
411 root 1.20
412 root 1.45 Please note that "aio_sendfile" can read more bytes from $in_fh than
413 root 1.48 are written, and there is no way to find out how many more bytes
414     have been read from "aio_sendfile" alone, as "aio_sendfile" only
415     provides the number of bytes written to $out_fh. Only if the result
416     value equals $length one can assume that $length bytes have been
417     read.
418 root 1.45
419     Unlike with other "aio_" functions, it makes a lot of sense to use
420     "aio_sendfile" on non-blocking sockets, as long as one end
421     (typically the $in_fh) is a file - the file I/O will then be
422     asynchronous, while the socket I/O will be non-blocking. Note,
423     however, that you can run into a trap where "aio_sendfile" reads
424     some data with readahead, then fails to write all data, and when the
425     socket is ready the next time, the data in the cache is already
426     lost, forcing "aio_sendfile" to again hit the disk. Explicit
427 root 1.48 "aio_read" + "aio_write" let's you better control resource usage.
428 root 1.45
429 root 1.48 This call tries to make use of a native "sendfile"-like syscall to
430 root 1.20 provide zero-copy operation. For this to work, $out_fh should refer
431 root 1.43 to a socket, and $in_fh should refer to an mmap'able file.
432 root 1.20
433 root 1.41 If a native sendfile cannot be found or it fails with "ENOSYS",
434 root 1.48 "EINVAL", "ENOTSUP", "EOPNOTSUPP", "EAFNOSUPPORT", "EPROTOTYPE" or
435     "ENOTSOCK", it will be emulated, so you can call "aio_sendfile" on
436     any type of filehandle regardless of the limitations of the
437     operating system.
438    
439     As native sendfile syscalls (as practically any non-POSIX interface
440     hacked together in a hurry to improve benchmark numbers) tend to be
441     rather buggy on many systems, this implementation tries to work
442     around some known bugs in Linux and FreeBSD kernels (probably
443     others, too), but that might fail, so you really really should check
444     the return value of "aio_sendfile" - fewre bytes than expected might
445     have been transferred.
446 root 1.20
447     aio_readahead $fh,$offset,$length, $callback->($retval)
448     "aio_readahead" populates the page cache with data from a file so
449     that subsequent reads from that file will not block on disk I/O. The
450     $offset argument specifies the starting point from which data is to
451     be read and $length specifies the number of bytes to be read. I/O is
452     performed in whole pages, so that offset is effectively rounded down
453     to a page boundary and bytes are read up to the next page boundary
454     greater than or equal to (off-set+length). "aio_readahead" does not
455     read beyond the end of the file. The current file offset of the file
456     is left unchanged.
457    
458     If that syscall doesn't exist (likely if your OS isn't Linux) it
459     will be emulated by simply reading the data, which would have a
460     similar effect.
461    
462     aio_stat $fh_or_path, $callback->($status)
463     aio_lstat $fh, $callback->($status)
464     Works like perl's "stat" or "lstat" in void context. The callback
465     will be called after the stat and the results will be available
466     using "stat _" or "-s _" etc...
467    
468     The pathname passed to "aio_stat" must be absolute. See API NOTES,
469     above, for an explanation.
470    
471     Currently, the stats are always 64-bit-stats, i.e. instead of
472     returning an error when stat'ing a large file, the results will be
473     silently truncated unless perl itself is compiled with large file
474     support.
475    
476 root 1.46 To help interpret the mode and dev/rdev stat values, IO::AIO offers
477     the following constants and functions (if not implemented, the
478     constants will be 0 and the functions will either "croak" or fall
479     back on traditional behaviour).
480    
481     "S_IFMT", "S_IFIFO", "S_IFCHR", "S_IFBLK", "S_IFLNK", "S_IFREG",
482     "S_IFDIR", "S_IFWHT", "S_IFSOCK", "IO::AIO::major $dev_t",
483     "IO::AIO::minor $dev_t", "IO::AIO::makedev $major, $minor".
484    
485 root 1.20 Example: Print the length of /etc/passwd:
486    
487     aio_stat "/etc/passwd", sub {
488     $_[0] and die "stat failed: $!";
489     print "size is ", -s _, "\n";
490     };
491    
492 root 1.42 aio_statvfs $fh_or_path, $callback->($statvfs)
493     Works like the POSIX "statvfs" or "fstatvfs" syscalls, depending on
494     whether a file handle or path was passed.
495    
496     On success, the callback is passed a hash reference with the
497     following members: "bsize", "frsize", "blocks", "bfree", "bavail",
498     "files", "ffree", "favail", "fsid", "flag" and "namemax". On
499     failure, "undef" is passed.
500    
501     The following POSIX IO::AIO::ST_* constants are defined: "ST_RDONLY"
502     and "ST_NOSUID".
503    
504     The following non-POSIX IO::AIO::ST_* flag masks are defined to
505     their correct value when available, or to 0 on systems that do not
506     support them: "ST_NODEV", "ST_NOEXEC", "ST_SYNCHRONOUS",
507     "ST_MANDLOCK", "ST_WRITE", "ST_APPEND", "ST_IMMUTABLE",
508     "ST_NOATIME", "ST_NODIRATIME" and "ST_RELATIME".
509    
510     Example: stat "/wd" and dump out the data if successful.
511    
512     aio_statvfs "/wd", sub {
513     my $f = $_[0]
514     or die "statvfs: $!";
515    
516     use Data::Dumper;
517     say Dumper $f;
518     };
519    
520     # result:
521     {
522     bsize => 1024,
523     bfree => 4333064312,
524     blocks => 10253828096,
525     files => 2050765568,
526     flag => 4096,
527     favail => 2042092649,
528     bavail => 4333064312,
529     ffree => 2042092649,
530     namemax => 255,
531     frsize => 1024,
532     fsid => 1810
533     }
534    
535 root 1.53 Here is a (likely partial) list of fsid values used by Linux - it is
536     safe to hardcode these when the $^O is "linux":
537    
538     0x0000adf5 adfs
539     0x0000adff affs
540     0x5346414f afs
541     0x09041934 anon-inode filesystem
542     0x00000187 autofs
543     0x42465331 befs
544     0x1badface bfs
545     0x42494e4d binfmt_misc
546     0x9123683e btrfs
547     0x0027e0eb cgroupfs
548     0xff534d42 cifs
549     0x73757245 coda
550     0x012ff7b7 coh
551     0x28cd3d45 cramfs
552     0x453dcd28 cramfs-wend (wrong endianness)
553     0x64626720 debugfs
554     0x00001373 devfs
555     0x00001cd1 devpts
556     0x0000f15f ecryptfs
557     0x00414a53 efs
558     0x0000137d ext
559     0x0000ef53 ext2/ext3
560     0x0000ef51 ext2
561     0x00004006 fat
562     0x65735546 fuseblk
563     0x65735543 fusectl
564     0x0bad1dea futexfs
565     0x01161970 gfs2
566     0x47504653 gpfs
567     0x00004244 hfs
568     0xf995e849 hpfs
569     0x958458f6 hugetlbfs
570     0x2bad1dea inotifyfs
571     0x00009660 isofs
572     0x000072b6 jffs2
573     0x3153464a jfs
574     0x6b414653 k-afs
575     0x0bd00bd0 lustre
576     0x0000137f minix
577     0x0000138f minix 30 char names
578     0x00002468 minix v2
579     0x00002478 minix v2 30 char names
580     0x00004d5a minix v3
581     0x19800202 mqueue
582     0x00004d44 msdos
583     0x0000564c novell
584     0x00006969 nfs
585     0x6e667364 nfsd
586     0x00003434 nilfs
587     0x5346544e ntfs
588     0x00009fa1 openprom
589     0x7461636F ocfs2
590     0x00009fa0 proc
591     0x6165676c pstorefs
592     0x0000002f qnx4
593     0x858458f6 ramfs
594     0x52654973 reiserfs
595     0x00007275 romfs
596     0x67596969 rpc_pipefs
597     0x73636673 securityfs
598     0xf97cff8c selinux
599     0x0000517b smb
600     0x534f434b sockfs
601     0x73717368 squashfs
602     0x62656572 sysfs
603     0x012ff7b6 sysv2
604     0x012ff7b5 sysv4
605     0x01021994 tmpfs
606     0x15013346 udf
607     0x00011954 ufs
608     0x54190100 ufs byteswapped
609     0x00009fa2 usbdevfs
610     0x01021997 v9fs
611     0xa501fcf5 vxfs
612     0xabba1974 xenfs
613     0x012ff7b4 xenix
614     0x58465342 xfs
615     0x012fd16d xia
616    
617 root 1.24 aio_utime $fh_or_path, $atime, $mtime, $callback->($status)
618     Works like perl's "utime" function (including the special case of
619     $atime and $mtime being undef). Fractional times are supported if
620     the underlying syscalls support them.
621    
622     When called with a pathname, uses utimes(2) if available, otherwise
623     utime(2). If called on a file descriptor, uses futimes(2) if
624     available, otherwise returns ENOSYS, so this is not portable.
625    
626     Examples:
627    
628     # set atime and mtime to current time (basically touch(1)):
629     aio_utime "path", undef, undef;
630     # set atime to current time and mtime to beginning of the epoch:
631     aio_utime "path", time, undef; # undef==0
632    
633     aio_chown $fh_or_path, $uid, $gid, $callback->($status)
634     Works like perl's "chown" function, except that "undef" for either
635     $uid or $gid is being interpreted as "do not change" (but -1 can
636     also be used).
637    
638     Examples:
639    
640     # same as "chown root path" in the shell:
641     aio_chown "path", 0, -1;
642     # same as above:
643     aio_chown "path", 0, undef;
644    
645     aio_truncate $fh_or_path, $offset, $callback->($status)
646     Works like truncate(2) or ftruncate(2).
647    
648 root 1.53 aio_allocate $fh, $mode, $offset, $len, $callback->($status)
649     Allocates or freed disk space according to the $mode argument. See
650     the linux "fallocate" docuemntation for details.
651    
652     $mode can currently be 0 or "IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE" to
653     allocate space, or "IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_PUNCH_HOLE |
654     IO::AIO::FALLOC_FL_KEEP_SIZE", to deallocate a file range.
655    
656     The file system block size used by "fallocate" is presumably the
657     "f_bsize" returned by "statvfs".
658    
659     If "fallocate" isn't available or cannot be emulated (currently no
660     emulation will be attempted), passes -1 and sets $! to "ENOSYS".
661    
662 root 1.24 aio_chmod $fh_or_path, $mode, $callback->($status)
663     Works like perl's "chmod" function.
664    
665 root 1.20 aio_unlink $pathname, $callback->($status)
666     Asynchronously unlink (delete) a file and call the callback with the
667     result code.
668    
669 root 1.50 aio_mknod $pathname, $mode, $dev, $callback->($status)
670 root 1.20 [EXPERIMENTAL]
671    
672     Asynchronously create a device node (or fifo). See mknod(2).
673    
674     The only (POSIX-) portable way of calling this function is:
675    
676 root 1.50 aio_mknod $pathname, IO::AIO::S_IFIFO | $mode, 0, sub { ...
677 root 1.20
678 root 1.46 See "aio_stat" for info about some potentially helpful extra
679     constants and functions.
680    
681 root 1.20 aio_link $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
682     Asynchronously create a new link to the existing object at $srcpath
683     at the path $dstpath and call the callback with the result code.
684    
685     aio_symlink $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
686     Asynchronously create a new symbolic link to the existing object at
687     $srcpath at the path $dstpath and call the callback with the result
688     code.
689    
690 root 1.50 aio_readlink $pathname, $callback->($link)
691 root 1.20 Asynchronously read the symlink specified by $path and pass it to
692     the callback. If an error occurs, nothing or undef gets passed to
693     the callback.
694    
695 root 1.50 aio_realpath $pathname, $callback->($path)
696 root 1.49 Asynchronously make the path absolute and resolve any symlinks in
697 root 1.54 $path. The resulting path only consists of directories (same as
698 root 1.49 Cwd::realpath).
699    
700     This request can be used to get the absolute path of the current
701     working directory by passing it a path of . (a single dot).
702    
703 root 1.20 aio_rename $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
704     Asynchronously rename the object at $srcpath to $dstpath, just as
705     rename(2) and call the callback with the result code.
706    
707 root 1.54 On systems that support the AIO::WD working directory abstraction
708     natively, the case "[$wd, "."]" as $srcpath is specialcased -
709     instead of failing, "rename" is called on the absolute path of $wd.
710    
711 root 1.23 aio_mkdir $pathname, $mode, $callback->($status)
712     Asynchronously mkdir (create) a directory and call the callback with
713     the result code. $mode will be modified by the umask at the time the
714     request is executed, so do not change your umask.
715    
716 root 1.20 aio_rmdir $pathname, $callback->($status)
717     Asynchronously rmdir (delete) a directory and call the callback with
718     the result code.
719    
720 root 1.54 On systems that support the AIO::WD working directory abstraction
721     natively, the case "[$wd, "."]" is specialcased - instead of
722     failing, "rmdir" is called on the absolute path of $wd.
723    
724 root 1.20 aio_readdir $pathname, $callback->($entries)
725     Unlike the POSIX call of the same name, "aio_readdir" reads an
726     entire directory (i.e. opendir + readdir + closedir). The entries
727     will not be sorted, and will NOT include the "." and ".." entries.
728    
729 root 1.36 The callback is passed a single argument which is either "undef" or
730     an array-ref with the filenames.
731    
732     aio_readdirx $pathname, $flags, $callback->($entries, $flags)
733 root 1.50 Quite similar to "aio_readdir", but the $flags argument allows one
734     to tune behaviour and output format. In case of an error, $entries
735     will be "undef".
736 root 1.36
737     The flags are a combination of the following constants, ORed
738     together (the flags will also be passed to the callback, possibly
739     modified):
740    
741     IO::AIO::READDIR_DENTS
742 root 1.47 When this flag is off, then the callback gets an arrayref
743     consisting of names only (as with "aio_readdir"), otherwise it
744     gets an arrayref with "[$name, $type, $inode]" arrayrefs, each
745 root 1.36 describing a single directory entry in more detail.
746    
747     $name is the name of the entry.
748    
749     $type is one of the "IO::AIO::DT_xxx" constants:
750    
751     "IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN", "IO::AIO::DT_FIFO", "IO::AIO::DT_CHR",
752     "IO::AIO::DT_DIR", "IO::AIO::DT_BLK", "IO::AIO::DT_REG",
753     "IO::AIO::DT_LNK", "IO::AIO::DT_SOCK", "IO::AIO::DT_WHT".
754    
755     "IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN" means just that: readdir does not know. If
756     you need to know, you have to run stat yourself. Also, for speed
757     reasons, the $type scalars are read-only: you can not modify
758     them.
759    
760     $inode is the inode number (which might not be exact on systems
761 root 1.38 with 64 bit inode numbers and 32 bit perls). This field has
762     unspecified content on systems that do not deliver the inode
763     information.
764 root 1.36
765     IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST
766     When this flag is set, then the names will be returned in an
767 root 1.47 order where likely directories come first, in optimal stat
768     order. This is useful when you need to quickly find directories,
769     or you want to find all directories while avoiding to stat()
770     each entry.
771 root 1.36
772     If the system returns type information in readdir, then this is
773     used to find directories directly. Otherwise, likely directories
774 root 1.47 are names beginning with ".", or otherwise names with no dots,
775     of which names with short names are tried first.
776 root 1.36
777     IO::AIO::READDIR_STAT_ORDER
778     When this flag is set, then the names will be returned in an
779     order suitable for stat()'ing each one. That is, when you plan
780     to stat() all files in the given directory, then the returned
781     order will likely be fastest.
782    
783     If both this flag and "IO::AIO::READDIR_DIRS_FIRST" are
784     specified, then the likely dirs come first, resulting in a less
785     optimal stat order.
786    
787     IO::AIO::READDIR_FOUND_UNKNOWN
788     This flag should not be set when calling "aio_readdirx".
789     Instead, it is being set by "aio_readdirx", when any of the
790 root 1.50 $type's found were "IO::AIO::DT_UNKNOWN". The absence of this
791 root 1.36 flag therefore indicates that all $type's are known, which can
792     be used to speed up some algorithms.
793 root 1.20
794 root 1.50 aio_load $pathname, $data, $callback->($status)
795 root 1.22 This is a composite request that tries to fully load the given file
796     into memory. Status is the same as with aio_read.
797    
798 root 1.20 aio_copy $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
799     Try to copy the *file* (directories not supported as either source
800     or destination) from $srcpath to $dstpath and call the callback with
801 root 1.40 a status of 0 (ok) or -1 (error, see $!).
802 root 1.20
803 root 1.32 This is a composite request that creates the destination file with
804     mode 0200 and copies the contents of the source file into it using
805     "aio_sendfile", followed by restoring atime, mtime, access mode and
806     uid/gid, in that order.
807 root 1.20
808     If an error occurs, the partial destination file will be unlinked,
809     if possible, except when setting atime, mtime, access mode and
810     uid/gid, where errors are being ignored.
811    
812     aio_move $srcpath, $dstpath, $callback->($status)
813     Try to move the *file* (directories not supported as either source
814     or destination) from $srcpath to $dstpath and call the callback with
815 root 1.40 a status of 0 (ok) or -1 (error, see $!).
816 root 1.20
817 root 1.33 This is a composite request that tries to rename(2) the file first;
818     if rename fails with "EXDEV", it copies the file with "aio_copy"
819     and, if that is successful, unlinks the $srcpath.
820 root 1.20
821 root 1.50 aio_scandir $pathname, $maxreq, $callback->($dirs, $nondirs)
822 root 1.20 Scans a directory (similar to "aio_readdir") but additionally tries
823     to efficiently separate the entries of directory $path into two sets
824     of names, directories you can recurse into (directories), and ones
825     you cannot recurse into (everything else, including symlinks to
826     directories).
827    
828     "aio_scandir" is a composite request that creates of many sub
829     requests_ $maxreq specifies the maximum number of outstanding aio
830     requests that this function generates. If it is "<= 0", then a
831     suitable default will be chosen (currently 4).
832    
833     On error, the callback is called without arguments, otherwise it
834     receives two array-refs with path-relative entry names.
835    
836     Example:
837    
838     aio_scandir $dir, 0, sub {
839     my ($dirs, $nondirs) = @_;
840     print "real directories: @$dirs\n";
841     print "everything else: @$nondirs\n";
842     };
843    
844     Implementation notes.
845    
846     The "aio_readdir" cannot be avoided, but "stat()"'ing every entry
847     can.
848    
849 root 1.36 If readdir returns file type information, then this is used directly
850     to find directories.
851    
852     Otherwise, after reading the directory, the modification time, size
853     etc. of the directory before and after the readdir is checked, and
854     if they match (and isn't the current time), the link count will be
855     used to decide how many entries are directories (if >= 2).
856     Otherwise, no knowledge of the number of subdirectories will be
857     assumed.
858    
859     Then entries will be sorted into likely directories a non-initial
860     dot currently) and likely non-directories (see "aio_readdirx"). Then
861     every entry plus an appended "/." will be "stat"'ed, likely
862     directories first, in order of their inode numbers. If that
863     succeeds, it assumes that the entry is a directory or a symlink to
864 root 1.50 directory (which will be checked separately). This is often faster
865 root 1.36 than stat'ing the entry itself because filesystems might detect the
866     type of the entry without reading the inode data (e.g. ext2fs
867     filetype feature), even on systems that cannot return the filetype
868     information on readdir.
869 root 1.20
870     If the known number of directories (link count - 2) has been
871     reached, the rest of the entries is assumed to be non-directories.
872    
873     This only works with certainty on POSIX (= UNIX) filesystems, which
874     fortunately are the vast majority of filesystems around.
875    
876     It will also likely work on non-POSIX filesystems with reduced
877     efficiency as those tend to return 0 or 1 as link counts, which
878     disables the directory counting heuristic.
879    
880 root 1.50 aio_rmtree $pathname, $callback->($status)
881 root 1.23 Delete a directory tree starting (and including) $path, return the
882     status of the final "rmdir" only. This is a composite request that
883     uses "aio_scandir" to recurse into and rmdir directories, and unlink
884     everything else.
885    
886 root 1.28 aio_sync $callback->($status)
887     Asynchronously call sync and call the callback when finished.
888    
889 root 1.20 aio_fsync $fh, $callback->($status)
890     Asynchronously call fsync on the given filehandle and call the
891     callback with the fsync result code.
892    
893     aio_fdatasync $fh, $callback->($status)
894     Asynchronously call fdatasync on the given filehandle and call the
895     callback with the fdatasync result code.
896    
897     If this call isn't available because your OS lacks it or it couldn't
898     be detected, it will be emulated by calling "fsync" instead.
899    
900 root 1.50 aio_syncfs $fh, $callback->($status)
901     Asynchronously call the syncfs syscall to sync the filesystem
902     associated to the given filehandle and call the callback with the
903     syncfs result code. If syncfs is not available, calls sync(), but
904     returns -1 and sets errno to "ENOSYS" nevertheless.
905    
906 root 1.34 aio_sync_file_range $fh, $offset, $nbytes, $flags, $callback->($status)
907     Sync the data portion of the file specified by $offset and $length
908     to disk (but NOT the metadata), by calling the Linux-specific
909     sync_file_range call. If sync_file_range is not available or it
910     returns ENOSYS, then fdatasync or fsync is being substituted.
911    
912     $flags can be a combination of
913     "IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE",
914     "IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WRITE" and
915     "IO::AIO::SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_AFTER": refer to the sync_file_range
916     manpage for details.
917    
918 root 1.50 aio_pathsync $pathname, $callback->($status)
919 root 1.28 This request tries to open, fsync and close the given path. This is
920 root 1.32 a composite request intended to sync directories after directory
921 root 1.28 operations (E.g. rename). This might not work on all operating
922     systems or have any specific effect, but usually it makes sure that
923     directory changes get written to disc. It works for anything that
924     can be opened for read-only, not just directories.
925    
926 root 1.39 Future versions of this function might fall back to other methods
927     when "fsync" on the directory fails (such as calling "sync").
928    
929 root 1.28 Passes 0 when everything went ok, and -1 on error.
930    
931 root 1.41 aio_msync $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0,
932     $callback->($status)
933     This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which only works on
934 root 1.43 mmap(2)ed scalars (see the "IO::AIO::mmap" function, although it
935     also works on data scalars managed by the Sys::Mmap or Mmap modules,
936     note that the scalar must only be modified in-place while an aio
937     operation is pending on it).
938 root 1.41
939     It calls the "msync" function of your OS, if available, with the
940     memory area starting at $offset in the string and ending $length
941     bytes later. If $length is negative, counts from the end, and if
942     $length is "undef", then it goes till the end of the string. The
943     flags can be a combination of "IO::AIO::MS_ASYNC",
944     "IO::AIO::MS_INVALIDATE" and "IO::AIO::MS_SYNC".
945    
946     aio_mtouch $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, flags = 0,
947     $callback->($status)
948     This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which works best on
949     mmap(2)ed scalars.
950    
951     It touches (reads or writes) all memory pages in the specified range
952     inside the scalar. All caveats and parameters are the same as for
953     "aio_msync", above, except for flags, which must be either 0 (which
954     reads all pages and ensures they are instantiated) or
955 root 1.54 "IO::AIO::MT_MODIFY", which modifies the memory pages (by reading
956 root 1.41 and writing an octet from it, which dirties the page).
957    
958 root 1.44 aio_mlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef, $callback->($status)
959     This is a rather advanced IO::AIO call, which works best on
960     mmap(2)ed scalars.
961    
962     It reads in all the pages of the underlying storage into memory (if
963     any) and locks them, so they are not getting swapped/paged out or
964     removed.
965    
966     If $length is undefined, then the scalar will be locked till the
967     end.
968    
969     On systems that do not implement "mlock", this function returns -1
970     and sets errno to "ENOSYS".
971    
972     Note that the corresponding "munlock" is synchronous and is
973     documented under "MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS".
974    
975     Example: open a file, mmap and mlock it - both will be undone when
976     $data gets destroyed.
977    
978     open my $fh, "<", $path or die "$path: $!";
979     my $data;
980     IO::AIO::mmap $data, -s $fh, IO::AIO::PROT_READ, IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED, $fh;
981     aio_mlock $data; # mlock in background
982    
983     aio_mlockall $flags, $callback->($status)
984     Calls the "mlockall" function with the given $flags (a combination
985     of "IO::AIO::MCL_CURRENT" and "IO::AIO::MCL_FUTURE").
986    
987     On systems that do not implement "mlockall", this function returns
988     -1 and sets errno to "ENOSYS".
989    
990     Note that the corresponding "munlockall" is synchronous and is
991     documented under "MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS".
992    
993     Example: asynchronously lock all current and future pages into
994     memory.
995    
996     aio_mlockall IO::AIO::MCL_FUTURE;
997    
998 root 1.51 aio_fiemap $fh, $start, $length, $flags, $count, $cb->(\@extents)
999 root 1.53 Queries the extents of the given file (by calling the Linux "FIEMAP"
1000 root 1.51 ioctl, see <http://cvs.schmorp.de/IO-AIO/doc/fiemap.txt> for
1001 root 1.53 details). If the ioctl is not available on your OS, then this
1002     request will fail with "ENOSYS".
1003 root 1.51
1004     $start is the starting offset to query extents for, $length is the
1005     size of the range to query - if it is "undef", then the whole file
1006     will be queried.
1007    
1008     $flags is a combination of flags ("IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC" or
1009     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_XATTR" - "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAGS_COMPAT" is
1010     also exported), and is normally 0 or "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC" to
1011     query the data portion.
1012    
1013     $count is the maximum number of extent records to return. If it is
1014 root 1.53 "undef", then IO::AIO queries all extents of the range. As a very
1015 root 1.51 special case, if it is 0, then the callback receives the number of
1016 root 1.53 extents instead of the extents themselves (which is unreliable, see
1017     below).
1018 root 1.51
1019     If an error occurs, the callback receives no arguments. The special
1020     "errno" value "IO::AIO::EBADR" is available to test for flag errors.
1021    
1022     Otherwise, the callback receives an array reference with extent
1023     structures. Each extent structure is an array reference itself, with
1024     the following members:
1025    
1026     [$logical, $physical, $length, $flags]
1027    
1028     Flags is any combination of the following flag values (typically
1029 root 1.53 either 0 or "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST" (1)):
1030 root 1.51
1031     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST", "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNKNOWN",
1032     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DELALLOC", "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_ENCODED",
1033     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_ENCRYPTED",
1034     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED",
1035     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_INLINE",
1036     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_TAIL",
1037     "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNWRITTEN", "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_MERGED"
1038     or "IO::AIO::FIEMAP_EXTENT_SHARED".
1039    
1040 root 1.53 At the time of this writing (Linux 3.2), this requets is unreliable
1041     unless $count is "undef", as the kernel has all sorts of bugs
1042     preventing it to return all extents of a range for files with large
1043     number of extents. The code works around all these issues if $count
1044     is undef.
1045    
1046 root 1.20 aio_group $callback->(...)
1047     This is a very special aio request: Instead of doing something, it
1048     is a container for other aio requests, which is useful if you want
1049     to bundle many requests into a single, composite, request with a
1050     definite callback and the ability to cancel the whole request with
1051     its subrequests.
1052    
1053     Returns an object of class IO::AIO::GRP. See its documentation below
1054     for more info.
1055    
1056     Example:
1057    
1058     my $grp = aio_group sub {
1059     print "all stats done\n";
1060     };
1061    
1062     add $grp
1063     (aio_stat ...),
1064     (aio_stat ...),
1065     ...;
1066    
1067     aio_nop $callback->()
1068     This is a special request - it does nothing in itself and is only
1069     used for side effects, such as when you want to add a dummy request
1070     to a group so that finishing the requests in the group depends on
1071     executing the given code.
1072    
1073     While this request does nothing, it still goes through the execution
1074     phase and still requires a worker thread. Thus, the callback will
1075     not be executed immediately but only after other requests in the
1076     queue have entered their execution phase. This can be used to
1077     measure request latency.
1078    
1079     IO::AIO::aio_busy $fractional_seconds, $callback->() *NOT EXPORTED*
1080     Mainly used for debugging and benchmarking, this aio request puts
1081     one of the request workers to sleep for the given time.
1082    
1083     While it is theoretically handy to have simple I/O scheduling
1084     requests like sleep and file handle readable/writable, the overhead
1085     this creates is immense (it blocks a thread for a long time) so do
1086     not use this function except to put your application under
1087     artificial I/O pressure.
1088 root 1.18
1089 root 1.50 IO::AIO::WD - multiple working directories
1090     Your process only has one current working directory, which is used by
1091     all threads. This makes it hard to use relative paths (some other
1092     component could call "chdir" at any time, and it is hard to control when
1093     the path will be used by IO::AIO).
1094    
1095     One solution for this is to always use absolute paths. This usually
1096     works, but can be quite slow (the kernel has to walk the whole path on
1097     every access), and can also be a hassle to implement.
1098    
1099     Newer POSIX systems have a number of functions (openat, fdopendir,
1100     futimensat and so on) that make it possible to specify working
1101     directories per operation.
1102    
1103     For portability, and because the clowns who "designed", or shall I
1104     write, perpetrated this new interface were obviously half-drunk, this
1105     abstraction cannot be perfect, though.
1106    
1107     IO::AIO allows you to convert directory paths into a so-called
1108     IO::AIO::WD object. This object stores the canonicalised, absolute
1109     version of the path, and on systems that allow it, also a directory file
1110     descriptor.
1111    
1112     Everywhere where a pathname is accepted by IO::AIO (e.g. in "aio_stat"
1113     or "aio_unlink"), one can specify an array reference with an IO::AIO::WD
1114     object and a pathname instead (or the IO::AIO::WD object alone, which
1115     gets interpreted as "[$wd, "."]"). If the pathname is absolute, the
1116     IO::AIO::WD object is ignored, otherwise the pathname is resolved
1117     relative to that IO::AIO::WD object.
1118    
1119     For example, to get a wd object for /etc and then stat passwd inside,
1120     you would write:
1121    
1122     aio_wd "/etc", sub {
1123     my $etcdir = shift;
1124    
1125     # although $etcdir can be undef on error, there is generally no reason
1126     # to check for errors here, as aio_stat will fail with ENOENT
1127     # when $etcdir is undef.
1128    
1129     aio_stat [$etcdir, "passwd"], sub {
1130     # yay
1131     };
1132     };
1133    
1134     That "aio_wd" is a request and not a normal function shows that creating
1135     an IO::AIO::WD object is itself a potentially blocking operation, which
1136     is why it is done asynchronously.
1137    
1138     To stat the directory obtained with "aio_wd" above, one could write
1139     either of the following three request calls:
1140    
1141     aio_lstat "/etc" , sub { ... # pathname as normal string
1142     aio_lstat [$wd, "."], sub { ... # "." relative to $wd (i.e. $wd itself)
1143     aio_lstat $wd , sub { ... # shorthand for the previous
1144    
1145     As with normal pathnames, IO::AIO keeps a copy of the working directory
1146     object and the pathname string, so you could write the following without
1147     causing any issues due to $path getting reused:
1148    
1149     my $path = [$wd, undef];
1150    
1151     for my $name (qw(abc def ghi)) {
1152     $path->[1] = $name;
1153     aio_stat $path, sub {
1154     # ...
1155     };
1156     }
1157    
1158     There are some caveats: when directories get renamed (or deleted), the
1159     pathname string doesn't change, so will point to the new directory (or
1160     nowhere at all), while the directory fd, if available on the system,
1161     will still point to the original directory. Most functions accepting a
1162     pathname will use the directory fd on newer systems, and the string on
1163     older systems. Some functions (such as realpath) will always rely on the
1164     string form of the pathname.
1165    
1166 root 1.54 So this functionality is mainly useful to get some protection against
1167 root 1.50 "chdir", to easily get an absolute path out of a relative path for
1168     future reference, and to speed up doing many operations in the same
1169     directory (e.g. when stat'ing all files in a directory).
1170    
1171     The following functions implement this working directory abstraction:
1172    
1173     aio_wd $pathname, $callback->($wd)
1174     Asynchonously canonicalise the given pathname and convert it to an
1175     IO::AIO::WD object representing it. If possible and supported on the
1176     system, also open a directory fd to speed up pathname resolution
1177     relative to this working directory.
1178    
1179     If something goes wrong, then "undef" is passwd to the callback
1180     instead of a working directory object and $! is set appropriately.
1181     Since passing "undef" as working directory component of a pathname
1182     fails the request with "ENOENT", there is often no need for error
1183     checking in the "aio_wd" callback, as future requests using the
1184     value will fail in the expected way.
1185    
1186     If this call isn't available because your OS lacks it or it couldn't
1187     be detected, it will be emulated by calling "fsync" instead.
1188    
1189     IO::AIO::CWD
1190     This is a compiletime constant (object) that represents the process
1191     current working directory.
1192    
1193     Specifying this object as working directory object for a pathname is
1194     as if the pathname would be specified directly, without a directory
1195 root 1.54 object. For example, these calls are functionally identical:
1196 root 1.50
1197     aio_stat "somefile", sub { ... };
1198     aio_stat [IO::AIO::CWD, "somefile"], sub { ... };
1199    
1200 root 1.54 To recover the path associated with an IO::AIO::WD object, you can use
1201     "aio_realpath":
1202    
1203     aio_realpath $wd, sub {
1204     warn "path is $_[0]\n";
1205     };
1206    
1207     Currently, "aio_statvfs" always, and "aio_rename" and "aio_rmdir"
1208     sometimes, fall back to using an absolue path.
1209    
1210 root 1.18 IO::AIO::REQ CLASS
1211 root 1.20 All non-aggregate "aio_*" functions return an object of this class when
1212     called in non-void context.
1213 root 1.18
1214 root 1.20 cancel $req
1215     Cancels the request, if possible. Has the effect of skipping
1216     execution when entering the execute state and skipping calling the
1217     callback when entering the the result state, but will leave the
1218 root 1.37 request otherwise untouched (with the exception of readdir). That
1219     means that requests that currently execute will not be stopped and
1220     resources held by the request will not be freed prematurely.
1221 root 1.18
1222 root 1.20 cb $req $callback->(...)
1223     Replace (or simply set) the callback registered to the request.
1224 root 1.18
1225     IO::AIO::GRP CLASS
1226 root 1.20 This class is a subclass of IO::AIO::REQ, so all its methods apply to
1227     objects of this class, too.
1228 root 1.18
1229 root 1.20 A IO::AIO::GRP object is a special request that can contain multiple
1230     other aio requests.
1231 root 1.18
1232 root 1.20 You create one by calling the "aio_group" constructing function with a
1233     callback that will be called when all contained requests have entered
1234     the "done" state:
1235 root 1.18
1236 root 1.20 my $grp = aio_group sub {
1237     print "all requests are done\n";
1238     };
1239    
1240     You add requests by calling the "add" method with one or more
1241     "IO::AIO::REQ" objects:
1242    
1243     $grp->add (aio_unlink "...");
1244    
1245     add $grp aio_stat "...", sub {
1246     $_[0] or return $grp->result ("error");
1247 root 1.1
1248 root 1.20 # add another request dynamically, if first succeeded
1249     add $grp aio_open "...", sub {
1250     $grp->result ("ok");
1251     };
1252     };
1253 root 1.18
1254 root 1.20 This makes it very easy to create composite requests (see the source of
1255     "aio_move" for an application) that work and feel like simple requests.
1256 root 1.18
1257 root 1.28 * The IO::AIO::GRP objects will be cleaned up during calls to
1258     "IO::AIO::poll_cb", just like any other request.
1259    
1260     * They can be canceled like any other request. Canceling will cancel
1261     not only the request itself, but also all requests it contains.
1262    
1263     * They can also can also be added to other IO::AIO::GRP objects.
1264    
1265     * You must not add requests to a group from within the group callback
1266     (or any later time).
1267 root 1.20
1268     Their lifetime, simplified, looks like this: when they are empty, they
1269     will finish very quickly. If they contain only requests that are in the
1270     "done" state, they will also finish. Otherwise they will continue to
1271     exist.
1272    
1273 root 1.32 That means after creating a group you have some time to add requests
1274     (precisely before the callback has been invoked, which is only done
1275     within the "poll_cb"). And in the callbacks of those requests, you can
1276     add further requests to the group. And only when all those requests have
1277     finished will the the group itself finish.
1278 root 1.20
1279     add $grp ...
1280     $grp->add (...)
1281     Add one or more requests to the group. Any type of IO::AIO::REQ can
1282     be added, including other groups, as long as you do not create
1283     circular dependencies.
1284    
1285     Returns all its arguments.
1286    
1287     $grp->cancel_subs
1288     Cancel all subrequests and clears any feeder, but not the group
1289     request itself. Useful when you queued a lot of events but got a
1290     result early.
1291    
1292 root 1.41 The group request will finish normally (you cannot add requests to
1293     the group).
1294    
1295 root 1.20 $grp->result (...)
1296     Set the result value(s) that will be passed to the group callback
1297 root 1.28 when all subrequests have finished and set the groups errno to the
1298 root 1.20 current value of errno (just like calling "errno" without an error
1299     number). By default, no argument will be passed and errno is zero.
1300    
1301     $grp->errno ([$errno])
1302     Sets the group errno value to $errno, or the current value of errno
1303     when the argument is missing.
1304    
1305     Every aio request has an associated errno value that is restored
1306     when the callback is invoked. This method lets you change this value
1307     from its default (0).
1308    
1309     Calling "result" will also set errno, so make sure you either set $!
1310     before the call to "result", or call c<errno> after it.
1311    
1312     feed $grp $callback->($grp)
1313     Sets a feeder/generator on this group: every group can have an
1314     attached generator that generates requests if idle. The idea behind
1315     this is that, although you could just queue as many requests as you
1316     want in a group, this might starve other requests for a potentially
1317     long time. For example, "aio_scandir" might generate hundreds of
1318 root 1.50 thousands of "aio_stat" requests, delaying any later requests for a
1319 root 1.20 long time.
1320    
1321     To avoid this, and allow incremental generation of requests, you can
1322     instead a group and set a feeder on it that generates those
1323     requests. The feed callback will be called whenever there are few
1324     enough (see "limit", below) requests active in the group itself and
1325     is expected to queue more requests.
1326    
1327     The feed callback can queue as many requests as it likes (i.e. "add"
1328     does not impose any limits).
1329    
1330     If the feed does not queue more requests when called, it will be
1331     automatically removed from the group.
1332    
1333 root 1.33 If the feed limit is 0 when this method is called, it will be set to
1334     2 automatically.
1335 root 1.20
1336     Example:
1337    
1338     # stat all files in @files, but only ever use four aio requests concurrently:
1339    
1340     my $grp = aio_group sub { print "finished\n" };
1341     limit $grp 4;
1342     feed $grp sub {
1343     my $file = pop @files
1344     or return;
1345 root 1.18
1346 root 1.20 add $grp aio_stat $file, sub { ... };
1347 root 1.1 };
1348    
1349 root 1.20 limit $grp $num
1350     Sets the feeder limit for the group: The feeder will be called
1351     whenever the group contains less than this many requests.
1352 root 1.18
1353 root 1.20 Setting the limit to 0 will pause the feeding process.
1354 root 1.17
1355 root 1.33 The default value for the limit is 0, but note that setting a feeder
1356     automatically bumps it up to 2.
1357    
1358 root 1.18 SUPPORT FUNCTIONS
1359 root 1.19 EVENT PROCESSING AND EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
1360 root 1.20 $fileno = IO::AIO::poll_fileno
1361     Return the *request result pipe file descriptor*. This filehandle
1362     must be polled for reading by some mechanism outside this module
1363 root 1.38 (e.g. EV, Glib, select and so on, see below or the SYNOPSIS). If the
1364     pipe becomes readable you have to call "poll_cb" to check the
1365     results.
1366 root 1.20
1367     See "poll_cb" for an example.
1368    
1369     IO::AIO::poll_cb
1370 root 1.54 Process some requests that have reached the result phase (i.e. they
1371     have been executed but the results are not yet reported). You have
1372     to call this "regularly" to finish outstanding requests.
1373    
1374     Returns 0 if all events could be processed (or there were no events
1375     to process), or -1 if it returned earlier for whatever reason.
1376     Returns immediately when no events are outstanding. The amount of
1377     events processed depends on the settings of "IO::AIO::max_poll_req",
1378     "IO::AIO::max_poll_time" and "IO::AIO::max_outstanding".
1379    
1380     If not all requests were processed for whatever reason, the poll
1381     file descriptor will still be ready when "poll_cb" returns, so
1382     normally you don't have to do anything special to have it called
1383     later.
1384 root 1.20
1385 root 1.47 Apart from calling "IO::AIO::poll_cb" when the event filehandle
1386     becomes ready, it can be beneficial to call this function from loops
1387     which submit a lot of requests, to make sure the results get
1388     processed when they become available and not just when the loop is
1389     finished and the event loop takes over again. This function returns
1390     very fast when there are no outstanding requests.
1391    
1392 root 1.20 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
1393 root 1.38 IO::AIO::poll_cb with high priority (more examples can be found in
1394     the SYNOPSIS section, at the top of this document):
1395 root 1.20
1396     Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1397     poll => 'r', async => 1,
1398     cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1399    
1400 root 1.43 IO::AIO::poll_wait
1401 root 1.54 Wait until either at least one request is in the result phase or no
1402     requests are outstanding anymore.
1403    
1404     This is useful if you want to synchronously wait for some requests
1405     to become ready, without actually handling them.
1406 root 1.43
1407     See "nreqs" for an example.
1408    
1409     IO::AIO::poll
1410     Waits until some requests have been handled.
1411    
1412     Returns the number of requests processed, but is otherwise strictly
1413     equivalent to:
1414    
1415     IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
1416    
1417     IO::AIO::flush
1418     Wait till all outstanding AIO requests have been handled.
1419    
1420     Strictly equivalent to:
1421    
1422     IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
1423     while IO::AIO::nreqs;
1424    
1425 root 1.20 IO::AIO::max_poll_reqs $nreqs
1426     IO::AIO::max_poll_time $seconds
1427     These set the maximum number of requests (default 0, meaning
1428     infinity) that are being processed by "IO::AIO::poll_cb" in one
1429     call, respectively the maximum amount of time (default 0, meaning
1430     infinity) spent in "IO::AIO::poll_cb" to process requests (more
1431     correctly the mininum amount of time "poll_cb" is allowed to use).
1432    
1433     Setting "max_poll_time" to a non-zero value creates an overhead of
1434     one syscall per request processed, which is not normally a problem
1435     unless your callbacks are really really fast or your OS is really
1436     really slow (I am not mentioning Solaris here). Using
1437     "max_poll_reqs" incurs no overhead.
1438    
1439     Setting these is useful if you want to ensure some level of
1440     interactiveness when perl is not fast enough to process all requests
1441     in time.
1442    
1443     For interactive programs, values such as 0.01 to 0.1 should be fine.
1444 root 1.4
1445 root 1.20 Example: Install an Event watcher that automatically calls
1446     IO::AIO::poll_cb with low priority, to ensure that other parts of
1447     the program get the CPU sometimes even under high AIO load.
1448 root 1.4
1449 root 1.20 # try not to spend much more than 0.1s in poll_cb
1450     IO::AIO::max_poll_time 0.1;
1451 root 1.4
1452 root 1.20 # use a low priority so other tasks have priority
1453     Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1454     poll => 'r', nice => 1,
1455     cb => &IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1456    
1457 root 1.19 CONTROLLING THE NUMBER OF THREADS
1458 root 1.20 IO::AIO::min_parallel $nthreads
1459     Set the minimum number of AIO threads to $nthreads. The current
1460     default is 8, which means eight asynchronous operations can execute
1461     concurrently at any one time (the number of outstanding requests,
1462     however, is unlimited).
1463    
1464     IO::AIO starts threads only on demand, when an AIO request is queued
1465     and no free thread exists. Please note that queueing up a hundred
1466     requests can create demand for a hundred threads, even if it turns
1467     out that everything is in the cache and could have been processed
1468     faster by a single thread.
1469    
1470     It is recommended to keep the number of threads relatively low, as
1471     some Linux kernel versions will scale negatively with the number of
1472     threads (higher parallelity => MUCH higher latency). With current
1473     Linux 2.6 versions, 4-32 threads should be fine.
1474    
1475     Under most circumstances you don't need to call this function, as
1476     the module selects a default that is suitable for low to moderate
1477     load.
1478    
1479     IO::AIO::max_parallel $nthreads
1480     Sets the maximum number of AIO threads to $nthreads. If more than
1481     the specified number of threads are currently running, this function
1482     kills them. This function blocks until the limit is reached.
1483    
1484     While $nthreads are zero, aio requests get queued but not executed
1485     until the number of threads has been increased again.
1486    
1487     This module automatically runs "max_parallel 0" at program end, to
1488     ensure that all threads are killed and that there are no outstanding
1489     requests.
1490    
1491     Under normal circumstances you don't need to call this function.
1492    
1493     IO::AIO::max_idle $nthreads
1494     Limit the number of threads (default: 4) that are allowed to idle
1495 root 1.46 (i.e., threads that did not get a request to process within the idle
1496     timeout (default: 10 seconds). That means if a thread becomes idle
1497     while $nthreads other threads are also idle, it will free its
1498     resources and exit.
1499 root 1.20
1500     This is useful when you allow a large number of threads (e.g. 100 or
1501     1000) to allow for extremely high load situations, but want to free
1502     resources under normal circumstances (1000 threads can easily
1503     consume 30MB of RAM).
1504    
1505     The default is probably ok in most situations, especially if thread
1506     creation is fast. If thread creation is very slow on your system you
1507     might want to use larger values.
1508    
1509 root 1.46 IO::AIO::idle_timeout $seconds
1510     Sets the minimum idle timeout (default 10) after which worker
1511     threads are allowed to exit. SEe "IO::AIO::max_idle".
1512    
1513 root 1.30 IO::AIO::max_outstanding $maxreqs
1514 root 1.48 Sets the maximum number of outstanding requests to $nreqs. If you do
1515     queue up more than this number of requests, the next call to
1516     "IO::AIO::poll_cb" (and other functions calling "poll_cb", such as
1517     "IO::AIO::flush" or "IO::AIO::poll") will block until the limit is
1518     no longer exceeded.
1519    
1520     In other words, this setting does not enforce a queue limit, but can
1521     be used to make poll functions block if the limit is exceeded.
1522    
1523 root 1.20 This is a very bad function to use in interactive programs because
1524     it blocks, and a bad way to reduce concurrency because it is
1525     inexact: Better use an "aio_group" together with a feed callback.
1526    
1527 root 1.48 It's main use is in scripts without an event loop - when you want to
1528     stat a lot of files, you can write somehting like this:
1529    
1530     IO::AIO::max_outstanding 32;
1531    
1532     for my $path (...) {
1533     aio_stat $path , ...;
1534     IO::AIO::poll_cb;
1535     }
1536    
1537     IO::AIO::flush;
1538    
1539     The call to "poll_cb" inside the loop will normally return
1540     instantly, but as soon as more thna 32 reqeusts are in-flight, it
1541     will block until some requests have been handled. This keeps the
1542     loop from pushing a large number of "aio_stat" requests onto the
1543     queue.
1544    
1545     The default value for "max_outstanding" is very large, so there is
1546     no practical limit on the number of outstanding requests.
1547 root 1.1
1548 root 1.19 STATISTICAL INFORMATION
1549 root 1.20 IO::AIO::nreqs
1550     Returns the number of requests currently in the ready, execute or
1551     pending states (i.e. for which their callback has not been invoked
1552     yet).
1553    
1554     Example: wait till there are no outstanding requests anymore:
1555    
1556     IO::AIO::poll_wait, IO::AIO::poll_cb
1557     while IO::AIO::nreqs;
1558    
1559     IO::AIO::nready
1560     Returns the number of requests currently in the ready state (not yet
1561     executed).
1562    
1563     IO::AIO::npending
1564     Returns the number of requests currently in the pending state
1565     (executed, but not yet processed by poll_cb).
1566 root 1.19
1567 root 1.38 MISCELLANEOUS FUNCTIONS
1568     IO::AIO implements some functions that might be useful, but are not
1569     asynchronous.
1570    
1571     IO::AIO::sendfile $ofh, $ifh, $offset, $count
1572     Calls the "eio_sendfile_sync" function, which is like
1573     "aio_sendfile", but is blocking (this makes most sense if you know
1574     the input data is likely cached already and the output filehandle is
1575     set to non-blocking operations).
1576    
1577     Returns the number of bytes copied, or -1 on error.
1578    
1579     IO::AIO::fadvise $fh, $offset, $len, $advice
1580 root 1.44 Simply calls the "posix_fadvise" function (see its manpage for
1581 root 1.50 details). The following advice constants are available:
1582 root 1.38 "IO::AIO::FADV_NORMAL", "IO::AIO::FADV_SEQUENTIAL",
1583     "IO::AIO::FADV_RANDOM", "IO::AIO::FADV_NOREUSE",
1584     "IO::AIO::FADV_WILLNEED", "IO::AIO::FADV_DONTNEED".
1585    
1586     On systems that do not implement "posix_fadvise", this function
1587     returns ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of "posix_fadvise".
1588    
1589 root 1.44 IO::AIO::madvise $scalar, $offset, $len, $advice
1590     Simply calls the "posix_madvise" function (see its manpage for
1591 root 1.50 details). The following advice constants are available:
1592 root 1.44 "IO::AIO::MADV_NORMAL", "IO::AIO::MADV_SEQUENTIAL",
1593     "IO::AIO::MADV_RANDOM", "IO::AIO::MADV_WILLNEED",
1594     "IO::AIO::MADV_DONTNEED".
1595    
1596     On systems that do not implement "posix_madvise", this function
1597     returns ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of "posix_madvise".
1598    
1599     IO::AIO::mprotect $scalar, $offset, $len, $protect
1600     Simply calls the "mprotect" function on the preferably AIO::mmap'ed
1601     $scalar (see its manpage for details). The following protect
1602 root 1.50 constants are available: "IO::AIO::PROT_NONE", "IO::AIO::PROT_READ",
1603 root 1.44 "IO::AIO::PROT_WRITE", "IO::AIO::PROT_EXEC".
1604    
1605     On systems that do not implement "mprotect", this function returns
1606     ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of "mprotect".
1607    
1608 root 1.43 IO::AIO::mmap $scalar, $length, $prot, $flags, $fh[, $offset]
1609     Memory-maps a file (or anonymous memory range) and attaches it to
1610 root 1.53 the given $scalar, which will act like a string scalar. Returns true
1611     on success, and false otherwise.
1612 root 1.43
1613     The only operations allowed on the scalar are "substr"/"vec" that
1614     don't change the string length, and most read-only operations such
1615     as copying it or searching it with regexes and so on.
1616    
1617     Anything else is unsafe and will, at best, result in memory leaks.
1618    
1619     The memory map associated with the $scalar is automatically removed
1620     when the $scalar is destroyed, or when the "IO::AIO::mmap" or
1621     "IO::AIO::munmap" functions are called.
1622    
1623     This calls the "mmap"(2) function internally. See your system's
1624     manual page for details on the $length, $prot and $flags parameters.
1625    
1626     The $length must be larger than zero and smaller than the actual
1627     filesize.
1628    
1629     $prot is a combination of "IO::AIO::PROT_NONE",
1630     "IO::AIO::PROT_EXEC", "IO::AIO::PROT_READ" and/or
1631     "IO::AIO::PROT_WRITE",
1632    
1633     $flags can be a combination of "IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED" or
1634     "IO::AIO::MAP_PRIVATE", or a number of system-specific flags (when
1635     not available, the are defined as 0): "IO::AIO::MAP_ANONYMOUS"
1636     (which is set to "MAP_ANON" if your system only provides this
1637     constant), "IO::AIO::MAP_HUGETLB", "IO::AIO::MAP_LOCKED",
1638     "IO::AIO::MAP_NORESERVE", "IO::AIO::MAP_POPULATE" or
1639     "IO::AIO::MAP_NONBLOCK"
1640    
1641     If $fh is "undef", then a file descriptor of -1 is passed.
1642    
1643     $offset is the offset from the start of the file - it generally must
1644     be a multiple of "IO::AIO::PAGESIZE" and defaults to 0.
1645    
1646     Example:
1647    
1648     use Digest::MD5;
1649     use IO::AIO;
1650    
1651     open my $fh, "<verybigfile"
1652     or die "$!";
1653    
1654     IO::AIO::mmap my $data, -s $fh, IO::AIO::PROT_READ, IO::AIO::MAP_SHARED, $fh
1655     or die "verybigfile: $!";
1656    
1657     my $fast_md5 = md5 $data;
1658    
1659     IO::AIO::munmap $scalar
1660     Removes a previous mmap and undefines the $scalar.
1661    
1662 root 1.44 IO::AIO::munlock $scalar, $offset = 0, $length = undef
1663     Calls the "munlock" function, undoing the effects of a previous
1664     "aio_mlock" call (see its description for details).
1665 root 1.43
1666     IO::AIO::munlockall
1667     Calls the "munlockall" function.
1668    
1669     On systems that do not implement "munlockall", this function returns
1670     ENOSYS, otherwise the return value of "munlockall".
1671    
1672 root 1.52 IO::AIO::splice $r_fh, $r_off, $w_fh, $w_off, $length, $flags
1673     Calls the GNU/Linux splice(2) syscall, if available. If $r_off or
1674     $w_off are "undef", then "NULL" is passed for these, otherwise they
1675     should be the file offset.
1676    
1677 root 1.53 $r_fh and $w_fh should not refer to the same file, as splice might
1678     silently corrupt the data in this case.
1679    
1680 root 1.52 The following symbol flag values are available:
1681     "IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_MOVE", "IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_NONBLOCK",
1682     "IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_MORE" and "IO::AIO::SPLICE_F_GIFT".
1683    
1684     See the splice(2) manpage for details.
1685    
1686     IO::AIO::tee $r_fh, $w_fh, $length, $flags
1687     Calls the GNU/Linux tee(2) syscall, see it's manpage and the
1688     description for "IO::AIO::splice" above for details.
1689    
1690 root 1.43 EVENT LOOP INTEGRATION
1691     It is recommended to use AnyEvent::AIO to integrate IO::AIO
1692     automatically into many event loops:
1693    
1694     # AnyEvent integration (EV, Event, Glib, Tk, POE, urxvt, pureperl...)
1695     use AnyEvent::AIO;
1696    
1697     You can also integrate IO::AIO manually into many event loops, here are
1698     some examples of how to do this:
1699    
1700     # EV integration
1701     my $aio_w = EV::io IO::AIO::poll_fileno, EV::READ, \&IO::AIO::poll_cb;
1702    
1703     # Event integration
1704     Event->io (fd => IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1705     poll => 'r',
1706     cb => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1707    
1708     # Glib/Gtk2 integration
1709     add_watch Glib::IO IO::AIO::poll_fileno,
1710     in => sub { IO::AIO::poll_cb; 1 };
1711    
1712     # Tk integration
1713     Tk::Event::IO->fileevent (IO::AIO::poll_fileno, "",
1714     readable => \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1715    
1716     # Danga::Socket integration
1717     Danga::Socket->AddOtherFds (IO::AIO::poll_fileno =>
1718     \&IO::AIO::poll_cb);
1719    
1720 root 1.9 FORK BEHAVIOUR
1721 root 1.48 Usage of pthreads in a program changes the semantics of fork
1722     considerably. Specifically, only async-safe functions can be called
1723     after fork. Perl doesn't know about this, so in general, you cannot call
1724 root 1.49 fork with defined behaviour in perl if pthreads are involved. IO::AIO
1725     uses pthreads, so this applies, but many other extensions and (for
1726     inexplicable reasons) perl itself often is linked against pthreads, so
1727     this limitation applies to quite a lot of perls.
1728    
1729     This module no longer tries to fight your OS, or POSIX. That means
1730     IO::AIO only works in the process that loaded it. Forking is fully
1731     supported, but using IO::AIO in the child is not.
1732    
1733     You might get around by not *using* IO::AIO before (or after) forking.
1734     You could also try to call the IO::AIO::reinit function in the child:
1735    
1736     IO::AIO::reinit
1737 root 1.50 Abandons all current requests and I/O threads and simply
1738 root 1.49 reinitialises all data structures. This is not an operation
1739 root 1.50 supported by any standards, but happens to work on GNU/Linux and
1740 root 1.49 some newer BSD systems.
1741    
1742     The only reasonable use for this function is to call it after
1743     forking, if "IO::AIO" was used in the parent. Calling it while
1744     IO::AIO is active in the process will result in undefined behaviour.
1745     Calling it at any time will also result in any undefined (by POSIX)
1746     behaviour.
1747 root 1.18
1748     MEMORY USAGE
1749 root 1.20 Per-request usage:
1750 root 1.18
1751 root 1.20 Each aio request uses - depending on your architecture - around 100-200
1752     bytes of memory. In addition, stat requests need a stat buffer (possibly
1753     a few hundred bytes), readdir requires a result buffer and so on. Perl
1754     scalars and other data passed into aio requests will also be locked and
1755     will consume memory till the request has entered the done state.
1756    
1757 root 1.25 This is not awfully much, so queuing lots of requests is not usually a
1758 root 1.20 problem.
1759    
1760     Per-thread usage:
1761    
1762     In the execution phase, some aio requests require more memory for
1763     temporary buffers, and each thread requires a stack and other data
1764     structures (usually around 16k-128k, depending on the OS).
1765 root 1.18
1766     KNOWN BUGS
1767 root 1.20 Known bugs will be fixed in the next release.
1768 root 1.9
1769 root 1.1 SEE ALSO
1770 root 1.30 AnyEvent::AIO for easy integration into event loops, Coro::AIO for a
1771     more natural syntax.
1772 root 1.1
1773     AUTHOR
1774 root 1.20 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
1775     http://home.schmorp.de/
1776 root 1.1