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Revision: 1.9
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# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 libeio - truly asynchronous POSIX I/O
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 #include <eio.h>
8
9 =head1 DESCRIPTION
10
11 The newest version of this document is also available as an html-formatted
12 web page you might find easier to navigate when reading it for the first
13 time: L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/libeio/eio.pod>.
14
15 Note that this library is a by-product of the C<IO::AIO> perl
16 module, and many of the subtler points regarding requests lifetime
17 and so on are only documented in its documentation at the
18 moment: L<http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/IO-AIO/AIO.pm>.
19
20 =head2 FEATURES
21
22 This library provides fully asynchronous versions of most POSIX functions
23 dealing with I/O. Unlike most asynchronous libraries, this not only
24 includes C<read> and C<write>, but also C<open>, C<stat>, C<unlink> and
25 similar functions, as well as less rarely ones such as C<mknod>, C<futime>
26 or C<readlink>.
27
28 It also offers wrappers around C<sendfile> (Solaris, Linux, HP-UX and
29 FreeBSD, with emulation on other platforms) and C<readahead> (Linux, with
30 emulation elsewhere>).
31
32 The goal is to enable you to write fully non-blocking programs. For
33 example, in a game server, you would not want to freeze for a few seconds
34 just because the server is running a backup and you happen to call
35 C<readdir>.
36
37 =head2 TIME REPRESENTATION
38
39 Libeio represents time as a single floating point number, representing the
40 (fractional) number of seconds since the (POSIX) epoch (somewhere near
41 the beginning of 1970, details are complicated, don't ask). This type is
42 called C<eio_tstamp>, but it is guaranteed to be of type C<double> (or
43 better), so you can freely use C<double> yourself.
44
45 Unlike the name component C<stamp> might indicate, it is also used for
46 time differences throughout libeio.
47
48 =head2 FORK SUPPORT
49
50 Calling C<fork ()> is fully supported by this module. It is implemented in these steps:
51
52 1. wait till all requests in "execute" state have been handled
53 (basically requests that are already handed over to the kernel).
54 2. fork
55 3. in the parent, continue business as usual, done
56 4. in the child, destroy all ready and pending requests and free the
57 memory used by the worker threads. This gives you a fully empty
58 libeio queue.
59
60 Note, however, since libeio does use threads, thr above guarantee doesn't
61 cover your libc, for example, malloc and other libc functions are not
62 fork-safe, so there is very little you can do after a fork, and in fatc,
63 the above might crash, and thus change.
64
65 =head1 INITIALISATION/INTEGRATION
66
67 Before you can call any eio functions you first have to initialise the
68 library. The library integrates into any event loop, but can also be used
69 without one, including in polling mode.
70
71 You have to provide the necessary glue yourself, however.
72
73 =over 4
74
75 =item int eio_init (void (*want_poll)(void), void (*done_poll)(void))
76
77 This function initialises the library. On success it returns C<0>, on
78 failure it returns C<-1> and sets C<errno> appropriately.
79
80 It accepts two function pointers specifying callbacks as argument, both of
81 which can be C<0>, in which case the callback isn't called.
82
83 =item want_poll callback
84
85 The C<want_poll> callback is invoked whenever libeio wants attention (i.e.
86 it wants to be polled by calling C<eio_poll>). It is "edge-triggered",
87 that is, it will only be called once when eio wants attention, until all
88 pending requests have been handled.
89
90 This callback is called while locks are being held, so I<you must
91 not call any libeio functions inside this callback>. That includes
92 C<eio_poll>. What you should do is notify some other thread, or wake up
93 your event loop, and then call C<eio_poll>.
94
95 =item done_poll callback
96
97 This callback is invoked when libeio detects that all pending requests
98 have been handled. It is "edge-triggered", that is, it will only be
99 called once after C<want_poll>. To put it differently, C<want_poll> and
100 C<done_poll> are invoked in pairs: after C<want_poll> you have to call
101 C<eio_poll ()> until either C<eio_poll> indicates that everything has been
102 handled or C<done_poll> has been called, which signals the same.
103
104 Note that C<eio_poll> might return after C<done_poll> and C<want_poll>
105 have been called again, so watch out for races in your code.
106
107 As with C<want_poll>, this callback is called while locks are being held,
108 so you I<must not call any libeio functions form within this callback>.
109
110 =item int eio_poll ()
111
112 This function has to be called whenever there are pending requests that
113 need finishing. You usually call this after C<want_poll> has indicated
114 that you should do so, but you can also call this function regularly to
115 poll for new results.
116
117 If any request invocation returns a non-zero value, then C<eio_poll ()>
118 immediately returns with that value as return value.
119
120 Otherwise, if all requests could be handled, it returns C<0>. If for some
121 reason not all requests have been handled, i.e. some are still pending, it
122 returns C<-1>.
123
124 =back
125
126 For libev, you would typically use an C<ev_async> watcher: the
127 C<want_poll> callback would invoke C<ev_async_send> to wake up the event
128 loop. Inside the callback set for the watcher, one would call C<eio_poll
129 ()> (followed by C<ev_async_send> again if C<eio_poll> indicates that not
130 all requests have been handled yet). The race is taken care of because
131 libev resets/rearms the async watcher before calling your callback,
132 and therefore, before calling C<eio_poll>. This might result in (some)
133 spurious wake-ups, but is generally harmless.
134
135 For most other event loops, you would typically use a pipe - the event
136 loop should be told to wait for read readiness on the read end. In
137 C<want_poll> you would write a single byte, in C<done_poll> you would try
138 to read that byte, and in the callback for the read end, you would call
139 C<eio_poll>. The race is avoided here because the event loop should invoke
140 your callback again and again until the byte has been read (as the pipe
141 read callback does not read it, only C<done_poll>).
142
143
144 =head1 HIGH LEVEL REQUEST API
145
146 Libeio has both a high-level API, which consists of calling a request
147 function with a callback to be called on completion, and a low-level API
148 where you fill out request structures and submit them.
149
150 This section describes the high-level API.
151
152 =head2 REQUEST SUBMISSION AND RESULT PROCESSING
153
154 You submit a request by calling the relevant C<eio_TYPE> function with the
155 required parameters, a callback of type C<int (*eio_cb)(eio_req *req)>
156 (called C<eio_cb> below) and a freely usable C<void *data> argument.
157
158 The return value will either be 0
159
160 The callback will be called with an C<eio_req *> which contains the
161 results of the request. The members you can access inside that structure
162 vary from request to request, except for:
163
164 =over 4
165
166 =item C<ssize_t result>
167
168 This contains the result value from the call (usually the same as the
169 syscall of the same name).
170
171 =item C<int errorno>
172
173 This contains the value of C<errno> after the call.
174
175 =item C<void *data>
176
177 The C<void *data> member simply stores the value of the C<data> argument.
178
179 =back
180
181 The return value of the callback is normally C<0>, which tells libeio to
182 continue normally. If a callback returns a nonzero value, libeio will
183 stop processing results (in C<eio_poll>) and will return the value to its
184 caller.
185
186 Memory areas passed to libeio must stay valid as long as a request
187 executes, with the exception of paths, which are being copied
188 internally. Any memory libeio itself allocates will be freed after the
189 finish callback has been called. If you want to manage all memory passed
190 to libeio yourself you can use the low-level API.
191
192 For example, to open a file, you could do this:
193
194 static int
195 file_open_done (eio_req *req)
196 {
197 if (req->result < 0)
198 {
199 /* open() returned -1 */
200 errno = req->errorno;
201 perror ("open");
202 }
203 else
204 {
205 int fd = req->result;
206 /* now we have the new fd in fd */
207 }
208
209 return 0;
210 }
211
212 /* the first three arguments are passed to open(2) */
213 /* the remaining are priority, callback and data */
214 if (!eio_open ("/etc/passwd", O_RDONLY, 0, 0, file_open_done, 0))
215 abort (); /* something ent wrong, we will all die!!! */
216
217 Note that you additionally need to call C<eio_poll> when the C<want_cb>
218 indicates that requests are ready to be processed.
219
220 =head2 AVAILABLE REQUESTS
221
222 The following request functions are available. I<All> of them return the
223 C<eio_req *> on success and C<0> on failure, and I<all> of them have the
224 same three trailing arguments: C<pri>, C<cb> and C<data>. The C<cb> is
225 mandatory, but in most cases, you pass in C<0> as C<pri> and C<0> or some
226 custom data value as C<data>.
227
228 =head3 POSIX API WRAPPERS
229
230 These requests simply wrap the POSIX call of the same name, with the same
231 arguments:
232
233 =over 4
234
235 =item eio_open (const char *path, int flags, mode_t mode, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
236
237 =item eio_utime (const char *path, eio_tstamp atime, eio_tstamp mtime, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
238
239 =item eio_truncate (const char *path, off_t offset, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
240
241 =item eio_chown (const char *path, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
242
243 =item eio_chmod (const char *path, mode_t mode, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
244
245 =item eio_mkdir (const char *path, mode_t mode, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
246
247 =item eio_rmdir (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
248
249 =item eio_unlink (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
250
251 =item eio_readlink (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data) /* result=ptr2 allocated dynamically */
252
253 =item eio_stat (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data) /* stat buffer=ptr2 allocated dynamically */
254
255 =item eio_lstat (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data) /* stat buffer=ptr2 allocated dynamically */
256
257 =item eio_statvfs (const char *path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data) /* stat buffer=ptr2 allocated dynamically */
258
259 =item eio_mknod (const char *path, mode_t mode, dev_t dev, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
260
261 =item eio_link (const char *path, const char *new_path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
262
263 =item eio_symlink (const char *path, const char *new_path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
264
265 =item eio_rename (const char *path, const char *new_path, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
266
267 =item eio_msync (void *addr, size_t length, int flags, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
268
269 =item eio_mlock (void *addr, size_t length, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
270
271 =item eio_mlockall (int flags, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
272
273 =item eio_close (int fd, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
274
275 =item eio_sync (int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
276
277 =item eio_fsync (int fd, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
278
279 =item eio_fdatasync (int fd, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
280
281 =item eio_futime (int fd, eio_tstamp atime, eio_tstamp mtime, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
282
283 =item eio_ftruncate (int fd, off_t offset, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
284
285 =item eio_fchmod (int fd, mode_t mode, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
286
287 =item eio_fchown (int fd, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
288
289 =item eio_dup2 (int fd, int fd2, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
290
291 These have the same semantics as the syscall of the same name, their
292 return value is available as C<< req->result >> later.
293
294 =item eio_read (int fd, void *buf, size_t length, off_t offset, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
295
296 =item eio_write (int fd, void *buf, size_t length, off_t offset, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
297
298 These two requests are called C<read> and C<write>, but actually wrap
299 C<pread> and C<pwrite>. On systems that lack these calls (such as cygwin),
300 libeio uses lseek/read_or_write/lseek and a mutex to serialise the
301 requests, so all these requests run serially and do not disturb each
302 other. However, they still disturb the file offset while they run, so it's
303 not safe to call these functions concurrently with non-libeio functions on
304 the same fd on these systems.
305
306 Not surprisingly, pread and pwrite are not thread-safe on Darwin (OS/X),
307 so it is advised not to submit multiple requests on the same fd on this
308 horrible pile of garbage.
309
310 =item eio_fstat (int fd, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
311
312 Stats a file - if C<< req->result >> indicates success, then you can
313 access the C<struct stat>-like structure via C<< req->ptr2 >>:
314
315 EIO_STRUCT_STAT *statdata = (EIO_STRUCT_STAT *)req->ptr2;
316
317 =item eio_fstatvfs (int fd, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data) /* stat buffer=ptr2 allocated dynamically */
318
319 Stats a filesystem - if C<< req->result >> indicates success, then you can
320 access the C<struct statvfs>-like structure via C<< req->ptr2 >>:
321
322 EIO_STRUCT_STATVFS *statdata = (EIO_STRUCT_STATVFS *)req->ptr2;
323
324 =back
325
326 =head3 READING DIRECTORIES
327
328 Reading directories sounds simple, but can be rather demanding, especially
329 if you want to do stuff such as traversing a diretcory hierarchy or
330 processing all files in a directory. Libeio can assist thess complex tasks
331 with it's C<eio_readdir> call.
332
333 =over 4
334
335 =item eio_readdir (const char *path, int flags, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
336
337 This is a very complex call. It basically reads through a whole directory
338 (via the C<opendir>, C<readdir> and C<closedir> calls) and returns either
339 the names or an array of C<struct eio_dirent>, depending on the C<flags>
340 argument.
341
342 The C<< req->result >> indicates either the number of files found, or
343 C<-1> on error. On success, zero-terminated names can be found as C<< req->ptr2 >>,
344 and C<struct eio_dirents>, if requested by C<flags>, can be found via C<<
345 req->ptr1 >>.
346
347 Here is an example that prints all the names:
348
349 int i;
350 char *names = (char *)req->ptr2;
351
352 for (i = 0; i < req->result; ++i)
353 {
354 printf ("name #%d: %s\n", i, names);
355
356 /* move to next name */
357 names += strlen (names) + 1;
358 }
359
360 Pseudo-entries such as F<.> and F<..> are never returned by C<eio_readdir>.
361
362 C<flags> can be any combination of:
363
364 =over 4
365
366 =item EIO_READDIR_DENTS
367
368 If this flag is specified, then, in addition to the names in C<ptr2>,
369 also an array of C<struct eio_dirent> is returned, in C<ptr1>. A C<struct
370 eio_dirent> looks like this:
371
372 struct eio_dirent
373 {
374 int nameofs; /* offset of null-terminated name string in (char *)req->ptr2 */
375 unsigned short namelen; /* size of filename without trailing 0 */
376 unsigned char type; /* one of EIO_DT_* */
377 signed char score; /* internal use */
378 ino_t inode; /* the inode number, if available, otherwise unspecified */
379 };
380
381 The only members you normally would access are C<nameofs>, which is the
382 byte-offset from C<ptr2> to the start of the name, C<namelen> and C<type>.
383
384 C<type> can be one of:
385
386 C<EIO_DT_UNKNOWN> - if the type is not known (very common) and you have to C<stat>
387 the name yourself if you need to know,
388 one of the "standard" POSIX file types (C<EIO_DT_REG>, C<EIO_DT_DIR>, C<EIO_DT_LNK>,
389 C<EIO_DT_FIFO>, C<EIO_DT_SOCK>, C<EIO_DT_CHR>, C<EIO_DT_BLK>)
390 or some OS-specific type (currently
391 C<EIO_DT_MPC> - multiplexed char device (v7+coherent),
392 C<EIO_DT_NAM> - xenix special named file,
393 C<EIO_DT_MPB> - multiplexed block device (v7+coherent),
394 C<EIO_DT_NWK> - HP-UX network special,
395 C<EIO_DT_CMP> - VxFS compressed,
396 C<EIO_DT_DOOR> - solaris door, or
397 C<EIO_DT_WHT>).
398
399 This example prints all names and their type:
400
401 int i;
402 struct eio_dirent *ents = (struct eio_dirent *)req->ptr1;
403 char *names = (char *)req->ptr2;
404
405 for (i = 0; i < req->result; ++i)
406 {
407 struct eio_dirent *ent = ents + i;
408 char *name = names + ent->nameofs;
409
410 printf ("name #%d: %s (type %d)\n", i, name, ent->type);
411 }
412
413 =item EIO_READDIR_DIRS_FIRST
414
415 When this flag is specified, then the names will be returned in an order
416 where likely directories come first, in optimal C<stat> order. This is
417 useful when you need to quickly find directories, or you want to find all
418 directories while avoiding to stat() each entry.
419
420 If the system returns type information in readdir, then this is used
421 to find directories directly. Otherwise, likely directories are names
422 beginning with ".", or otherwise names with no dots, of which names with
423 short names are tried first.
424
425 =item EIO_READDIR_STAT_ORDER
426
427 When this flag is specified, then the names will be returned in an order
428 suitable for stat()'ing each one. That is, when you plan to stat()
429 all files in the given directory, then the returned order will likely
430 be fastest.
431
432 If both this flag and C<EIO_READDIR_DIRS_FIRST> are specified, then
433 the likely dirs come first, resulting in a less optimal stat order.
434
435 =item EIO_READDIR_FOUND_UNKNOWN
436
437 This flag should not be specified when calling C<eio_readdir>. Instead,
438 it is being set by C<eio_readdir> (you can access the C<flags> via C<<
439 req->int1 >>, when any of the C<type>'s found were C<EIO_DT_UNKNOWN>. The
440 absense of this flag therefore indicates that all C<type>'s are known,
441 which can be used to speed up some algorithms.
442
443 A typical use case would be to identify all subdirectories within a
444 directory - you would ask C<eio_readdir> for C<EIO_READDIR_DIRS_FIRST>. If
445 then this flag is I<NOT> set, then all the entries at the beginning of the
446 returned array of type C<EIO_DT_DIR> are the directories. Otherwise, you
447 should start C<stat()>'ing the entries starting at the beginning of the
448 array, stopping as soon as you found all directories (the count can be
449 deduced by the link count of the directory).
450
451 =back
452
453 =back
454
455 =head3 OS-SPECIFIC CALL WRAPPERS
456
457 These wrap OS-specific calls (usually Linux ones), and might or might not
458 be emulated on other operating systems. Calls that are not emulated will
459 return C<-1> and set C<errno> to C<ENOSYS>.
460
461 =over 4
462
463 =item eio_sendfile (int out_fd, int in_fd, off_t in_offset, size_t length, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
464
465 Wraps the C<sendfile> syscall. The arguments follow the Linux version, but
466 libeio supports and will use similar calls on FreeBSD, HP/UX, Solaris and
467 Darwin.
468
469 If the OS doesn't support some sendfile-like call, or the call fails,
470 indicating support for the given file descriptor type (for example,
471 Linux's sendfile might not support file to file copies), then libeio will
472 emulate the call in userspace, so there are almost no limitations on its
473 use.
474
475 =item eio_readahead (int fd, off_t offset, size_t length, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
476
477 Calls C<readahead(2)>. If the syscall is missing, then the call is
478 emulated by simply reading the data (currently in 64kiB chunks).
479
480 =item eio_sync_file_range (int fd, off_t offset, size_t nbytes, unsigned int flags, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
481
482 Calls C<sync_file_range>. If the syscall is missing, then this is the same
483 as calling C<fdatasync>.
484
485 =back
486
487 =head3 LIBEIO-SPECIFIC REQUESTS
488
489 These requests are specific to libeio and do not correspond to any OS call.
490
491 =over 4
492
493 =item eio_mtouch (void *addr, size_t length, int flags, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
494
495 Reads (C<flags == 0>) or modifies (C<flags == EIO_MT_MODIFY) the given
496 memory area, page-wise, that is, it reads (or reads and writes back) the
497 first octet of every page that spans the memory area.
498
499 This can be used to page in some mmapped file, or dirty some pages. Note
500 that dirtying is an unlocked read-write access, so races can ensue when
501 the some other thread modifies the data stored in that memory area.
502
503 =item eio_custom (void (*)(eio_req *) execute, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
504
505 Executes a custom request, i.e., a user-specified callback.
506
507 The callback gets the C<eio_req *> as parameter and is expected to read
508 and modify any request-specific members. Specifically, it should set C<<
509 req->result >> to the result value, just like other requests.
510
511 Here is an example that simply calls C<open>, like C<eio_open>, but it
512 uses the C<data> member as filename and uses a hardcoded C<O_RDONLY>. If
513 you want to pass more/other parameters, you either need to pass some
514 struct or so via C<data> or provide your own wrapper using the low-level
515 API.
516
517 static int
518 my_open_done (eio_req *req)
519 {
520 int fd = req->result;
521
522 return 0;
523 }
524
525 static void
526 my_open (eio_req *req)
527 {
528 req->result = open (req->data, O_RDONLY);
529 }
530
531 eio_custom (my_open, 0, my_open_done, "/etc/passwd");
532
533 =item eio_busy (eio_tstamp delay, int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
534
535 This is a a request that takes C<delay> seconds to execute, but otherwise
536 does nothing - it simply puts one of the worker threads to sleep for this
537 long.
538
539 This request can be used to artificially increase load, e.g. for debugging
540 or benchmarking reasons.
541
542 =item eio_nop (int pri, eio_cb cb, void *data)
543
544 This request does nothing, except go through the whole request cycle. This
545 can be used to measure latency or in some cases to simplify code, but is
546 not really of much use.
547
548 =back
549
550 =head3 GROUPING AND LIMITING REQUESTS
551
552 #TODO
553
554 /*****************************************************************************/
555 /* groups */
556
557 eio_req *eio_grp (eio_cb cb, void *data);
558 void eio_grp_feed (eio_req *grp, void (*feed)(eio_req *req), int limit);
559 void eio_grp_limit (eio_req *grp, int limit);
560 void eio_grp_add (eio_req *grp, eio_req *req);
561 void eio_grp_cancel (eio_req *grp); /* cancels all sub requests but not the group */
562
563
564 =back
565
566
567 =head1 LOW LEVEL REQUEST API
568
569 #TODO
570
571
572 =head1 ANATOMY AND LIFETIME OF AN EIO REQUEST
573
574 A request is represented by a structure of type C<eio_req>. To initialise
575 it, clear it to all zero bytes:
576
577 eio_req req;
578
579 memset (&req, 0, sizeof (req));
580
581 A more common way to initialise a new C<eio_req> is to use C<calloc>:
582
583 eio_req *req = calloc (1, sizeof (*req));
584
585 In either case, libeio neither allocates, initialises or frees the
586 C<eio_req> structure for you - it merely uses it.
587
588 zero
589
590 #TODO
591
592 =head2 CONFIGURATION
593
594 The functions in this section can sometimes be useful, but the default
595 configuration will do in most case, so you should skip this section on
596 first reading.
597
598 =over 4
599
600 =item eio_set_max_poll_time (eio_tstamp nseconds)
601
602 This causes C<eio_poll ()> to return after it has detected that it was
603 running for C<nsecond> seconds or longer (this number can be fractional).
604
605 This can be used to limit the amount of time spent handling eio requests,
606 for example, in interactive programs, you might want to limit this time to
607 C<0.01> seconds or so.
608
609 Note that:
610
611 a) libeio doesn't know how long your request callbacks take, so the time
612 spent in C<eio_poll> is up to one callback invocation longer then this
613 interval.
614
615 b) this is implemented by calling C<gettimeofday> after each request,
616 which can be costly.
617
618 c) at least one request will be handled.
619
620 =item eio_set_max_poll_reqs (unsigned int nreqs)
621
622 When C<nreqs> is non-zero, then C<eio_poll> will not handle more than
623 C<nreqs> requests per invocation. This is a less costly way to limit the
624 amount of work done by C<eio_poll> then setting a time limit.
625
626 If you know your callbacks are generally fast, you could use this to
627 encourage interactiveness in your programs by setting it to C<10>, C<100>
628 or even C<1000>.
629
630 =item eio_set_min_parallel (unsigned int nthreads)
631
632 Make sure libeio can handle at least this many requests in parallel. It
633 might be able handle more.
634
635 =item eio_set_max_parallel (unsigned int nthreads)
636
637 Set the maximum number of threads that libeio will spawn.
638
639 =item eio_set_max_idle (unsigned int nthreads)
640
641 Libeio uses threads internally to handle most requests, and will start and stop threads on demand.
642
643 This call can be used to limit the number of idle threads (threads without
644 work to do): libeio will keep some threads idle in preparation for more
645 requests, but never longer than C<nthreads> threads.
646
647 In addition to this, libeio will also stop threads when they are idle for
648 a few seconds, regardless of this setting.
649
650 =item unsigned int eio_nthreads ()
651
652 Return the number of worker threads currently running.
653
654 =item unsigned int eio_nreqs ()
655
656 Return the number of requests currently handled by libeio. This is the
657 total number of requests that have been submitted to libeio, but not yet
658 destroyed.
659
660 =item unsigned int eio_nready ()
661
662 Returns the number of ready requests, i.e. requests that have been
663 submitted but have not yet entered the execution phase.
664
665 =item unsigned int eio_npending ()
666
667 Returns the number of pending requests, i.e. requests that have been
668 executed and have results, but have not been finished yet by a call to
669 C<eio_poll>).
670
671 =back
672
673 =head1 EMBEDDING
674
675 Libeio can be embedded directly into programs. This functionality is not
676 documented and not (yet) officially supported.
677
678 Note that, when including C<libeio.m4>, you are responsible for defining
679 the compilation environment (C<_LARGEFILE_SOURCE>, C<_GNU_SOURCE> etc.).
680
681 If you need to know how, check the C<IO::AIO> perl module, which does
682 exactly that.
683
684
685 =head1 COMPILETIME CONFIGURATION
686
687 These symbols, if used, must be defined when compiling F<eio.c>.
688
689 =over 4
690
691 =item EIO_STACKSIZE
692
693 This symbol governs the stack size for each eio thread. Libeio itself
694 was written to use very little stackspace, but when using C<EIO_CUSTOM>
695 requests, you might want to increase this.
696
697 If this symbol is undefined (the default) then libeio will use its default
698 stack size (C<sizeof (long) * 4096> currently). If it is defined, but
699 C<0>, then the default operating system stack size will be used. In all
700 other cases, the value must be an expression that evaluates to the desired
701 stack size.
702
703 =back
704
705
706 =head1 PORTABILITY REQUIREMENTS
707
708 In addition to a working ISO-C implementation, libeio relies on a few
709 additional extensions:
710
711 =over 4
712
713 =item POSIX threads
714
715 To be portable, this module uses threads, specifically, the POSIX threads
716 library must be available (and working, which partially excludes many xBSD
717 systems, where C<fork ()> is buggy).
718
719 =item POSIX-compatible filesystem API
720
721 This is actually a harder portability requirement: The libeio API is quite
722 demanding regarding POSIX API calls (symlinks, user/group management
723 etc.).
724
725 =item C<double> must hold a time value in seconds with enough accuracy
726
727 The type C<double> is used to represent timestamps. It is required to
728 have at least 51 bits of mantissa (and 9 bits of exponent), which is good
729 enough for at least into the year 4000. This requirement is fulfilled by
730 implementations implementing IEEE 754 (basically all existing ones).
731
732 =back
733
734 If you know of other additional requirements drop me a note.
735
736
737 =head1 AUTHOR
738
739 Marc Lehmann <libeio@schmorp.de>.
740