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Revision: 1.34
Committed: Wed Jun 26 00:01:46 2019 UTC (4 years, 10 months ago) by root
Content type: text/plain
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.33: +7 -3 lines
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# User Rev Content
1 root 1.1 /*
2     * libev linux aio fd activity backend
3     *
4     * Copyright (c) 2019 Marc Alexander Lehmann <libev@schmorp.de>
5     * All rights reserved.
6     *
7     * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modifica-
8     * tion, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
9     *
10     * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
11     * this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
12     *
13     * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
14     * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
15     * documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
16     *
17     * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
18     * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MER-
19     * CHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
20     * EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPE-
21     * CIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
22     * PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
23     * OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
24     * WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTH-
25     * ERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED
26     * OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
27     *
28     * Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of
29     * the GNU General Public License ("GPL") version 2 or any later version,
30     * in which case the provisions of the GPL are applicable instead of
31     * the above. If you wish to allow the use of your version of this file
32     * only under the terms of the GPL and not to allow others to use your
33     * version of this file under the BSD license, indicate your decision
34     * by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice
35     * and other provisions required by the GPL. If you do not delete the
36     * provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under
37     * either the BSD or the GPL.
38     */
39    
40 root 1.25 /*
41     * general notes about linux aio:
42     *
43     * a) at first, the linux aio IOCB_CMD_POLL functionality introduced in
44     * 4.18 looks too good to be true: both watchers and events can be
45     * batched, and events can even be handled in userspace using
46     * a ring buffer shared with the kernel. watchers can be canceled
47     * regardless of whether the fd has been closed. no problems with fork.
48     * ok, the ring buffer is 200% undocumented (there isn't even a
49     * header file), but otherwise, it's pure bliss!
50     * b) ok, watchers are one-shot, so you have to re-arm active ones
51     * on every iteration. so much for syscall-less event handling,
52     * but at least these re-arms can be batched, no big deal, right?
53     * c) well, linux as usual: the documentation lies to you: io_submit
54     * sometimes returns EINVAL because the kernel doesn't feel like
55     * handling your poll mask - ttys can be polled for POLLOUT,
56     * POLLOUT|POLLIN, but polling for POLLIN fails. just great,
57     * so we have to fall back to something else (hello, epoll),
58     * but at least the fallback can be slow, because these are
59     * exceptional cases, right?
60     * d) hmm, you have to tell the kernel the maximum number of watchers
61 root 1.27 * you want to queue when initialising the aio context. but of
62 root 1.25 * course the real limit is magically calculated in the kernel, and
63     * is often higher then we asked for. so we just have to destroy
64     * the aio context and re-create it a bit larger if we hit the limit.
65     * (starts to remind you of epoll? well, it's a bit more deterministic
66     * and less gambling, but still ugly as hell).
67     * e) that's when you find out you can also hit an arbitrary system-wide
68     * limit. or the kernel simply doesn't want to handle your watchers.
69     * what the fuck do we do then? you guessed it, in the middle
70     * of event handling we have to switch to 100% epoll polling. and
71     * that better is as fast as normal epoll polling, so you practically
72     * have to use the normal epoll backend with all its quirks.
73 root 1.27 * f) end result of this train wreck: it inherits all the disadvantages
74 root 1.25 * from epoll, while adding a number on its own. why even bother to use
75     * it? because if conditions are right and your fds are supported and you
76     * don't hit a limit, this backend is actually faster, doesn't gamble with
77     * your fds, batches watchers and events and doesn't require costly state
78     * recreates. well, until it does.
79     * g) all of this makes this backend use almost twice as much code as epoll.
80 root 1.27 * which in turn uses twice as much code as poll. and that#s not counting
81 root 1.25 * the fact that this backend also depends on the epoll backend, making
82     * it three times as much code as poll, or kqueue.
83     * h) bleah. why can't linux just do kqueue. sure kqueue is ugly, but by now
84 root 1.27 * it's clear that whatever linux comes up with is far, far, far worse.
85 root 1.25 */
86 root 1.10
87 root 1.1 #include <sys/time.h> /* actually linux/time.h, but we must assume they are compatible */
88 root 1.2 #include <poll.h>
89 root 1.1 #include <linux/aio_abi.h>
90    
91     /*****************************************************************************/
92 root 1.25 /* syscall wrapdadoop - this section has the raw api/abi definitions */
93 root 1.1
94     #include <sys/syscall.h> /* no glibc wrappers */
95    
96 root 1.5 /* aio_abi.h is not versioned in any way, so we cannot test for its existance */
97 root 1.1 #define IOCB_CMD_POLL 5
98    
99 root 1.25 /* taken from linux/fs/aio.c. yup, that's a .c file.
100     * not only is this totally undocumented, not even the source code
101     * can tell you what the future semantics of compat_features and
102     * incompat_features are, or what header_length actually is for.
103     */
104 root 1.1 #define AIO_RING_MAGIC 0xa10a10a1
105     #define AIO_RING_INCOMPAT_FEATURES 0
106     struct aio_ring
107     {
108     unsigned id; /* kernel internal index number */
109     unsigned nr; /* number of io_events */
110     unsigned head; /* Written to by userland or by kernel. */
111     unsigned tail;
112    
113     unsigned magic;
114     unsigned compat_features;
115     unsigned incompat_features;
116     unsigned header_length; /* size of aio_ring */
117    
118     struct io_event io_events[0];
119     };
120    
121 root 1.30 /*
122     * define some syscall wrappers for common architectures
123     * this is mostly for nice looks during debugging, not performance.
124     * our syscalls return < 0, not == -1, on error. which is good
125     * enough for linux aio.
126     * TODO: arm is also common nowadays, maybe even mips and x86
127     * TODO: after implementing this, it suddenly looks like overkill, but its hard to remove...
128     */
129 root 1.32 #if __GNUC__ && __linux && ECB_AMD64 && !defined __OPTIMIZE_SIZE__
130     /* the costly errno access probably kills this for size optimisation */
131 root 1.30
132     #define ev_syscall(nr,narg,arg1,arg2,arg3,arg4,arg5) \
133     ({ \
134     long res; \
135     register unsigned long r5 __asm__ ("r8" ); \
136     register unsigned long r4 __asm__ ("r10"); \
137     register unsigned long r3 __asm__ ("rdx"); \
138     register unsigned long r2 __asm__ ("rsi"); \
139     register unsigned long r1 __asm__ ("rdi"); \
140     if (narg >= 5) r5 = (unsigned long)(arg5); \
141     if (narg >= 4) r4 = (unsigned long)(arg4); \
142     if (narg >= 3) r3 = (unsigned long)(arg3); \
143     if (narg >= 2) r2 = (unsigned long)(arg2); \
144     if (narg >= 1) r1 = (unsigned long)(arg1); \
145     __asm__ __volatile__ ( \
146     "syscall\n\t" \
147     : "=a" (res) \
148     : "0" (nr), "r" (r1), "r" (r2), "r" (r3), "r" (r4), "r" (r5) \
149     : "cc", "r11", "cx", "memory"); \
150     errno = -res; \
151     res; \
152     })
153    
154     #endif
155    
156     #ifdef ev_syscall
157     #define ev_syscall0(nr) ev_syscall (nr, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0
158     #define ev_syscall1(nr,arg1) ev_syscall (nr, 1, arg1, 0, 0, 0, 0)
159     #define ev_syscall2(nr,arg1,arg2) ev_syscall (nr, 2, arg1, arg2, 0, 0, 0)
160     #define ev_syscall3(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3) ev_syscall (nr, 3, arg1, arg2, arg3, 0, 0)
161     #define ev_syscall4(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3,arg4) ev_syscall (nr, 3, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, 0)
162     #define ev_syscall5(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3,arg4,arg5) ev_syscall (nr, 5, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
163     #else
164     #define ev_syscall0(nr) syscall (nr)
165     #define ev_syscall1(nr,arg1) syscall (nr, arg1)
166     #define ev_syscall2(nr,arg1,arg2) syscall (nr, arg1, arg2)
167     #define ev_syscall3(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3) syscall (nr, arg1, arg2, arg3)
168     #define ev_syscall4(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3,arg4) syscall (nr, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4)
169     #define ev_syscall5(nr,arg1,arg2,arg3,arg4,arg5) syscall (nr, arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4, arg5)
170     #endif
171    
172 root 1.6 inline_size
173     int
174 root 1.20 evsys_io_setup (unsigned nr_events, aio_context_t *ctx_idp)
175 root 1.1 {
176 root 1.30 return ev_syscall2 (SYS_io_setup, nr_events, ctx_idp);
177 root 1.1 }
178    
179 root 1.6 inline_size
180     int
181 root 1.20 evsys_io_destroy (aio_context_t ctx_id)
182 root 1.1 {
183 root 1.30 return ev_syscall1 (SYS_io_destroy, ctx_id);
184 root 1.1 }
185    
186 root 1.6 inline_size
187     int
188 root 1.20 evsys_io_submit (aio_context_t ctx_id, long nr, struct iocb *cbp[])
189 root 1.1 {
190 root 1.30 return ev_syscall3 (SYS_io_submit, ctx_id, nr, cbp);
191 root 1.1 }
192    
193 root 1.6 inline_size
194     int
195 root 1.20 evsys_io_cancel (aio_context_t ctx_id, struct iocb *cbp, struct io_event *result)
196 root 1.1 {
197 root 1.30 return ev_syscall3 (SYS_io_cancel, ctx_id, cbp, result);
198 root 1.1 }
199    
200 root 1.6 inline_size
201     int
202 root 1.20 evsys_io_getevents (aio_context_t ctx_id, long min_nr, long nr, struct io_event *events, struct timespec *timeout)
203 root 1.1 {
204 root 1.30 return ev_syscall5 (SYS_io_getevents, ctx_id, min_nr, nr, events, timeout);
205 root 1.1 }
206    
207     /*****************************************************************************/
208     /* actual backed implementation */
209    
210 root 1.25 ecb_cold
211     static int
212     linuxaio_nr_events (EV_P)
213     {
214     /* we start with 16 iocbs and incraese from there
215     * that's tiny, but the kernel has a rather low system-wide
216     * limit that can be reached quickly, so let's be parsimonious
217     * with this resource.
218     * Rest assured, the kernel generously rounds up small and big numbers
219     * in different ways (but doesn't seem to charge you for it).
220     * The 15 here is because the kernel usually has a power of two as aio-max-nr,
221     * and this helps to take advantage of that limit.
222     */
223    
224     /* we try to fill 4kB pages exactly.
225     * the ring buffer header is 32 bytes, every io event is 32 bytes.
226     * the kernel takes the io requests number, doubles it, adds 2
227     * and adds the ring buffer.
228     * the way we use this is by starting low, and then roughly doubling the
229     * size each time we hit a limit.
230     */
231    
232     int requests = 15 << linuxaio_iteration;
233     int one_page = (4096
234     / sizeof (struct io_event) ) / 2; /* how many fit into one page */
235     int first_page = ((4096 - sizeof (struct aio_ring))
236     / sizeof (struct io_event) - 2) / 2; /* how many fit into the first page */
237    
238     /* if everything fits into one page, use count exactly */
239     if (requests > first_page)
240     /* otherwise, round down to full pages and add the first page */
241     requests = requests / one_page * one_page + first_page;
242    
243     return requests;
244     }
245    
246 root 1.27 /* we use out own wrapper structure in case we ever want to do something "clever" */
247 root 1.1 typedef struct aniocb
248     {
249     struct iocb io;
250     /*int inuse;*/
251     } *ANIOCBP;
252    
253     inline_size
254     void
255 root 1.22 linuxaio_array_needsize_iocbp (ANIOCBP *base, int offset, int count)
256 root 1.1 {
257     while (count--)
258     {
259 root 1.27 /* TODO: quite the overhead to allocate every iocb separately, maybe use our own allocator? */
260 root 1.22 ANIOCBP iocb = (ANIOCBP)ev_malloc (sizeof (*iocb));
261    
262     /* full zero initialise is probably not required at the moment, but
263     * this is not well documented, so we better do it.
264     */
265     memset (iocb, 0, sizeof (*iocb));
266    
267     iocb->io.aio_lio_opcode = IOCB_CMD_POLL;
268     iocb->io.aio_data = offset;
269     iocb->io.aio_fildes = offset;
270    
271     base [offset++] = iocb;
272 root 1.1 }
273     }
274    
275 root 1.6 ecb_cold
276 root 1.1 static void
277     linuxaio_free_iocbp (EV_P)
278     {
279     while (linuxaio_iocbpmax--)
280     ev_free (linuxaio_iocbps [linuxaio_iocbpmax]);
281    
282 root 1.6 linuxaio_iocbpmax = 0; /* next resize will completely reallocate the array, at some overhead */
283 root 1.1 }
284    
285     static void
286     linuxaio_modify (EV_P_ int fd, int oev, int nev)
287     {
288     array_needsize (ANIOCBP, linuxaio_iocbps, linuxaio_iocbpmax, fd + 1, linuxaio_array_needsize_iocbp);
289 root 1.22 ANIOCBP iocb = linuxaio_iocbps [fd];
290 root 1.1
291 root 1.10 if (iocb->io.aio_reqprio < 0)
292     {
293 root 1.25 /* we handed this fd over to epoll, so undo this first */
294 root 1.34 /* we do it manually because the optimisations on epoll_modify won't do us any good */
295 root 1.10 epoll_ctl (backend_fd, EPOLL_CTL_DEL, fd, 0);
296 root 1.30 anfds [fd].emask = 0;
297 root 1.10 iocb->io.aio_reqprio = 0;
298     }
299    
300 root 1.1 if (iocb->io.aio_buf)
301 root 1.34 {
302     evsys_io_cancel (linuxaio_ctx, &iocb->io, (struct io_event *)0);
303     /* on relevant kernels, io_cancel fails with EINPROGRES if everything is fine */
304     assert (("libev: linuxaio unexpected io_cancel failed", errno != EINPROGRESS));
305     }
306 root 1.1
307     if (nev)
308     {
309 root 1.22 iocb->io.aio_buf =
310 root 1.1 (nev & EV_READ ? POLLIN : 0)
311     | (nev & EV_WRITE ? POLLOUT : 0);
312    
313     /* queue iocb up for io_submit */
314     /* this assumes we only ever get one call per fd per loop iteration */
315     ++linuxaio_submitcnt;
316     array_needsize (struct iocb *, linuxaio_submits, linuxaio_submitmax, linuxaio_submitcnt, array_needsize_noinit);
317     linuxaio_submits [linuxaio_submitcnt - 1] = &iocb->io;
318     }
319     }
320    
321 root 1.19 static void
322 root 1.25 linuxaio_epoll_cb (EV_P_ struct ev_io *w, int revents)
323 root 1.19 {
324 root 1.25 epoll_poll (EV_A_ 0);
325 root 1.19 }
326    
327     static void
328 root 1.25 linuxaio_fd_rearm (EV_P_ int fd)
329 root 1.19 {
330 root 1.25 anfds [fd].events = 0;
331     linuxaio_iocbps [fd]->io.aio_buf = 0;
332     fd_change (EV_A_ fd, EV_ANFD_REIFY);
333 root 1.19 }
334    
335 root 1.1 static void
336     linuxaio_parse_events (EV_P_ struct io_event *ev, int nr)
337     {
338     while (nr)
339     {
340     int fd = ev->data;
341     int res = ev->res;
342    
343 root 1.2 assert (("libev: iocb fd must be in-bounds", fd >= 0 && fd < anfdmax));
344 root 1.1
345     /* feed events, we do not expect or handle POLLNVAL */
346 root 1.21 fd_event (
347     EV_A_
348     fd,
349     (res & (POLLOUT | POLLERR | POLLHUP) ? EV_WRITE : 0)
350     | (res & (POLLIN | POLLERR | POLLHUP) ? EV_READ : 0)
351     );
352 root 1.1
353 root 1.25 /* linux aio is oneshot: rearm fd. TODO: this does more work than needed */
354     linuxaio_fd_rearm (EV_A_ fd);
355    
356 root 1.1 --nr;
357     ++ev;
358     }
359     }
360    
361 root 1.27 /* get any events from ring buffer, return true if any were handled */
362 root 1.1 static int
363     linuxaio_get_events_from_ring (EV_P)
364     {
365     struct aio_ring *ring = (struct aio_ring *)linuxaio_ctx;
366    
367 root 1.13 /* the kernel reads and writes both of these variables, */
368     /* as a C extension, we assume that volatile use here */
369     /* both makes reads atomic and once-only */
370     unsigned head = *(volatile unsigned *)&ring->head;
371 root 1.1 unsigned tail = *(volatile unsigned *)&ring->tail;
372    
373 root 1.6 if (head == tail)
374     return 0;
375    
376 root 1.7 /* bail out if the ring buffer doesn't match the expected layout */
377 root 1.17 if (expect_false (ring->magic != AIO_RING_MAGIC)
378     || ring->incompat_features != AIO_RING_INCOMPAT_FEATURES
379     || ring->header_length != sizeof (struct aio_ring)) /* TODO: or use it to find io_event[0]? */
380 root 1.1 return 0;
381    
382 root 1.12 /* make sure the events up to tail are visible */
383 root 1.9 ECB_MEMORY_FENCE_ACQUIRE;
384    
385 root 1.1 /* parse all available events, but only once, to avoid starvation */
386     if (tail > head) /* normal case around */
387     linuxaio_parse_events (EV_A_ ring->io_events + head, tail - head);
388 root 1.6 else /* wrapped around */
389 root 1.1 {
390     linuxaio_parse_events (EV_A_ ring->io_events + head, ring->nr - head);
391     linuxaio_parse_events (EV_A_ ring->io_events, tail);
392     }
393    
394 root 1.28 ECB_MEMORY_FENCE_RELEASE;
395 root 1.16 /* as an extension to C, we hope that the volatile will make this atomic and once-only */
396 root 1.11 *(volatile unsigned *)&ring->head = tail;
397 root 1.1
398     return 1;
399     }
400    
401     /* read at least one event from kernel, or timeout */
402     inline_size
403     void
404     linuxaio_get_events (EV_P_ ev_tstamp timeout)
405     {
406     struct timespec ts;
407 root 1.18 struct io_event ioev[1];
408 root 1.1 int res;
409    
410     if (linuxaio_get_events_from_ring (EV_A))
411     return;
412    
413     /* no events, so wait for at least one, then poll ring buffer again */
414 root 1.7 /* this degrades to one event per loop iteration */
415 root 1.1 /* if the ring buffer changes layout, but so be it */
416    
417 root 1.19 EV_RELEASE_CB;
418    
419 root 1.1 ts.tv_sec = (long)timeout;
420     ts.tv_nsec = (long)((timeout - ts.tv_sec) * 1e9);
421    
422 root 1.20 res = evsys_io_getevents (linuxaio_ctx, 1, sizeof (ioev) / sizeof (ioev [0]), ioev, &ts);
423 root 1.1
424 root 1.19 EV_ACQUIRE_CB;
425    
426 root 1.1 if (res < 0)
427 root 1.10 if (errno == EINTR)
428     /* ignored */;
429     else
430     ev_syserr ("(libev) linuxaio io_getevents");
431 root 1.1 else if (res)
432     {
433 root 1.31 /* at least one event available, handle it and any remaining ones in the ring buffer */
434 root 1.18 linuxaio_parse_events (EV_A_ ioev, res);
435 root 1.1 linuxaio_get_events_from_ring (EV_A);
436     }
437     }
438    
439 root 1.31 inline_size
440     int
441 root 1.25 linuxaio_io_setup (EV_P)
442     {
443     linuxaio_ctx = 0;
444     return evsys_io_setup (linuxaio_nr_events (EV_A), &linuxaio_ctx);
445     }
446    
447 root 1.1 static void
448     linuxaio_poll (EV_P_ ev_tstamp timeout)
449     {
450     int submitted;
451    
452     /* first phase: submit new iocbs */
453    
454     /* io_submit might return less than the requested number of iocbs */
455     /* this is, afaics, only because of errors, but we go by the book and use a loop, */
456 root 1.27 /* which allows us to pinpoint the erroneous iocb */
457 root 1.1 for (submitted = 0; submitted < linuxaio_submitcnt; )
458     {
459 root 1.20 int res = evsys_io_submit (linuxaio_ctx, linuxaio_submitcnt - submitted, linuxaio_submits + submitted);
460 root 1.1
461 root 1.17 if (expect_false (res < 0))
462 root 1.25 if (errno == EINVAL)
463 root 1.10 {
464 root 1.15 /* This happens for unsupported fds, officially, but in my testing,
465 root 1.10 * also randomly happens for supported fds. We fall back to good old
466     * poll() here, under the assumption that this is a very rare case.
467 root 1.19 * See https://lore.kernel.org/patchwork/patch/1047453/ to see
468     * discussion about such a case (ttys) where polling for POLLIN
469     * fails but POLLIN|POLLOUT works.
470 root 1.10 */
471     struct iocb *iocb = linuxaio_submits [submitted];
472 root 1.25 epoll_modify (EV_A_ iocb->aio_fildes, 0, anfds [iocb->aio_fildes].events);
473     iocb->aio_reqprio = -1; /* mark iocb as epoll */
474 root 1.10
475 root 1.25 res = 1; /* skip this iocb - another iocb, another chance */
476     }
477     else if (errno == EAGAIN)
478     {
479     /* This happens when the ring buffer is full, or some other shit we
480 root 1.27 * don't know and isn't documented. Most likely because we have too
481 root 1.25 * many requests and linux aio can't be assed to handle them.
482     * In this case, we try to allocate a larger ring buffer, freeing
483     * ours first. This might fail, in which case we have to fall back to 100%
484     * epoll.
485     * God, how I hate linux not getting its act together. Ever.
486     */
487     evsys_io_destroy (linuxaio_ctx);
488     linuxaio_submitcnt = 0;
489    
490     /* rearm all fds with active iocbs */
491     {
492     int fd;
493     for (fd = 0; fd < linuxaio_iocbpmax; ++fd)
494     if (linuxaio_iocbps [fd]->io.aio_buf)
495     linuxaio_fd_rearm (EV_A_ fd);
496     }
497    
498     ++linuxaio_iteration;
499     if (linuxaio_io_setup (EV_A) < 0)
500     {
501     /* to bad, we can't get a new aio context, go 100% epoll */
502     linuxaio_free_iocbp (EV_A);
503     ev_io_stop (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w);
504     ev_ref (EV_A);
505     linuxaio_ctx = 0;
506     backend_modify = epoll_modify;
507     backend_poll = epoll_poll;
508     }
509 root 1.21
510 root 1.25 timeout = 0;
511     /* it's easiest to handle this mess in another iteration */
512     return;
513 root 1.10 }
514 root 1.21 else if (errno == EBADF)
515     {
516 root 1.34 assert (("libev: event loop rejected bad fd", errno != EBADF));
517 root 1.21 fd_kill (EV_A_ linuxaio_submits [submitted]->aio_fildes);
518    
519     res = 1; /* skip this iocb */
520     }
521 root 1.1 else
522 root 1.8 ev_syserr ("(libev) linuxaio io_submit");
523 root 1.1
524     submitted += res;
525     }
526    
527     linuxaio_submitcnt = 0;
528    
529     /* second phase: fetch and parse events */
530    
531     linuxaio_get_events (EV_A_ timeout);
532     }
533    
534     inline_size
535     int
536     linuxaio_init (EV_P_ int flags)
537     {
538     /* would be great to have a nice test for IOCB_CMD_POLL instead */
539 root 1.2 /* also: test some semi-common fd types, such as files and ttys in recommended_backends */
540 root 1.27 /* 4.18 introduced IOCB_CMD_POLL, 4.19 made epoll work, and we need that */
541 root 1.15 if (ev_linux_version () < 0x041300)
542     return 0;
543 root 1.25
544     if (!epoll_init (EV_A_ 0))
545 root 1.1 return 0;
546    
547 root 1.25 linuxaio_iteration = 0;
548 root 1.1
549 root 1.25 if (linuxaio_io_setup (EV_A) < 0)
550 root 1.10 {
551 root 1.25 epoll_destroy (EV_A);
552 root 1.10 return 0;
553     }
554    
555     ev_io_init (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w, linuxaio_epoll_cb, backend_fd, EV_READ);
556 root 1.19 ev_set_priority (&linuxaio_epoll_w, EV_MAXPRI);
557 root 1.10 ev_io_start (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w);
558 root 1.14 ev_unref (EV_A); /* watcher should not keep loop alive */
559 root 1.10
560 root 1.1 backend_modify = linuxaio_modify;
561     backend_poll = linuxaio_poll;
562    
563     linuxaio_iocbpmax = 0;
564     linuxaio_iocbps = 0;
565    
566     linuxaio_submits = 0;
567     linuxaio_submitmax = 0;
568     linuxaio_submitcnt = 0;
569    
570     return EVBACKEND_LINUXAIO;
571     }
572    
573     inline_size
574     void
575     linuxaio_destroy (EV_P)
576     {
577 root 1.25 epoll_destroy (EV_A);
578 root 1.1 linuxaio_free_iocbp (EV_A);
579 root 1.33 evsys_io_destroy (linuxaio_ctx); /* fails in child, aio context is destroyed */
580 root 1.1 }
581    
582     inline_size
583     void
584     linuxaio_fork (EV_P)
585     {
586 root 1.6 /* this frees all iocbs, which is very heavy-handed */
587 root 1.2 linuxaio_destroy (EV_A);
588 root 1.6 linuxaio_submitcnt = 0; /* all pointers were invalidated */
589 root 1.2
590 root 1.25 linuxaio_iteration = 0; /* we start over in the child */
591    
592     while (linuxaio_io_setup (EV_A) < 0)
593 root 1.8 ev_syserr ("(libev) linuxaio io_setup");
594 root 1.2
595 root 1.33 /* forking epoll should also effectively unregister all fds from the backend */
596 root 1.25 epoll_fork (EV_A);
597 root 1.10
598     ev_io_stop (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w);
599 root 1.25 ev_io_set (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w, backend_fd, EV_READ);
600 root 1.10 ev_io_start (EV_A_ &linuxaio_epoll_w);
601    
602 root 1.25 /* epoll_fork already did this. hopefully */
603     /*fd_rearm_all (EV_A);*/
604 root 1.1 }
605