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select, pselect, FD_CLR, FD_ISSET, FD_SET, FD_ZERO — synchronous I/O multiplexing
/* According to POSIX.1-2001 */ #include <sys/select.h> /* According to earlier standards */ #include <sys/time.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <unistd.h>
int
select( |
int nfds, |
fd_set *readfds, | |
fd_set *writefds, | |
fd_set *exceptfds, | |
struct timeval *utimeout) ; |
void
FD_CLR( |
int fd, |
fd_set *set) ; |
int
FD_ISSET( |
int fd, |
fd_set *set) ; |
void
FD_SET( |
int fd, |
fd_set *set) ; |
void
FD_ZERO( |
fd_set *set) ; |
#include <sys/select.h>
int
pselect( |
int nfds, |
fd_set *readfds, | |
fd_set *writefds, | |
fd_set *exceptfds, | |
const struct timespec *ntimeout, | |
const sigset_t *sigmask) ; |
Note | |||
---|---|---|---|
|
select
() (or pselect
()) is used to efficiently monitor
multiple file descriptors, to see if any of them is, or
becomes, "ready"; that is, to see whether I/O becomes
possible, or an "exceptional condition" has occurred on any
of the descriptors.
Its principal arguments are three "sets" of file
descriptors: readfds
,
writefds
, and
exceptfds
. Each set
is declared as type fd_set
, and its contents can
be manipulated with the macros FD_CLR
(), FD_ISSET
(), FD_SET
(), and FD_ZERO
(). A newly declared set should
first be cleared using FD_ZERO
(). select
() modifies the contents of the sets
according to the rules described below; after calling
select
() you can test if a file
descriptor is still present in a set with the FD_ISSET
() macro. FD_ISSET
() returns nonzero if a specified
file descriptor is present in a set and zero if it is not.
FD_CLR
() removes a file
descriptor from a set.
readfds
This set is watched to see if data is available
for reading from any of its file descriptors. After
select
() has returned,
readfds
will
be cleared of all file descriptors except for those
that are immediately available for reading.
writefds
This set is watched to see if there is space to
write data to any of its file descriptors. After
select
() has returned,
writefds
will
be cleared of all file descriptors except for those
that are immediately available for writing.
exceptfds
This set is watched for "exceptional conditions".
In practice, only one such exceptional condition is
common: the availability of out-of-band
(OOB)
data for reading from a TCP socket. See recv(2), send(2), and
tcp(7) for more
details about OOB data. (One other less common case
where select(2) indicates
an exceptional condition occurs with pseudoterminals
in packet mode; see tty_ioctl(4).)
After select
() has
returned, exceptfds
will be
cleared of all file descriptors except for those for
which an exceptional condition has occurred.
nfds
This is an integer one more than the maximum of
any file descriptor in any of the sets. In other
words, while adding file descriptors to each of the
sets, you must calculate the maximum integer value of
all of them, then increment this value by one, and
then pass this as nfds
.
utimeout
This is the longest time select
() may wait before returning,
even if nothing interesting happened. If this value
is passed as NULL, then select
() blocks indefinitely
waiting for a file descriptor to become ready.
utimeout
can
be set to zero seconds, which causes select
() to return immediately,
with information about the readiness of file
descriptors at the time of the call. The structure
struct timeval
is defined as:
struct timeval { time_t tv_sec
; /* seconds */long tv_usec
; /* microseconds */};
ntimeout
This argument for pselect
() has the same meaning as
utimeout
, but
struct
timespec has nanosecond precision as
follows:
struct timespec { long tv_sec
; /* seconds */long tv_nsec
; /* nanoseconds */};
sigmask
This argument holds a set of signals that the
kernel should unblock (i.e., remove from the signal
mask of the calling thread), while the caller is
blocked inside the pselect
() call (see sigaddset(3) and
sigprocmask(2)). It
may be NULL, in which case the call does not modify
the signal mask on entry and exit to the function. In
this case, pselect
()
will then behave just like select
().
pselect
() is useful if you
are waiting for a signal as well as for file descriptor(s)
to become ready for I/O. Programs that receive signals
normally use the signal handler only to raise a global
flag. The global flag will indicate that the event must be
processed in the main loop of the program. A signal will
cause the select
() (or
pselect
()) call to return
with errno
set to EINTR. This behavior is essential so
that signals can be processed in the main loop of the
program, otherwise select
()
would block indefinitely. Now, somewhere in the main loop
will be a conditional to check the global flag. So we must
ask: what if a signal arrives after the conditional, but
before the select
() call? The
answer is that select
() would
block indefinitely, even though an event is actually
pending. This race condition is solved by the pselect
() call. This call can be used to
set the signal mask to a set of signals that are only to be
received within the pselect
()
call. For instance, let us say that the event in question
was the exit of a child process. Before the start of the
main loop, we would block SIGCHLD
using sigprocmask(2). Our
pselect
() call would enable
SIGCHLD
by using an empty
signal mask. Our program would look like:
static volatile sig_atomic_t got_SIGCHLD = 0; static void child_sig_handler(int sig) { got_SIGCHLD = 1; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { sigset_t sigmask, empty_mask; struct sigaction sa; fd_set readfds, writefds, exceptfds; int r; sigemptyset(&sigmask); sigaddset(&sigmask, SIGCHLD); if (sigprocmask(SIG_BLOCK, &sigmask, NULL) == −1) { perror("sigprocmask"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } sa.sa_flags = 0; sa.sa_handler = child_sig_handler; sigemptyset(&sa.sa_mask); if (sigaction(SIGCHLD, &sa, NULL) == −1) { perror("sigaction"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } sigemptyset(&empty_mask); for (;;) { /* main loop */ /* Initialize readfds, writefds, and exceptfds before the pselect() call. (Code omitted.) */ r = pselect(nfds, &readfds, &writefds, &exceptfds, NULL, &empty_mask); if (r == −1 && errno != EINTR) { /* Handle error */ } if (got_SIGCHLD) { got_SIGCHLD = 0; /* Handle signalled event here; e.g., wait() for all terminated children. (Code omitted.) */ } /* main body of program */ } }
So what is the point of select
()? Can't I just read and write to
my descriptors whenever I want? The point of select
() is that it watches multiple
descriptors at the same time and properly puts the process
to sleep if there is no activity. UNIX programmers often
find themselves in a position where they have to handle I/O
from more than one file descriptor where the data flow may
be intermittent. If you were to merely create a sequence of
read(2) and write(2) calls, you would
find that one of your calls may block waiting for data
from/to a file descriptor, while another file descriptor is
unused though ready for I/O. select
() efficiently copes with this
situation.
Many people who try to use select
() come across behavior that is
difficult to understand and produces nonportable or
borderline results. For instance, the above program is
carefully written not to block at any point, even though it
does not set its file descriptors to nonblocking mode. It
is easy to introduce subtle errors that will remove the
advantage of using select
(),
so here is a list of essentials to watch for when using
select
().
You should always try to use select
() without a timeout. Your
program should have nothing to do if there is no data
available. Code that depends on timeouts is not
usually portable and is difficult to debug.
The value nfds
must be properly
calculated for efficiency as explained above.
No file descriptor must be added to any set if you
do not intend to check its result after the
select
() call, and
respond appropriately. See next rule.
After select
()
returns, all file descriptors in all sets should be
checked to see if they are ready.
The functions read(2), recv(2), write(2), and
send(2) do
not
necessarily read/write the full amount of data that
you have requested. If they do read/write the full
amount, it's because you have a low traffic load and
a fast stream. This is not always going to be the
case. You should cope with the case of your functions
managing to send or receive only a single byte.
Never read/write only in single bytes at a time unless you are really sure that you have a small amount of data to process. It is extremely inefficient not to read/write as much data as you can buffer each time. The buffers in the example below are 1024 bytes although they could easily be made larger.
The functions read(2), recv(2), write(2), and
send(2) as well as
the select
() call can
return −1 with errno
set to EINTR, or with errno
set to EAGAIN (EWOULDBLOCK). These results must
be properly managed (not done properly above). If
your program is not going to receive any signals,
then it is unlikely you will get EINTR. If your program does not
set nonblocking I/O, you will not get EAGAIN.
Never call read(2), recv(2), write(2), or send(2) with a buffer length of zero.
If the functions read(2), recv(2), write(2), and
send(2) fail with
errors other than those listed in 7.
, or one of the
input functions returns 0, indicating end of file,
then you should not
pass that
descriptor to select
()
again. In the example below, I close the descriptor
immediately, and then set it to −1 to prevent
it being included in a set.
The timeout value must be initialized with each
new call to select
(),
since some operating systems modify the structure.
pselect
() however does
not modify its timeout structure.
Since select
()
modifies its file descriptor sets, if the call is
being used in a loop, then the sets must be
reinitialized before each call.
On systems that do not have a usleep(3) function, you
can call select
() with a
finite timeout and no file descriptors as follows:
struct timeval tv; tv.tv_sec = 0; tv.tv_usec = 200000; /* 0.2 seconds */ select(0, NULL, NULL, NULL, &tv);
This is guaranteed to work only on UNIX systems, however.
On success, select
() returns
the total number of file descriptors still present in the
file descriptor sets.
If select
() timed out, then
the return value will be zero. The file descriptors set
should be all empty (but may not be on some systems).
A return value of −1 indicates an error, with
errno
being set appropriately.
In the case of an error, the contents of the returned sets
and the struct timeout
contents are undefined and should not be used. pselect
() however never modifies ntimeout
.
Generally speaking, all operating systems that support
sockets also support select
().
select
() can be used to solve
many problems in a portable and efficient way that naive
programmers try to solve in a more complicated manner using
threads, forking, IPCs, signals, memory sharing, and so
on.
The poll(2) system call has the
same functionality as select
(),
and is somewhat more efficient when monitoring sparse file
descriptor sets. It is nowadays widely available, but
historically was less portable than select
().
The Linux-specific epoll(7) API provides an interface that is more efficient than select(2) and poll(2) when monitoring large numbers of file descriptors.
Here is an example that better demonstrates the true
utility of select
(). The
listing below is a TCP forwarding program that forwards from
one TCP port to another.
#include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <unistd.h> #include <sys/time.h> #include <sys/types.h> #include <string.h> #include <signal.h> #include <sys/socket.h> #include <netinet/in.h> #include <arpa/inet.h> #include <errno.h> static int forward_port; #undef max #define max(x,y) ((x) > (y) ? (x) : (y)) static int listen_socket(int listen_port) { struct sockaddr_in a; int s; int yes; if ((s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) == −1) { perror("socket"); return −1; } yes = 1; if (setsockopt(s, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, &yes, sizeof(yes)) == −1) { perror("setsockopt"); close(s); return −1; } memset(&a, 0, sizeof(a)); a.sin_port = htons(listen_port); a.sin_family = AF_INET; if (bind(s, (struct sockaddr *) &a, sizeof(a)) == −1) { perror("bind"); close(s); return −1; } printf("accepting connections on port %d\n", listen_port); listen(s, 10); return s; } static int connect_socket(int connect_port, char *address) { struct sockaddr_in a; int s; if ((s = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0)) == −1) { perror("socket"); close(s); return −1; } memset(&a, 0, sizeof(a)); a.sin_port = htons(connect_port); a.sin_family = AF_INET; if (!inet_aton(address, (struct in_addr *) &a.sin_addr.s_addr)) { perror("bad IP address format"); close(s); return −1; } if (connect(s, (struct sockaddr *) &a, sizeof(a)) == −1) { perror("connect()"); shutdown(s, SHUT_RDWR); close(s); return −1; } return s; } #define SHUT_FD1 do { \ if (fd1 >= 0) { \ shutdown(fd1, SHUT_RDWR); \ close(fd1); \ fd1 = −1; \ } \ } while (0) #define SHUT_FD2 do { \ if (fd2 >= 0) { \ shutdown(fd2, SHUT_RDWR); \ close(fd2); \ fd2 = −1; \ } \ } while (0) #define BUF_SIZE 1024 int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { int h; int fd1 = −1, fd2 = −1; char buf1[BUF_SIZE], buf2[BUF_SIZE]; int buf1_avail, buf1_written; int buf2_avail, buf2_written; if (argc != 4) { fprintf(stderr, "Usage\n\tfwd <listen−port> " "<forward−to−port> <forward−to−ip−address>\n"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN); forward_port = atoi(argv[2]); h = listen_socket(atoi(argv[1])); if (h == −1) exit(EXIT_FAILURE); for (;;) { int r, nfds = 0; fd_set rd, wr, er; FD_ZERO(&rd); FD_ZERO(&wr); FD_ZERO(&er); FD_SET(h, &rd); nfds = max(nfds, h); if (fd1 > 0 && buf1_avail < BUF_SIZE) { FD_SET(fd1, &rd); nfds = max(nfds, fd1); } if (fd2 > 0 && buf2_avail < BUF_SIZE) { FD_SET(fd2, &rd); nfds = max(nfds, fd2); } if (fd1 > 0 && buf2_avail − buf2_written > 0) { FD_SET(fd1, &wr); nfds = max(nfds, fd1); } if (fd2 > 0 && buf1_avail − buf1_written > 0) { FD_SET(fd2, &wr); nfds = max(nfds, fd2); } if (fd1 > 0) { FD_SET(fd1, &er); nfds = max(nfds, fd1); } if (fd2 > 0) { FD_SET(fd2, &er); nfds = max(nfds, fd2); } r = select(nfds + 1, &rd, &wr, &er, NULL); if (r == −1 && errno == EINTR) continue; if (r == −1) { perror("select()"); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } if (FD_ISSET(h, &rd)) { unsigned int l; struct sockaddr_in client_address; memset(&client_address, 0, l = sizeof(client_address)); r = accept(h, (struct sockaddr *) &client_address, &l); if (r == −1) { perror("accept()"); } else { SHUT_FD1; SHUT_FD2; buf1_avail = buf1_written = 0; buf2_avail = buf2_written = 0; fd1 = r; fd2 = connect_socket(forward_port, argv[3]); if (fd2 == −1) SHUT_FD1; else printf("connect from %s\n", inet_ntoa(client_address.sin_addr)); } } /* NB: read oob data before normal reads */ if (fd1 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd1, &er)) { char c; r = recv(fd1, &c, 1, MSG_OOB); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD1; else send(fd2, &c, 1, MSG_OOB); } if (fd2 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd2, &er)) { char c; r = recv(fd2, &c, 1, MSG_OOB); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD2; else send(fd1, &c, 1, MSG_OOB); } if (fd1 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd1, &rd)) { r = read(fd1, buf1 + buf1_avail, BUF_SIZE − buf1_avail); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD1; else buf1_avail += r; } if (fd2 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd2, &rd)) { r = read(fd2, buf2 + buf2_avail, BUF_SIZE − buf2_avail); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD2; else buf2_avail += r; } if (fd1 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd1, &wr)) { r = write(fd1, buf2 + buf2_written, buf2_avail − buf2_written); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD1; else buf2_written += r; } if (fd2 > 0) if (FD_ISSET(fd2, &wr)) { r = write(fd2, buf1 + buf1_written, buf1_avail − buf1_written); if (r < 1) SHUT_FD2; else buf1_written += r; } /* check if write data has caught read data */ if (buf1_written == buf1_avail) buf1_written = buf1_avail = 0; if (buf2_written == buf2_avail) buf2_written = buf2_avail = 0; /* one side has closed the connection, keep writing to the other side until empty */ if (fd1 < 0 && buf1_avail − buf1_written == 0) SHUT_FD2; if (fd2 < 0 && buf2_avail − buf2_written == 0) SHUT_FD1; } exit(EXIT_SUCCESS); }
The above program properly forwards most kinds of TCP
connections including OOB signal data transmitted by
telnet
servers. It
handles the tricky problem of having data flow in both
directions simultaneously. You might think it more efficient
to use a fork(2) call and devote a
thread to each stream. This becomes more tricky than you
might suspect. Another idea is to set nonblocking I/O using
fcntl(2). This also has its
problems because you end up using inefficient timeouts.
The program does not handle more than one simultaneous connection at a time, although it could easily be extended to do this with a linked list of buffers—one for each connection. At the moment, new connections cause the current connection to be dropped.
accept(2), connect(2), ioctl(2), poll(2), read(2), recv(2), select(2), send(2), sigprocmask(2), write(2), sigaddset(3), sigdelset(3), sigemptyset(3), sigfillset(3), sigismember(3), epoll(7)
This page is part of release 3.52 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting
bugs, can be found at
http://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
This manpage is copyright (C) 2001 Paul Sheer. %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one. Since the Linux kernel and libraries are constantly changing, this manual page may be incorrect or out-of-date. The author(s) assume no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. The author(s) may not have taken the same level of care in the production of this manual, which is licensed free of charge, as they might when working professionally. Formatted or processed versions of this manual, if unaccompanied by the source, must acknowledge the copyright and authors of this work. %%%LICENSE_END very minor changes, aeb Modified 5 June 2002, Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpagesgmail.com> 2006-05-13, mtk, removed much material that is redundant with select.2 various other changes 2008-01-26, mtk, substantial changes and rewrites |