Date: Tue, 1 Jan 2019 19:23:43 -0700 From: Alan Somers <asomers@freebsd.org> To: Willem Jan Withagen <wjw@digiware.nl> Cc: FreeBSD Hackers <freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Using kqueue with aio_read/write Message-ID: <CAOtMX2ics595SQTDR=ORF8YCTOgm9JSk-Nv1T89O6iCOp5O4fg@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <969d9a38-d3dd-78d0-c974-ba14ec4747db@digiware.nl> References: <8753521a-4555-ec2a-5efc-dee2660b4d9b@digiware.nl> <CAOtMX2iOy4Uf%2B9%2BuYhbX-wXJ68E57CjTW0aLPsa3dH__n4oP_w@mail.gmail.com> <969d9a38-d3dd-78d0-c974-ba14ec4747db@digiware.nl>
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On Tue, Jan 1, 2019 at 6:56 PM Willem Jan Withagen <wjw@digiware.nl> wrote: > > On 28/12/2018 02:47, Alan Somers wrote: > > On Thu, Dec 27, 2018 at 6:15 PM Willem Jan Withagen <wjw@digiware.nl> wrote: > >> Hi, > >> > >> Im trying to understand why I cannot get so code to work. > >> This is the smallest extract I can make to show my problem. > >> > >> I would expect the kevent() call to return every timeo tick. > >> Even if I tell it NOT to time-out I get these spurts of errors > >> > >> Since there is nothing to trigger the AIO-event, I would expect kqueue > >> to hold indefinitly. > >> > >> But it does not generate anything other than errors > >> And instead it repeatedly complains that there is a permission error: > >> get_events_kevent: EV_Error(1) kevent(): Operation not permitted > >> > >> But I'm not getting where that would the case... > >> > >> Surely a pilot error, but I do overlook it al the time. > >> So suggestions are welcome. > >> > >> Thanx, > >> --WjW > >> > >> #include <aio.h> > >> #include <errno.h> > >> #include <fcntl.h> > >> #include <stdio.h> > >> #include <stdlib.h> > >> #include <string.h> > >> #include <sys/stat.h> > >> #include <sys/event.h> > >> #include <unistd.h> > >> > >> #define BUFFER_SIZE 512 > >> #define MAX_EVENTS 32 > >> > >> #define FILENAME "/tmp/aio_test" > >> char filename[256]; > >> int fd; > >> int done = 0; > >> > >> void get_events_kevent(int fd, int kq) > >> { > >> printf("get_events function fd = %d, kq = %d\n", fd, kq); > >> int i = 0, errcnt = 0, err, ret, reterr, rev; > >> int search = 1; > >> > >> int timeout_ms = 10; > >> struct timespec timeo = { > >> timeout_ms / 1000, > >> (timeout_ms % 1000) * 1000 * 1000 > >> }; > >> struct kevent filter[16]; > >> struct kevent changed[16]; > >> > >> EV_SET(&filter[0], fd, EVFILT_AIO, > >> EV_ADD, > >> 0, 0, 0 ); > > > > This is the first problem. There's no need to explicitly set > > EVFILT_AIO on the kqueue. It gets set by the aio_read(2) or similar > > syscall. And this invocation wouldn't be correct anyway, because for > > AIO the ident field refers to the address of the struct aiocb, not the > > file descriptor. If the only events you care about are AIO, then you > > can pass NULL as the filter argument to kevent. I suspect this is the > > cause of your problem. The kernel probably thinks you're trying to > > register for an aiocb that's outside of your address space or > > something like that. > > > > > >> while (!done) { > >> printf("+"); > >> rev = kevent(kq, filter, 1, changed, 16, 0); //&timeo); > >> if (rev < 0) { > >> perror("kevent error"); > >> } else if (rev == 0) { > >> printf("T"); > >> } else { > >> printf("rev(%d)\n", rev); > >> if (changed[0].flags == EV_ERROR) { > >> errno = changed[0].data; > >> printf( "%s: EV_Error(%d) kevent(): %s\n", __func__, errno, > >> strerror(errno)); > >> memset(&changed[0], 0, sizeof(struct kevent)); > >> } else { > >> err = aio_error((struct aiocb*)changed[0].udata); > > > > No need to call aio_error(2) after kevent(2) returns. You can go > > straight to aio_return. aio_error shouldn't hurt, but it isn't > > necessary. > > According to kevent(2) calling kevent can return errors on the called > aio_calls. > It then returns with EV_ERROR in flags, and errno is stored in the > event.data. > > But what would be going on when the event's flag contains EV_ERROR but > event's data is still 0??? > > the udata field still seems to point to the aio data that was passed > into the aio block when calling aio_read(). > > Should I ignore this as a non-error? > > --WjW Are you sure you bzero()ed your aiocb before initializing it? Any stack garbage that was present in its aio_sigevent.sigev_notify_kevent_flags field will be dutifully copied into the returned kevent. And in any case, the definitive way to get the final status of a completed aio operation is with aio_return. -Alan
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