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- .TH QIO 9
- .SH NAME
- qio: qget, qdiscard, qconsume, qpass, qproduce, qcopy, qopen, qbread, qread, qbwrite, qwrite, qiwrite, qfree, qclose, qhangup, qreopen, qlen, qwindow, qcanread, qsetlimit, qnoblock, qflush, qfull \- queued I/O for devices
- .SH SYNOPSIS
- .ta \w'\fLQueue* 'u
- .B
- Queue* qopen(int limit,int msg, void (*kick)(void*),void *arg)
- .PP
- .B
- void qhangup(Queue *q, char *reason)
- .PP
- .B
- void qclose(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- void qreopen(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- void qfree(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- long qbwrite(Queue *q, Block *b)
- .PP
- .B
- long qwrite(Queue *q, void *buf, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- int qpass(Queue *q, Block *b)
- .PP
- .B
- int qpassnolim(Queue *q, Block *b)
- .PP
- .B
- int qproduce(Queue *q, void *buf, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- int qiwrite(Queue *q, void *buf, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- Block* qbread(Queue *q, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- long qread(Queue *q, void *buf, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- Block* qcopy(Queue *q, int len, ulong offset)
- .PP
- .B
- Block* qget(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- int qconsume(Queue *q, void *buf, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- int qdiscard(Queue *q, int len)
- .PP
- .B
- void qflush(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- int qlen(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- int qwindow(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- int qcanread(Queue *q)
- .PP
- .B
- void qsetlimit(Queue *q, int limit)
- .PP
- .B
- void qnoblock(Queue *q, int nonblock)
- .PP
- .B
- int qfull(Queue *q)
- .SH DESCRIPTION
- This suite of functions provides serial data buffering for device drivers.
- Data is stored in a
- .B Queue
- structure as a sequence of variable-sized
- .BR Blocks ;
- see
- .IR allocb (9).
- .PP
- .I Qopen
- initialises and returns a pointer to a new
- .BR Queue ,
- configuring it according to the following parameters:
- .TF limit
- .PD
- .TP
- .I limit
- Set the queue limit (high water mark) in bytes.
- .TP
- .I msg
- Set message mode if non-zero; otherwise, stream mode (discussed below).
- .TP
- .I kick
- Optional flow-control function called by
- .I qbread
- to restart writers, and by
- .I qbwrite
- (also
- .IR qiwrite )
- to restart readers.
- .TP
- .I arg
- Argument to pass to
- .I kick
- .PP
- .I Qhangup
- marks
- .I q
- as `hung up'
- for the given
- .IR reason
- .RB ( Ehungup
- by default).
- Subsequent attempts to write to the queue raise an
- .IR error (9).
- .I Qhangup
- does not flush the queue: subsequent read requests are
- handled normally until the queue empties.
- .I Qread
- and the other functions then return their conventional values
- for a hungup stream: 0, -1 or a null pointer, depending on the function.
- After a few such attempts by any process, an
- .IR error (9)
- is raised (typically
- .BR Ehungup )
- on each subsequent read.
- .PP
- If queued data is left unread, and not flushed by
- .I qflush
- or
- .IR qclose ,
- the data will again be readable following a subsequent
- .IR qreopen .
- .PP
- .I Qclose
- also marks a given
- .I q
- as `hung up',
- but removes and frees any queued data Blocks.
- .I Qclose
- ignores calls when
- .I q
- is null.
- .PP
- .I Qreopen
- makes a closed or hung up queue available for use again.
- The queue's data limit is reset to the
- .I limit
- value given when the queue was first created by
- .IR qopen ,
- cancelling the effect of any previous call to
- .IR qsetlimit .
- .PP
- .I Qfree
- closes
- .I q
- with
- .I qclose
- and frees it.
- The caller must ensure that no references remain;
- these functions do not keep a reference count.
- .SS "Flow control"
- The queue I/O routines provide a flow control mechanism to coordinate producers and consumers.
- Each queue has a limit on the number of bytes queued, its `high water mark',
- initially set when the queue is created, but adjustable by
- .IR qsetlimit ,
- below.
- The low water mark is not set explicitly:
- it is always half the current queue limit.
- When the high water mark is exceeded, writes normally block until a reader drains the
- queue below its low water mark; the writer is then allowed to proceed.
- Conversely, readers normally block when the queue is empty, until a writer
- arrives with data, or the queue is closed.
- .PP
- A queue can be given a
- .I kick
- function when the queue is created by
- .IR qopen .
- The function is invoked by
- .IR qread
- and
- .IR qbread ,
- to prod an output routine when the queue falls below the low-water mark, and by
- .IR qwrite ,
- .IR qbwrite
- and
- .IR qiwrite ,
- to notify a reader that a queue is no longer empty.
- Because
- .I kick
- is called from the reading (or writing) process, or an interrupt handler, it
- must not block.
- .PP
- Interrupt handlers must not
- .IR sleep (9),
- and are therefore restricted to using only the non-blocking functions described below.
- .SS "Stream mode and message mode"
- In stream mode,
- no read will return more than one
- block
- of data, but
- a read can split a block that contains more data than requested, leaving the remainder
- in a new block at the front of the Queue.
- Writes of more than the maximum
- .B Block
- size (currently 128k bytes)
- are split into as many Blocks as required, each written separately to the queue,
- in order, but with possible flow-control between them.
- The queue is locked meanwhile, however, so that data from other writers is not intermingled.
- .PP
- In message mode, by contrast, a read will return at most
- one block's worth of data, but the remainder of a partially-read block will be discarded,
- not returned to the queue.
- If a write count exceeds the maximum
- .B Block
- size, the excess data is discarded:
- at most a single block can be queued.
- .PP
- The mode of the queue should be taken into account in the descriptions below
- of the following functions:
- .IR qwrite ,
- .IR qiwrite ,
- .IR qbread
- and
- .IR qconsume .
- No other functions are aware of the distinction.
- .SS "Write operations (flow controlled)"
- .I Qwrite
- copies
- .I len
- bytes of data from
- .I buf
- into one or more
- .B Blocks
- which it places on the
- .IR q .
- .I Qwrite
- always returns
- .IR len .
- It can implement message mode.
- .PP
- .I Qbwrite
- places the single Block
- .I b
- on the tail of
- .IR q ,
- waking any sleeping reader.
- If the queue is full, the
- writing process blocks until a reader
- has reduced the queued data to
- the low-water mark;
- if the queue is non-blocking
- (see
- .I qnoblock
- below),
- the data is discarded without notice.
- .I Qbwrite
- normally returns
- .IR len ,
- but raises an
- .IR error (9)
- if the queue is closed (see
- .I qhangup
- and
- .IR qclose ).
- The block
- .I b
- is always freed.
- Note that
- .I b
- can be empty (zero-length), to punctuate the data in a queue.
- .I Qbwrite
- cannot handle a list of Blocks;
- .I qpass
- must be used instead.
- .SS Non-blocking writes
- .PP
- .I Qproduce
- returns -1immediately if
- .I q
- is full.
- Otherwise, it queues
- .I len
- bytes of data from
- .I buf
- in a single
- .B Block
- on
- .I q
- and returns the number of bytes written.
- .PP
- .I Qpass
- attempts to place the list of Blocks headed by
- .I b
- on
- .IR q ,
- returning the number of bytes written if successful.
- If
- .I q
- was full, it
- frees the Block list
- .I b
- and returns -1.
- .PP
- .I Qpassnolim
- puts the Block list
- .I b
- on
- .I q
- regardless of flow control; it returns the number of bytes in the list
- .IR b .
- .PP
- .I Qiwrite
- is a variant of
- .I qwrite
- used exclusively by the kernel print function,
- to allow printing by interrupt handlers;
- .I qiwrite
- could be used with care by other routines, but
- .IR qproduce
- is preferable.
- .I Qiwrite
- writes the
- .I len
- bytes of data at
- .I buf
- into the
- .I q
- without regard to flow control;
- the writer never blocks.
- The queue is assumed to be open.
- .I Qiwrite
- always returns
- .IR len .
- It can implement message mode.
- .SS "Read operations (flow controlled)"
- .I Qbread
- blocks until data arrives on
- .IR q ,
- then
- returns the first
- .BR Block ;
- it limits the data returned
- to
- .I len
- bytes (in the manner depending on the mode of
- .IR q ).
- It returns a null pointer if the queue has hung up.
- .PP
- .I Qread
- reads a Block of up to
- .I len
- bytes from
- .I q
- using
- .IR qbread ,
- and copies the data in the Block into
- .IR buf ,
- then frees the Block and returns
- the number of bytes read.
- .I Qread
- returns 0 on end of file or error (hangup).
- It can implement message mode.
- .PP
- .I Qcopy
- returns a Block with a copy of data from the queue (the data remains on the queue).
- The copy begins
- .I offset
- bytes into the queue's data and proceeds until
- .I len
- bytes have been copied or no more data remains.
- The Block's read and write pointers delimit the data copied into it.
- .I Qcopy
- can be used by a reliable transport protocol to copy a packet for transmission,
- leaving the data queued for possible retransmission, if unacknowledged.
- .SS Non-blocking reads
- .PP
- .I Qconsume
- returns -1 immediately if
- .I q
- is empty.
- Otherwise, it
- copies up to
- .I len
- bytes from the first
- .B Block
- on the queue into
- .IR buf ,
- returning the number of bytes copied.
- It can implement message mode.
- .PP
- .I Qget
- returns a null pointer immediately if
- .I q
- is empty or closed.
- Otherwise, it
- returns the first
- .B Block
- on the queue.
- .SS "Discard and flush"
- .I Qdiscard
- removes the first
- .I len
- data bytes from
- .IR q ;
- it returns the number of bytes actually discarded, in case
- the queue is shorter than
- .IR len .
- If the queue drains below the low-water mark,
- .I qdiscard
- wakes any sleeping writers.
- Since it does not block,
- .I qdiscard
- can safely be called from interrupt handlers.
- It is useful in transport protocol drivers to remove data from the queue
- once acknowledged.
- .PP
- .I Qflush
- discards all data waiting on
- .IR q ,
- waking any waiting writer.
- .SS "Queue status"
- The following functions return a Queue's status.
- Note that between a call to one of these functions and another operation,
- the state can change if a driver allows concurrent access by
- either another process or an interrupt handler.
- .PP
- .I Qlen
- returns the number of bytes queued on
- .IR q .
- .PP
- .I Qwindow
- returns the number of bytes that can be written before reaching the queue's high-water mark.
- A return of 0 means that a write operation will certainly block;
- a non-zero return gives no guarantees (see
- .IR qfull ,
- below).
- .PP
- .I Qcanread
- returns 1 if any data queued is queued. A subsequent read operation will not block.
- .PP
- .I Qfull
- returns non-zero if
- .I q
- is flow-controlled and a write would block or a non-blocking write would return an error.
- (Note that the implementation allows
- .I qwindow
- to return non-zero yet
- .I qfull
- to return true.)
- .SS "Queue control"
- .I Qsetlimit
- sets the high water mark for the queue to
- .IR limit .
- Note that
- .I qopen
- saves the initial queue limit.
- If the queue is closed and reopened (by
- .IR qreopen )
- that initial limit is restored.
- .PP
- .I Qnoblock
- sets or resets non-blocking mode.
- If
- .I nonblock
- is non-zero,
- the queue becomes non-blocking, and
- data written to a queue beyond its high water mark is discarded
- by calls that would otherwise block.
- .SH SOURCE
- .B /sys/src/9/port/qio.c
- .SH SEE ALSO
- .IR allocb (9),
- .IR ref (9)
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