Module Linux_ext.Epoll
epoll(): a Linux I/O multiplexer of the same family as select() or poll(). Its main differences are support for Edge- or Level-triggered notifications (we're using Level-triggered to emulate "select") and much better scaling with the number of file descriptors.
See the man pages for a full description of the epoll facility.
module Flags : sig ... end
type t
An
Epoll.t
maintains a map fromFile_descr.t
toFlags.t
, where the domain is the set of file descriptors that one is interested in, and the flags associated with each file descriptor specify the types of events one is interested in being notified about for that file descriptor. Our implementation maintains a user-level table equivalent to the kernel epoll set, so thatsexp_of_t
produces useful human-readable information, and so that we can present our standard table interface.The implementation assumes that one never closes a file descriptor that is the domain of an
Epoll.t
, since doing so might remove thefd
from the kernel epoll set without the implementation's knowledge.An
Epoll.t
also has a buffer that is used to store the set of readyfd
s returned by callingwait
.
val sexp_of_t : t -> Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexp.t
val invariant : t -> unit
val create : (num_file_descrs:int -> max_ready_events:int -> t) Core.Or_error.t
create ~num_file_descrs
creates a new epoll set able to watch file descriptors in [0,num_file_descrs
). Additionally, the set allocates space for reading the "ready" events whenwait
returns, allowing for up tomax_ready_events
to be returned in a single call towait
.
val close : t -> unit
val find_exn : t -> Core.Unix.File_descr.t -> Flags.t
val set : t -> Core.Unix.File_descr.t -> Flags.t -> unit
val remove : t -> Core.Unix.File_descr.t -> unit
val iter : t -> f:(Core.Unix.File_descr.t -> Flags.t -> unit) -> unit
val wait : t -> timeout:[ `Never | `Immediately | `After of Core.Time_ns.Span.t ] -> [ `Ok | `Timeout ]
wait t ~timeout
blocks until at least one file descriptor int
is ready for one of the events it is being watched for, ortimeout
passes.wait
side effectst
by storing the ready set in it. One can subsequently access the ready set by callingiter_ready
orfold_ready
.With
wait ~timeout:(`After span)
,span <= 0
is treated as0
. Ifspan > 0
, thenspan
is rounded to the nearest millisecond, with a minimum value of one millisecond.Note that this method should not be considered thread-safe. There is mutable state in
t
that will be changed by invocations towait
that cannot be prevented by mutexes aroundwait
.
val wait_timeout_after : t -> Core.Time_ns.Span.t -> [ `Ok | `Timeout ]
wait_timeout_after t span = wait t ~timeout:(`After span)
.wait_timeout_after
is a performance hack to avoid allocating`After span
.
val iter_ready : t -> f:(Core.Unix.File_descr.t -> Flags.t -> unit) -> unit
iter_ready
andfold_ready
iterate over the ready set computed by the last call towait
.
module Expert : sig ... end