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   _newselect    ( 2 )

синхронное мультиплексирование ввода / вывода (synchronous I/O multiplexing)

Примечание (Note)

An fd_set is a fixed size buffer. Executing FD_CLR() or FD_SET() with a value of fd that is negative or is equal to or larger than FD_SETSIZE will result in undefined behavior. Moreover, POSIX requires fd to be a valid file descriptor.

The operation of select() and pselect() is not affected by the O_NONBLOCK flag.

On some other UNIX systems, select() can fail with the error EAGAIN if the system fails to allocate kernel-internal resources, rather than ENOMEM as Linux does. POSIX specifies this error for poll(2), but not for select(). Portable programs may wish to check for EAGAIN and loop, just as with EINTR.

The self-pipe trick On systems that lack pselect(), reliable (and more portable) signal trapping can be achieved using the self-pipe trick. In this technique, a signal handler writes a byte to a pipe whose other end is monitored by select() in the main program. (To avoid possibly blocking when writing to a pipe that may be full or reading from a pipe that may be empty, nonblocking I/O is used when reading from and writing to the pipe.)

Emulating usleep(3) Before the advent of usleep(3), some code employed a call to select() with all three sets empty, nfds zero, and a non-NULL timeout as a fairly portable way to sleep with subsecond precision.

Correspondence between select() and poll() notifications Within the Linux kernel source, we find the following definitions which show the correspondence between the readable, writable, and exceptional condition notifications of select() and the event notifications provided by poll(2) and epoll(7):

#define POLLIN_SET (EPOLLRDNORM | EPOLLRDBAND | EPOLLIN | EPOLLHUP | EPOLLERR) /* Ready for reading */ #define POLLOUT_SET (EPOLLWRBAND | EPOLLWRNORM | EPOLLOUT | EPOLLERR) /* Ready for writing */ #define POLLEX_SET (EPOLLPRI) /* Exceptional condition */

Multithreaded applications If a file descriptor being monitored by select() is closed in another thread, the result is unspecified. On some UNIX systems, select() unblocks and returns, with an indication that the file descriptor is ready (a subsequent I/O operation will likely fail with an error, unless another process reopens file descriptor between the time select() returned and the I/O operation is performed). On Linux (and some other systems), closing the file descriptor in another thread has no effect on select(). In summary, any application that relies on a particular behavior in this scenario must be considered buggy.

C library/kernel differences The Linux kernel allows file descriptor sets of arbitrary size, determining the length of the sets to be checked from the value of nfds. However, in the glibc implementation, the fd_set type is fixed in size. See also BUGS.

The pselect() interface described in this page is implemented by glibc. The underlying Linux system call is named pselect6(). This system call has somewhat different behavior from the glibc wrapper function.

The Linux pselect6() system call modifies its timeout argument. However, the glibc wrapper function hides this behavior by using a local variable for the timeout argument that is passed to the system call. Thus, the glibc pselect() function does not modify its timeout argument; this is the behavior required by POSIX.1-2001.

The final argument of the pselect6() system call is not a sigset_t * pointer, but is instead a structure of the form:

struct { const kernel_sigset_t *ss; /* Pointer to signal set */ size_t ss_len; /* Size (in bytes) of object pointed to by 'ss' */ };

This allows the system call to obtain both a pointer to the signal set and its size, while allowing for the fact that most architectures support a maximum of 6 arguments to a system call. See sigprocmask(2) for a discussion of the difference between the kernel and libc notion of the signal set.

Historical glibc details Glibc 2.0 provided an incorrect version of pselect() that did not take a sigmask argument.

In glibc versions 2.1 to 2.2.1, one must define _GNU_SOURCE in order to obtain the declaration of pselect() from <sys/select.h>.