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aio_suspend(AIO)


aio_suspend, aio_suspend64 -- suspend until asynchronous I/O completes

Synopsis

   cc [options] -Kthread file
   

#include <aio.h>

int aio_suspend(const struct aiocb *list[], int nent, const struct timespec *timeout);

int aio_suspend64(const struct aiocb64 *list[], int nent, const struct timespec *timeout);

Description

aio_suspend suspends the calling thread until at least one of the asynchronous I/O operations referenced by the list argument has completed, until a signal interrupts the function, or, if timeout is not NULL, until the time interval specified by timeout has passed. If any of the aiocb structures in the list correspond to completed asynchronous I/O operations (i.e., the error status for the operation is not equal to EINPROGRESS) at the time of the call, the function returns without suspending the calling process. None of the aiocb structures in the list may have the AIO_RAW flag set.

The list argument is an array of pointers to asynchronous I/O control blocks. The nent argument indicates the number of elements in the array. Each aiocb structure pointed to is used in initiating an asynchronous I/O request via aio_read, aio_write, or lio_listio. This array may contain NULL pointers which are ignored. If this array contains pointers that refer to aiocb structures which have not been used in submitting asynchronous I/O, the effect is undefined.

If the time interval indicated in the timespec structure pointed to by timeout passes before any of the I/O operations referenced by list are completed, aio_suspend returns with an error.

Return values

If the aio_suspend or aio_suspend64 functions return after one or more asynchronous I/O operations have completed, the functions return zero. Otherwise, they return a value of -1 and set errno to indicate the error.

The application determines which asynchronous I/O completed by scanning the associated error and return status, using aio_error and aio_return (or aio_error64 and aio_return64), respectively.

Errors

If any of the following conditions occur, the aio_suspend and aio_suspend64 functions return -1 and set errno to the corresponding value:

EAGAIN
No asynchronous I/O indicated in the list referenced by list completed in the time interval indicated by timeout.

EINTR
A signal interrupted the aio_suspend or aio_suspend64 function. Note that, since each asynchronous I/O operation may possibly provoke a signal when it completes, this error return may be caused by the completion of one (or more) of the I/O operations being awaited.

ENOMEM
There were no internal kernal aio control blocks available to service the request (number of kernel aio control blocks is tunable via the NUMAIO kernel parameter; see ``Miscellaneous parameters'' in Monitoring and tuning the system).

ENOSYS
One or more of the asynchronous I/O operations referenced by the list argument had the AIO_RAW flag set.

References

aiocb(M), aio_cancel(AIO), aio_error(AIO), aio_read(AIO), aio_return(AIO), aio_write(AIO) intro(S)

Notices

In general, users should not mix notification via callback (for example, by requesting callback in the aiocb) with the use of aio_suspend or aio_suspend64. If they are mixed, the aio_suspend and aio_suspend64 calls will always return an error with errno set to EINTR.

Considerations for large file support

aio_suspend64 supports large files, but is otherwise identical to aio_suspend. For details on programming for large file capable applications, see ``Large File Support'' on intro(S).
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 - 01 June 2005