3

I am curious how epoll_wait() receives the event that a registered socket (with epoll_ctl()) is ready for read/write.

I believe that glibc magically handles it.

Then, is there a document describing how the following events can be triggered for a socket?

  1. EPOLLPRI
  2. EPOLLRDNORM
  3. EPOLLRDBAND
  4. EPOLLWRNORM
  5. EPOLLWRBAND
  6. EPOLLMSG
  7. EPOLLERR
  8. EPOLLHUP
  9. EPOLLRDHUP

P.S. Originally I was trying to paste the enum EPOLL_EVENTS in sys/epoll.h on my box here; stackoverflow thinks that I don't format the code block correctly although I wrapped it with pre and then code tag, any idea?

3

2 Answers 2

10

The most glaring problem with epoll documentation is its failure to state in "bold caps" that epoll events, are, in fact, fully identical to poll (2) events. Indeed, on the kernel side epoll handles its events in terms of older poll event names:

#define POLLIN     0x0001  // EPOLLIN
#define POLLPRI    0x0002  // EPOLLPRI
#define POLLOUT    0x0004  // EPOLLOUT
#define POLLERR    0x0008  // EPOLLERR
#define POLLHUP    0x0010  // EPOLLHUP
#define POLLNVAL   0x0020  // unused in epoll
#define POLLRDNORM 0x0040  // EPOLLRDNORM
#define POLLRDBAND 0x0080  // EPOLLRDBAND
#define POLLWRNORM 0x0100  // EPOLLWRNORM
#define POLLWRBAND 0x0200  // EPOLLWRBAND
#define POLLMSG    0x0400  // EPOLLMSG
#define POLLREMOVE 0x1000  // unused in epoll
#define POLLRDHUP  0x2000  // EPOLLRDHUP

Then, a brief inspection of kernel source reveals that:

  • EPOLLIN and EPOLLRDNORM are identical (epoll returns EPOLLIN | EPOLLRDNORM when data is available for reading from the file descriptor).

  • EPOLLOUT and EPOLLWRNORM are identical (epoll returns EPOLLOUT | EPOLLWRNORM when buffer space is available for writing).

  • EPOLLRDBAND and EPOLLWRBAND signal availability of the out of band data on the descriptor (on some sockets this will be the data send with MSG_OOB flag passed to socket).

  • EPOLLPRI is a modifier flag and always augments some other event (such as EPOLLERR). It's use is subsystem dependent, as it may mean somewhat different things depending on what purpose associated file descriptor serves.

  • EPOLLMSG appears to be unused by the kernel and appears to serve no purpose.

  • EPOLLRDHUP signals that the peer had closed its side of the channel for reading, but may still receive data (handy to establish that no more request data is coming in).

  • EPOLLHUP signals that the peer had closed its side of the channel.

2

All the critical work for epoll is done in the kernel, the user space API is just an interface. The previous thread on Why exactly does ePoll scale better than Poll? covers the details of how the kernel implements epoll is nice details.

As for a document describing the events and how they are triggered the epoll_ctl(2) man page covers each event, for example:

EPOLLIN
          The associated file is available for read(2) operations.

EPOLLOUT
          The associated file is available for write(2) operations.

For a better description of EPOLLET you need to read the epoll(7) man page.

This is a complete example of how to use epoll.

You use epoll_ctl to request which events you wish to receive events EPOLLIN and EPOLLET, the code above does this:

event.events = EPOLLIN | EPOLLET;
s = epoll_ctl (efd, EPOLL_CTL_ADD, infd, &event);
5
  • My questions are that there are many other possible events (as I listed in my original questions). However, there is no document mentioning under what situation each type of event on the socket will be propagated to epoll_wait(). Let's take an example, what happens to the socket that epoll_wait() will receive EPOLLRDNORM?
    – Hei
    Aug 8, 2013 at 10:09
  • By the way, although your link doesn't answer my question, it does have a lot of good information. Thanks for sharing Shafik!
    – Hei
    Aug 8, 2013 at 11:19
  • @Hei I will clarify, you use epoll_ctl to request which of the events you wish to receive, I will add a link to example code. Aug 8, 2013 at 17:29
  • Hi Shafik, I think you misinterpreted my question. Let's stick with what you just added. Let's say I set event.events to EPOLLIN | EPOLLET | EPOLLRDNORM. Then, when will I receive EPOLLRDNORM? I think possible answer is: 1. never (then why? any document says so?). 2. when x happens (then any document says so?). My main question is that there are many events specified in epoll.h, but I don't see any document talking about some of those I listed in my original question.
    – Hei
    Aug 9, 2013 at 9:23
  • @Hei I had several references, I thought the one I linked covered all of them but this one does except one it looks like: turing.com.br/pydoc/2.7/library/select.html let me see if I can dig up a better one Aug 9, 2013 at 9:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.