vote up 12 vote down star
3

There are pages scattered around the web that describe POSIX AIO facilities in varying amounts of detail. None of them are terribly recent. It's not clear what, exactly, they're describing. For example, the "official" (?) web site for Linux kernel asynchronous I/O support here says that sockets don't work, but the "aio.h" manual pages on my Ubuntu 8.04.1 workstation all seem to imply that it works for arbitrary file descriptors. Then there's another project that seems to work at the library layer with even less documentation.

I'd like to know:

  • What is the purpose of POSIX AIO? Given that the most obvious example of an implementation I can find says it doesn't support sockets, the whole thing seems weird to me. Is it just for async disk I/O? If so, why the hyper-general API? If not, why is disk I/O the first thing that got attacked?
  • Where are there example complete POSIX AIO programs that I can look at?
  • Does anyone actually use it, for real?
  • What platforms support POSIX AIO? What parts of it do they support? Does anyone really support the implied "Any I/O to any FD" that <aio.h> seems to promise?

The other multiplexing mechanisms available to me are perfectly good, but the random fragments of information floating around out there have made me curious.

flag

50% accept rate

1 Answer

vote up 9 vote down check

Network I/O is not a priority for AIO because everyone writing POSIX network servers uses an event based, non-blocking approach. The old-style Java "billions of blocking threads" approach sucks horribly.

Disk write I/O is already buffered and disk read I/O can be prefetched into buffer using functions like posix_fadvise. That leaves direct, unbuffered disk I/O as the only useful purpose for AIO.

Direct, unbuffered I/O is only really useful for transactional databases, and those tend to write their own threads or processes to manage their disk I/O.

So, at the end that leaves POSIX AIO in the position of not serving any useful purpose. Don't use it.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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