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1.How to understand asynchronous io in Windows??

Read the Win32 documentation. Search on the web. Don't expect an answer to such a large, broad question here in SO.

2.If I write/read something to the file using asynchronous io :

WriteFile(); ReadFile(); WriteFile();

How many threads does the OS generate to accomplish these task?

I don't think it does. It will re-use existing thread contexts to execute kernel function calls. Basically the OS schedules the work and borrows a thread to do it - which is fine, since the kernel context is always the same.

3.Can I use multithreading and in each thread using a asynchronous io to read or write the same file?

I believe so, yes. I don't know that the order of execution is guaranteed to match the order of submission, in which case you will obtain unpredictable results if you issue concurrent reads/writes on the same byte ranges.

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1.How to understand asynchronous io in Windows??

Read the Win32 documentation. Search on the web. Don't expect an answer to such a large, broad question here in SO.

2.If I write/read something to the file using asynchronous io :

WriteFile(); ReadFile(); WriteFile();

How many threads does the OS generate to accomplish these task?

I don't think it does. It will re-use existing thread contexts to execute kernel function calls. Basically the OS schedules the work and borrows a thread to do it - which is fine, since the kernel context is always the same.

3.Can I use multithreading and in each thread using a asynchronous io to read or write the same file?

I believe so, yes.