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Current scenario is epoll_wait over a couple of fds and a queue of possible incoming messages, I'd like the loop below epoll_wait to be executed on IO event or on new message.
Ways I know:

  • Use a time msec timeout and check the queue first thing in the loop
  • Use the self-pipe trick from the queue code when messages become available
  • Interrupt the syscall with a standard signal
  • Use epoll_pwait and refine the previous point

None of the points posted above satisfy me enough and I was wondering if there are any other methods that I haven't found.
Reasons are:

  • Signals are something to avoid on multithreaded code and are not very reliable
  • Timeout one removes part of the benefit of the epoll, only waking with events
  • Self-pipe trick looks the best approach for the moment, but still too much boilerplate

ideas?

2 Answers 2

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You can use an eventfd which is effectively the same thing as the self-pipe trick except with fewer file descriptors and less boilerplate (glibc has convenience eventfd_read/write functions for instance).

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  • I've used eventfd successfully when only one thread is waiting an epollfd, but what about multiple threads are waiting the same epollfd? is eventfd useful in such case too? if so, how? Feb 16, 2015 at 10:33
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You have enumerated the events that can wake up epoll, so the question really becomes: "How do I reduce the boilerplate for the self-pipe trick?"

The answer to that question really depends on your code, the language and what you are trying to do. I assume you have a thread that processes I/O and you want to do other work in that thread while there is no I/O ready. In the code that manages the epoll loop, it can have an internal handle that is exposed to other parts of the system as a "wake" function or a "submit work" function.

There are libraries that do this, for example boost.asio for C++. However, it isn't difficult to write your own if you're just targeting epoll, and the amount of actual boilerplate code should be minimal once you have a class/module/whatever that deals with the epoll loop.

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