From 81f9d4616e969693ff11026fd954f23ccc560bee Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeff Moyer Date: Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:55:01 -0500 Subject: io_uring_enter.2 man page Initial man page for io_uring_enter. Signed-off-by: Jeff Moyer Signed-off-by: Jens Axboe --- man/io_uring_enter.2 | 378 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 378 insertions(+) create mode 100644 man/io_uring_enter.2 (limited to 'man') diff --git a/man/io_uring_enter.2 b/man/io_uring_enter.2 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc81fc4 --- /dev/null +++ b/man/io_uring_enter.2 @@ -0,0 +1,378 @@ +.\" Copyright (C) 2019 Jens Axboe +.\" Copyright (C) 2019 Red Hat, Inc. +.\" +.\" %%%LICENSE_START(LGPL_V2.1) +.\" This file is distributed according to the GNU Lesser General Public License. +.\" %%%LICENSE_END +.\" +.TH IO_URING_ENTER 2 2019-01-22 "Linux" "Linux Programmer's Manual" +.SH NAME +io_uring_enter \- initiate and/or complete asynchronous I/O +.SH SYNOPSIS +.nf +.BR "#include " +.PP +.BI "int io_uring_enter(unsigned int " fd ", unsigned int " to_submit , +.BI " unsigned int " min_complete ", unsigned int " flags) +.fi +.PP +.SH DESCRIPTION +.PP +.BR io_uring_enter () +is used to initiate and complete I/O using the shared submission and +completion queues setup by a call to +.BR io_uring_setup(2). +A single call can both submit new I/O and wait for completions of I/O +initiated by this call or previous calls to +.BR io_uring_enter (). + +.I fd +is the file descriptor returned by +.BR io_uring_setup(2). +.I to_submit +specifies the number of I/Os to submit from the submission queue. If +the +.B IORING_ENTER_GETEVENTS +bit is set in +.I flags, +then the system call will attempt to wait for +.I min_events +I/O completions. Note that it is valid to specify +.B IORING_ENTER_GETEVENTS +in +.I flags +and pass in +.I min_complete +as 0 at the same time. This allows the kernel to return already +completed events without waiting. This is useful only when the +io_uring instance was configured for polling (by specifying the +.B IORING_SETUP_IOPOLL +flag in +.BR io_uring_setup(2)), +as for IRQ driven I/O, the application can just check the completion +queue without entering the kernel. + +Submission queue entries are represented using the following data +structure: +.PP +.in +4n +.EX +/* + * IO submission data structure (Submission Queue Entry) + */ +struct io_uring_sqe { + __u8 opcode; /* type of operation for this sqe */ + __u8 flags; /* IOSQE_ flags */ + __u16 ioprio; /* ioprio for the request */ + __s32 fd; /* file descriptor to do IO on */ + __u64 off; /* offset into file */ + __u64 addr; /* pointer to buffer or iovecs */ + __u32 len; /* buffer size or number of iovecs */ + union { + __kernel_rwf_t rw_flags; + __u32 fsync_flags; + __u16 poll_events; + }; + __u64 user_data; /* data passed back at completion time */ + union { + __u16 buf_index; /* index into fixed buffers, if used */ + __u64 __pad2[3]; + }; +}; +.EE +.in +.PP +The +.I opcode +describes the operation to be performed. It can be one of: +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_NOP +Do not perform any I/O. This is useful for testing the performance of +the io_uring implementation itself. +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_READV +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_WRITEV +Vectored read and write operations, similar to +.BR preadv2(2) +and +.BR pwritev2(2). + +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_READ_FIXED +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_WRITE_FIXED +Read from or write to pre-mapped buffers. See +.BR io_uring_register(2) +for details on how to setup a context for fixed reads and writes. + +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_FSYNC +File sync. See also +.BR fsync(2). +Note that, while I/O is initiated in the order in which it appears in +the submission queue, completions are unordered. For example, an +application which places a write I/O followed by an fsync in the +submission queue cannot expect the fsync to apply to the write. The +two operations execute in parallel, so the fsync may complete before +the write is issued to the storage. The same is also true for +previously issued writes that have not completed prior to the fsync. + +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_POLL_ADD +Poll the +.I fd +specified in the submission queue entry for the events +specified in the +.I poll_events +field. Unlike poll or epoll without +.B EPOLLONESHOT, +this interface always works in one shot mode. That is, once the poll +operation is completed, it will have to be resubmitted. + +.TP +.BR IORING_OP_POLL_REMOVE +Remove an existing poll request. If found, the +.I res +field of the +.I struct io_uring_cqe +will contain 0. If not found, +.I res +will contain +.B -ENOENT. + +.PP +The +.I flags +field is a bit mask. Currently, the only supported flag is +.B IOSQE_FIXED_FILE. +This flag must be specified for io_uring instances that registered +files using the +.BR io_uring_register(2) +system call. When specified, +.I fd +contains an index into the files array registered with the io_uring +instance. + +.I ioprio +specifies the I/O priority. See +.BR ioprio_get(2) +for a description of Linux I/O priorities. + +.I fd +specifies the file descriptor against which the operation will be +performed, with the exception noted above. + +If the operation is one of +.B IORING_OP_READ_FIXED +or +.B IORING_OP_WRITE_FIXED, +.I addr +and +.I len +must fall within the buffer located at +.I buf_index +in the fixed buffer array. If the operation is either +.B IORING_OP_READV +or +.B IORING_OP_WRITEV, +then +.I addr +points to an iovec array of +.I len +entries. + +.I rw_flags, +specified for read and write operations, contains a bitwise OR of +per-I/O flags, as described in the +.BR preadv2(2) +man page. + +The +.I fsync_flags +bit mask may contain either 0, for a normal file integrity sync, or +.B IORING_FSYNC_DATASYNC +to provide data sync only semantics. See the descriptions of +.B O_SYNC +and +.B O_DSYNC +in the +.BR open(2) +manual page for more information. + +The bits that may be set in +.I poll_events +are defined in \fI\fP, and documented in +.BR poll(2). + +.I user_data +is an application-supplied value that will be copied into +the completion queue entry (see below). +.I buf_index +is an index into an array of fixed buffers, and is only valid if fixed +buffers were registered +.PP +Once the submission queue entry is initialized, I/O is submitted by +placing the index of the submission queue entry into the tail of the +submission queue. After one or more indexes are added to the queue, +and the queue tail is advanced, the io_uring_enter(2) system call can +be invoked to initiate the I/O. + +Completions use the following data structure: +.PP +.in +4n +.EX +/* + * IO completion data structure (Completion Queue Entry) + */ +struct io_uring_cqe { + __u64 user_data; /* sqe->data submission passed back */ + __s32 res; /* result code for this event */ + __u32 flags; +}; +.EE +.in +.PP +.I user_data +is copied from the field of the same name in the submission queue +entry. The primary use case is to store data that the application +will need to access upon completion of this particular I/O. The +.I flags +bit mask may contain 0 or more of the following values, ORed together: +.TP +.BR IOCQE_FLAG_CACHEHIT +The page(s) associated with the buffered I/O operation were present in +the page cache. +.I res +is the operation-specific result. +.PP +For read and write opcodes, the +return values match those documented in the +.BR preadv2(2) +and +.BR pwritev2(2) +man pages. +Return codes for the io_uring-specific opcodes are documented in the +description of the opcodes above. +.PP +.SH RETURN VALUE +.BR io_uring_enter () +returns the number of I/Os successfully submitted. This can be zero +if +.I to_submit +was zero, if there were invalid entries in the submission queue, or if +the submission queue was empty. + +On error, -1 is returned and +.I errno +is set appropriately. +.PP +.SH ERRORS +.TP +.BR EAGAIN +The kernel was unable to allocate memory for the request. +.TP +.BR EBADF +The +.I fd +field in the submission queue entry is invalid, or the +.B IOSQE_FIXED_FILE +flag was set in the submission queue entry, but no files were registered +with the io_uring instance +.TP +.BR EBUSY +the io_uring instance is being acted on by another thread +.TP +.BR EFAULT +buffer is outside of the process' accessible address space +.TP +.BR EFAULT +.B IORING_OP_READ_FIXED +or +.B IORING_OP_WRITE_FIXED +was specified in the +.I opcode +field of the submission queue entry, but either buffers were not +registered for this io_uring instance, or the address range described +by +.I addr +and +.I len +does not fit within the buffer registered at +.I buf_index +.TP +.BR EINVAL +The +.I index +member of the submission queue entry is invalid. +.TP +.BR EINVAL +the +.I flags +field or +.I opcode +in a submission queue entry is invalid +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_NOP +was specified in the submission queue entry, but the io_uring context +was setup for polling ( +.B IORING_SETUP_IOPOLL +was specified in the call to io_uring_setup) +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_READV +or +.B IORING_OP_WRITEV +was specified in the submission queue entry, but the io_uring instance +has fixed buffers registered. +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_READ_FIXED +or +.B IORING_OP_WRITE_FIXED +was specified in the submission queue entry, and the +.I buf_index +is invalid +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_READV, IORING_OP_WRITEV, IORING_OP_READ_FIXED, +.B IORING_OP_WRITE_FIXED +or +.B IORING_OP_FSYNC +was specified in the submission queue entry, but the io_uring instance +was configured for IOPOLLing, or any of +.I addr, ioprio, off, len, +or +.I buf_index +was set in the submission queue entry. +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_POLL_ADD +or +.B IORING_OP_POLL_REMOVE +was specified in the +.I opcode +field of the submission queue entry, but the io_uring instance was +configured for busy-wait polling +.B (IORING_SETUP_IOPOLL), +or any of +.I ioprio, off, len +or +.I buf_index +was non-zero in the submission queue entry. +.TP +.BR EINVAL +.B IORING_OP_POLL_ADD +was specified in the +.I opcode +field of the submission queue entry, and the +.I addr +field was non-zero. +.TP +.BR ENXIO +the io_uring instance is in the process of being torn down +.TP +.BR EOPNOTSUPP +.I fd +does not refer to an io_uring instance -- cgit