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POLL(P)			   POSIX Programmer's Manual		       POLL(P)

PROLOG
       This  manual  page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux
       implementation of this interface may differ (consult the	 corresponding
       Linux  manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the interface may
       not be implemented on Linux.

NAME
       poll - input/output multiplexing

SYNOPSIS
       #include <poll.h>

       int poll(struct pollfd fds[], nfds_t nfds, int timeout);

DESCRIPTION
       The poll() function provides applications with a mechanism  for	multi‐
       plexing	input/output  over a set of file descriptors.  For each member
       of the array pointed to by fds, poll() shall  examine  the  given  file
       descriptor  for	the event(s) specified in events. The number of pollfd
       structures in the fds array is specified by nfds. The  poll()  function
       shall  identify those file descriptors on which an application can read
       or write data, or on which certain events have occurred.

       The fds argument specifies the file descriptors to be examined and  the
       events  of  interest  for  each	file descriptor. It is a pointer to an
       array with one member for each open file descriptor  of	interest.  The
       array's members are pollfd structures within which fd specifies an open
       file descriptor and events and  revents	are  bitmasks  constructed  by
       OR'ing a combination of the following event flags:

       POLLIN Data other than high-priority data may be read without blocking.

       For STREAMS, this flag is set in revents even if the message is of zero
       length. This flag shall be equivalent to POLLRDNORM | POLLRDBAND.

       POLLRDNORM
	      Normal data may be read without blocking.

       For STREAMS, data on priority band 0  may  be  read  without  blocking.
       This flag is set in revents even if the message is of zero length.

       POLLRDBAND
	      Priority data may be read without blocking.

       For  STREAMS, data on priority bands greater than 0 may be read without
       blocking. This flag is set in revents even if the message  is  of  zero
       length.

       POLLPRI
	      High-priority data may be read without blocking.

       For STREAMS, this flag is set in revents even if the message is of zero
       length.

       POLLOUT
	      Normal data may be written without blocking.

       For STREAMS, data on priority band 0 may be written without blocking.

       POLLWRNORM
	      Equivalent to POLLOUT.

       POLLWRBAND
	      Priority data may be written.

       For STREAMS, data on priority bands greater than 0 may be written with‐
       out  blocking. If any priority band has been written to on this STREAM,
       this event only examines bands that have been written to at least once.

       POLLERR
	      An error has occurred on the device or stream. This flag is only
	      valid  in the revents bitmask; it shall be ignored in the events
	      member.

       POLLHUP
	      The device has been disconnected. This  event  and  POLLOUT  are
	      mutually-exclusive;  a  stream can never be writable if a hangup
	      has occurred. However, this event and POLLIN, POLLRDNORM,	 POLL‐
	      RDBAND, or POLLPRI are not mutually-exclusive. This flag is only
	      valid in the revents bitmask; it shall be ignored in the	events
	      member.

       POLLNVAL
	      The  specified  fd  value is invalid. This flag is only valid in
	      the revents member; it shall ignored in the events member.

       The significance and semantics of normal, priority,  and	 high-priority
       data are file and device-specific.

       If the value of fd is less than 0, events shall be ignored, and revents
       shall be set to 0 in that entry on return from poll().

       In each pollfd structure, poll() shall clear the revents member, except
       that where the application requested a report on a condition by setting
       one of the bits of events listed above, poll()  shall  set  the	corre‐
       sponding	 bit  in revents if the requested condition is true.  In addi‐
       tion, poll() shall set the  POLLHUP,  POLLERR,  and  POLLNVAL  flag  in
       revents	if  the condition is true, even if the application did not set
       the corresponding bit in events.

       If none of the defined  events  have  occurred  on  any	selected  file
       descriptor,  poll()  shall  wait	 at  least timeout milliseconds for an
       event to occur on any of the selected file descriptors.	If  the	 value
       of timeout is 0, poll() shall return immediately. If the value of time‐
       out is -1, poll() shall block until a requested event occurs  or	 until
       the call is interrupted.

       Implementations	may  place  limitations	 on the granularity of timeout
       intervals. If the requested timeout interval requires a finer granular‐
       ity than the implementation supports, the actual timeout interval shall
       be rounded up to the next supported value.

       The poll() function shall not be affected by the O_NONBLOCK flag.

       The poll() function shall support regular files, terminal  and  pseudo-
       terminal	 devices, FIFOs, pipes, sockets and  STREAMS-based files.  The
       behavior of poll() on elements of fds that refer to other types of file
       is unspecified.

       Regular files shall always poll TRUE for reading and writing.

       A  file descriptor for a socket that is listening for connections shall
       indicate that it is ready for reading, once connections are  available.
       A  file descriptor for a socket that is connecting asynchronously shall
       indicate that it is ready for  writing,	once  a	 connection  has  been
       established.

RETURN VALUE
       Upon successful completion, poll() shall return a non-negative value. A
       positive value indicates the total number of file descriptors that have
       been  selected  (that is, file descriptors for which the revents member
       is non-zero). A value of 0 indicates that the call  timed  out  and  no
       file  descriptors have been selected. Upon failure, poll() shall return
       -1 and set errno to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       The poll() function shall fail if:

       EAGAIN The allocation of internal data structures failed but  a	subse‐
	      quent request may succeed.

       EINTR  A signal was caught during poll().

       EINVAL The  nfds	 argument is greater than {OPEN_MAX},	 or one of the
	      fd members refers to a STREAM  or	 multiplexer  that  is	linked
	      (directly or indirectly) downstream from a multiplexer.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES
   Checking for Events on a Stream
       The  following  example	opens a pair of STREAMS devices and then waits
       for either one to become writable. This example proceeds as follows:

	1. Sets the timeout parameter to 500 milliseconds.

	2. Opens the STREAMS devices /dev/dev0 and /dev/dev1, and  then	 polls
	   them, specifying POLLOUT and POLLWRBAND as the events of interest.

       The  STREAMS  device names /dev/dev0 and /dev/dev1 are only examples of
       how STREAMS devices can be named; STREAMS naming conventions  may  vary
       among systems conforming to the IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

	3. Uses the ret variable to determine whether an event has occurred on
	   either of the two STREAMS. The poll() function is  given  500  mil‐
	   liseconds  to  wait	for  an event to occur (if it has not occurred
	   prior to the poll() call).

	4. Checks the returned value of ret. If a positive value is  returned,
	   one of the following can be done:

	    a. Priority	 data  can  be	written to the open STREAM on priority
	       bands greater than 0, because the POLLWRBAND event occurred  on
	       the open STREAM ( fds[0] or fds[1]).

	    b. Data  can  be  written  to  the open STREAM on priority-band 0,
	       because the POLLOUT event occurred on the open STREAM (	fds[0]
	       or fds[1]).

	5. If  the returned value is not a positive value, permission to write
	   data to the open STREAM (on any priority band) is denied.

	6. If the POLLHUP event occurs on the open STREAM ( fds[0] or fds[1]),
	   the device on the open STREAM has disconnected.

	      #include <stropts.h>
	      #include <poll.h>
	      ...
	      struct pollfd fds[2];
	      int timeout_msecs = 500;
	      int ret;
		  int i;

	      /* Open STREAMS device. */
	      fds[0].fd = open("/dev/dev0", ...);
	      fds[1].fd = open("/dev/dev1", ...);
		  fds[0].events = POLLOUT | POLLWRBAND;
		  fds[1].events = POLLOUT | POLLWRBAND;

	      ret = poll(fds, 2, timeout_msecs);

	      if (ret > 0) {
		  /* An event on one of the fds has occurred. */
		  for (i=0; i<2; i++) {
		      if (fds[i].revents & POLLWRBAND) {
		      /* Priority data may be written on device number i. */
	      ...
		      }
		      if (fds[i].revents & POLLOUT) {
		      /* Data may be written on device number i. */
	      ...
		      }
		      if (fds[i].revents & POLLHUP) {
		      /* A hangup has occurred on device number i. */
	      ...
		      }
		  }
	      }

APPLICATION USAGE
       None.

RATIONALE
       None.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.

SEE ALSO
       STREAMS	, getmsg() , putmsg() , read() , select() , write() , the Base
       Definitions volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, <poll.h>, <stropts.h>

COPYRIGHT
       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in  electronic  form
       from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
       -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX),	The  Open  Group  Base
       Specifications  Issue  6,  Copyright  (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of
       Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open  Group.  In  the
       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
       The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group  Standard
       is  the	referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online
       at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

IEEE/The Open Group		     2003			       POLL(P)
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