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#include <sys/epoll.h> int epoll_ctl(int epfd, int op, int fd, struct epoll_event *event);
The epoll_ctl() function executes the operation specified by op (as parameterized by event) on the epfd epoll instance. Valid values for op: EPOLL_CTL_ADD
For the epoll(5) instance specified by epfd, associate the file descriptor specified by fd with the event specified by event.
For the epoll(5) instance specified by epfd, remove all event associations for the file descriptor specified by fd. event is ignored, and may be NULL.
For the epoll(5) instance specified by epfd, modify the event association for the file descriptor specified by fd to be that specified by event.
typedef union epoll_data { void *ptr; int fd; uint32_t u32; uint64_t u64; } epoll_data_t; struct epoll_event { uint32_t events; epoll_data_t data; };The data field specifies the datum to be associated with the event and will be returned via epoll_wait(3C). The events field denotes both the desired events (when specified via epoll_ctl()) and the events that have occurred (when returned via epoll_wait(3C)). In either case, the events field is a bitmask constructed by a logical OR operation of any combination of the following event flags: EPOLLIN
Data other than high priority data may be read without blocking. For streams, this flag is set in the returned events even if the message is of zero length.
Normal data (priority band equals 0) may be read without blocking. For streams, this flag is set in the returned events even if the message is of zero length.
Normal data (priority band equals 0) may be written without blocking.
Normal data (priority band equals 0) may be read without blocking. For streams, this flag is set in the returned revents even if the message is of zero length.
Data from a non-zero priority band may be read without blocking. For streams, this flag is set in the returned revents even if the message is of zero length.
The same as EPOLLOUT.
Priority data (priority band > 0) may be written. This event only examines bands that have been written to at least once.
This exists only for backwards binary and source compatibility with Linux; it has no meaning and is ignored.
An error has occurred on the device or stream. This flag is only valid in the returned events field.
A hangup has occurred on the stream. This event and EPOLLOUT are mutually exclusive; a stream can never be writable if a hangup has occurred. However, this event and EPOLLIN, EPOLLRDNORM, EPOLLRDBAND, EPOLLRDHUP or EPOLLPRI are not mutually exclusive. This flag is only valid in the events field returned from epoll_wait(3C); it is not used in the events field specified via epoll_ctl().
The stream socket peer shutdown the writing half of the connection and no further data will be readable via the socket. This event is not mutually exclusive with EPOLLIN.
This exists only for backwards binary and source compatibility with Linux; it has no meaning and is ignored.
Sets the specified event to be in one-shot mode, whereby the event association with the epoll(5) instance specified by epfd is removed atomically as the event is returned via epoll_wait(3C). Use of this mode allows for resolution of some of the races inherent in multithreaded use of epoll_wait(3C).
Sets the specified event to be edge-triggered mode instead of the default mode of level-triggered. In this mode, events will be induced by transitions on an event source rather than the state of the event source. While perhaps superficially appealing, this mode introduces several new potential failure modes for user-level software and should be used with caution.
Upon successful completion, epoll_ctl() returns 0. If an error occurs, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
epoll_ctl() will fail if: EBADF
epfd is not a valid file descriptor.
The memory associated with event was not mapped.
The operation specified was EPOLL_CTL_ADD and the specified file descriptor is already associated with an event for the specified epoll(5) instance.
The operation specified was EPOLL_CTL_MOD or EPOLL_CTL_DEL and the specified file descriptor is not associated with an event for the specified epoll(5) instance.
The epoll(5) facility is implemented for purposes of offering compatibility for Linux-borne applications; native applications should continue to prefer using event ports via the port_create(3C), port_associate(3C) and port_get(3C) interfaces. See epoll(5) for compatibility details and restrictions.
epoll_create(3C), epoll_wait(3C), port_create(3C), port_associate(3C), port_get(3C), epoll(5)