This manual page is derived from the DAT/uDAPL 1.2 specification.
Portions Copyright (c) 2007, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
cc [ flag.\|.\|. ] file.\|.\|. -ldat [ library.\|.\|. ] #include <dat/udat.h> DAT_RETURN dat_ep_post_rdma_read ( IN DAT_EP_HANDLE ep_handle, IN DAT_COUNT num_segments, IN DAT_LMR_TRIPLET *local_iov, IN DAT_DTO_COOKIE user_cookie, IN DAT_RMR_TRIPLET *remote_buffer, IN DAT_COMPLETION_FLAGS completion_flags )
Handle for an instance of the Endpoint.
Number of lmr_triplets in local_iov.
I/O Vector that specifies the local buffer from which the data is transferred.
User-provided cookie that is returned to the Consumer at the completion of the RDMA Write.
A pointer to an RMR Triplet that specifies the remote buffer from which the data is read.
Flags for posted RDMA read. The default DAT_COMPLETION_DEFAULT_FLAG is 0x00. Other values are as follows: Completion Suppression
DAT_COMPLETION_SUPPRESS_FLAG 0x01
Suppress successful Completion.
DAT_COMPLETION_UNSIGNALLED_FLAG 0x04
Non-notification completion. Local Endpoint must be configured for Notification Suppression.
DAT_COMPLETION_BARRIER_FENCE_FLAG 0x08
Request for Barrier Fence.
The dat_ep_post_rdma_write() function requests the transfer of all the data specified by the local_iov over the connection of the ep_handle Endpoint into the remote_buffer.
The num_segments parameter specifies the number of segments in the local_iov. The local_iov segments are traversed in the I/O Vector order until all the data is transferred.
A Consumer must not modify the local_iov or its content until the DTO is completed. When a Consumer does not adhere to this rule, the behavior of the Provider and the underlying Transport is not defined. Providers that allow Consumers to get ownership of the local_iov but not the memory it specifies back after the dat_ep_post_rdma_write() returns should document this behavior and also specify its support in Provider attributes. This behavior allows Consumers full control of the local_iov after dat_ep_post_rdma_write() returns. Because this behavior is not guaranteed by all Providers, portable Consumers should not rely on this behavior. Consumers should not rely on the Provider copying local_iov information.
The DAT_SUCCESS return of the dat_ep_post_rdma_write() is at least the equivalent of posting an RDMA Write operation directly by native Transport. Providers should avoid resource allocation as part of dat_ep_post_rdma_write() to ensure that this operation is nonblocking and thread safe for an UpCall.
The completion of the posted RDMA Write is reported to the Consumer asynchronously through a DTO Completion event based on the specified completion_flags value. The value of DAT_COMPLETION_UNSIGNALLED_FLAG is only valid if the Endpoint Request Completion Flags DAT_COMPLETION_UNSIGNALLED_FLAG. Otherwise, DAT_INVALID_PARAMETER is returned.
The user_cookie allows Consumers to have unique identifiers for each DTO. These identifiers are completely under user control and are opaque to the Provider. There is no requirement on the Consumer that the value user_cookie should be unique for each DTO. The user_cookie is returned to the Consumer in the Completion event for the posted RDMA Write.
The operation is valid for the Endpoint in the DAT_EP_STATE_CONNECTED and DAT_EP_STATE_DISCONNECTED states. If the operation returns successfully for the Endpoint in the DAT_EP_STATE_DISCONNECTED state, the posted RDMA Write is immediately flushed to request_evd_handle.
The operation was successful.
The operation failed due to resource limitations.
Invalid parameter. For example, one of the IOV segments pointed to a memory outside its LMR.
The ep_handle parameter is invalid.
A parameter is in an invalid state. Endpoint was not in the DAT_EP_STATE_CONNECTED or DAT_EP_STATE_DISCONNECTED state.
The size of the receiving buffer is too small for sending buffer data. The size of the remote buffer is too small for the data of the local buffer.
Protection violation for local or remote memory access. Protection Zone mismatch between either an LMR of one of the local_iov segments and the local Endpoint or the rmr_context and the remote Endpoint.
Privileges violation for local or remote memory access. Either one of the LMRs used in local_iov is invalid or does not have the local read privileges, or rmr_context does not have the remote write privileges.
For best RDMA Write operation performance, the Consumer should align each buffer segment of local_iov to the Optimal Buffer Alignment attribute of the Provider. For portable applications, the Consumer should align each buffer segment of local_iov to the DAT_OPTIMAL_ALIGNMENT.
See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
Interface Stability Standard: uDAPL, 1.1, 1.2 |
MT-Level Unsafe |
libdat (3LIB), attributes (7)