summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst')
-rw-r--r--docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst153
1 files changed, 153 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst b/docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..a5ba816412
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/nspr/nonblocking_io_in_nspr.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,153 @@
+Nonblocking IO in NSPR
+======================
+
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+Previously, all I/O in the NetScape Portable Runtime (NSPR) was
+*blocking* (or *synchronous*). A thread invoking an io function is
+blocked until the io operation is finished. The blocking io model
+encourages the use of multiple threads as a programming model. A thread
+is typically created to attend to one of the simultaneous I/O operations
+that may potentially block.
+
+In the *nonblocking* io model, a file descriptor may be marked as
+nonblocking. An io function on a nonblocking file descriptor either
+succeeds immediately or fails immediately with
+<tt>PR_WOULD_BLOCK_ERROR</tt>. A single thread is sufficient to attend
+to multiple nonblocking file descriptors simultaneously. Typically, this
+central thread invokes <tt>PR_Poll()</tt> on a set of nonblocking file
+descriptors. (Note: <tt>PR_Poll()</tt> also works with blocking file
+descriptors, although it is less useful in the blocking io model.) When
+<tt>PR_Poll()</tt> reports that a file descriptor is ready for some io
+operation, the central thread invokes that io function on the file
+descriptor.
+
+.. _Creating_a_Nonblocking_Socket:
+
+Creating a Nonblocking Socket
+-----------------------------
+
+*Only sockets can be made nonblocking*. Regular files always operate in
+blocking mode. This is not a serious constraint as one can assume that
+disk I/O never blocks. Fundamentally, this constraint is due to the fact
+that nonblocking I/O and <tt>select()</tt> are only available to sockets
+on some platforms (e.g., Winsock).
+
+In NSPR, a new socket returned by <tt>PR_NewTCPSocket()</tt> or
+<tt>PR_NewUDPSocket()</tt> is always created in blocking mode. One can
+make the new socket nonblocking by using <tt>PR_SetSockOpt()</tt> as in
+the example below (error checking is omitted for clarity):
+
+|
+| <tt>PRFileDesc \*sock;</tt>
+| **<tt>PRIntn optval = 1;</tt>**
+
+<tt>sock = PR_NewTCPSocket();</tt>
+
+::
+
+ /*
+ * Make the socket nonblocking
+ */
+
+ PR_SetSockOpt(sock, PR_SockOpt_Nonblocking, &optval, sizeof(optval));
+
+.. _Programming_Constraints:
+
+Programming Constraints
+-----------------------
+
+There are some constraints due to the use of NT asynchronous I/O in the
+NSPR. In NSPR, blocking sockets on NT are associated with an I/O
+completion port. Once associated with an I/O completion port, we can't
+disassociate the socket from the I/O completion port. I have seen some
+strange problems with using a nonblocking socket associated with an I/O
+completion port. So the first constraint is:
+
+ **The blocking/nonblocking io mode of a new socket is committed the
+ first time a potentially-blocking io function is invoked on the
+ socket. Once the io mode of a socket is committed, it cannot be
+ changed.**
+
+The potentially-blocking io functions include <tt>PR_Connect()</tt>,
+<tt>PR_Accept()</tt>, <tt>PR_AcceptRead()</tt>, <tt>PR_Read()</tt>,
+<tt>PR_Write()</tt>, <tt>PR_Writev()</tt>, <tt>PR_Recv()</tt>,
+<tt>PR_Send()</tt>, <tt>PR_RecvFrom()</tt>, <tt>PR_SendTo()</tt>, and
+<tt>PR_TransmitFile(),</tt> and do not include <tt>PR_Bind()</tt> and
+<tt>PR_Listen()</tt>.
+
+In blocking mode, any of these potentially-blocking functions requires
+the use of the NT I/O completion port. So at that point we must
+determine whether to associate the socket with the I/O completion or
+not, and that decision cannot be changed later.
+
+There is a second constraint, due to the use of NT asynchronous I/O and
+the recycling of used sockets:
+
+ **The new socket returned by <tt>PR_Accept()</tt> or
+ <tt>PR_AcceptRead()</tt> inherits the blocking/nonblocking io mode of
+ the listening socket and this cannot be changed.**
+
+The socket returned by <tt>PR_Accept()</tt> or <tt>PR_AcceptRead()</tt>
+on a blocking, listening socket may be a recycled socket previously used
+in a <tt>PR_TransmitFile()</tt> call. Since <tt>PR_TransmitFile()</tt>
+only operates in blocking mode, this recycled socket can only be reused
+in blocking mode, hence the above constraint.
+
+Because these constraints only apply to NT, it is advised that you test
+your cross-platform code that uses nonblocking io on NT early in the
+development cycle. These constraints are enforced in the debug NSPR
+library by assertions.
+
+.. _Differences_from_Blocking_IO:
+
+Differences from Blocking IO
+----------------------------
+
+- In nonblocking mode, the timeout argument for the io functions is
+ ignored.
+- <tt>PR_AcceptRead()</tt> and <tt>PR_TransmitFile()</tt> only work on
+ blocking sockets. They do not make sense in nonblocking mode.
+- <tt>PR_Write()</tt>, <tt>PR_Send()</tt>, <tt>PR_Writev()</tt> in
+ blocking mode block until the entire buffer is sent. In nonblocking
+ mode, they cannot block, so they may return with just sending part of
+ the buffer.
+
+.. _PR_Poll()_or_PR_Select():
+
+PR_Poll() or PR_Select()?
+-------------------------
+
+<tt>PR_Select()</tt> is deprecated, now declared in
+<tt>private/pprio.h</tt>. Use <tt>PR_Poll()</tt> instead.
+
+The current implementation of <tt>PR_Select()</tt> simply calls
+<tt>PR_Poll()</tt>, so it is sure to have worse performance. Also,
+native file descriptors (socket handles) cannot be added to
+<tt>PR_fd_set</tt>, i.e., the functions <tt>PR_FD_NSET</tt>,
+<tt>PR_FD_NCLR</tt>, <tt>PR_FD_NISSET</tt> do not work.
+
+PR_Available()
+--------------
+
+When <tt>PR_Available()</tt> returns 0, it may mean one of two things:
+
+- There is no data available for reading on that socket. I.e.,
+ <tt>PR_Recv()</tt> would block (a blocking socket) or fail with
+ <tt>PR_WOULD_BLOCK_ERROR</tt> (a nonblocking socket).
+- The TCP connection on that socket has been closed (end of stream).
+
+These two cases can be distinguished by <tt>PR_Poll()</tt>. If
+<tt>PR_Poll()</tt> reports that the socket is readable (i.e.,
+<tt>PR_POLL_READ</tt> is set in <tt>out_flags</tt>), and
+<tt>PR_Available()</tt> returns 0, this means that the socket connection
+is closed.
+
+.. _Current_Status:
+
+Current Status
+--------------
+
+Implemented across all supported platforms.