Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.sao.ru/hq/sts/linux/doc/ipc_guide/fifos.html
Дата изменения: Unknown
Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 14:42:18 2012
Кодировка:

Поисковые слова: trifid nebula
FIFOs

FIFOs

A FIFO ("First In, First Out", pronounced "Fy-Foh") is sometimes known as a named pipe. That is, it's like a pipe, except that it has a name! In this case, the name is that of a file that multiple processes can open() and read and write to.

This latter aspect of FIFOs is designed to let them get around one of the shortcomings of normal pipes: you can't grab one end of a normal pipe that was created by an unrelated process. See, if I run two individual copies of a program, they can both call pipe() all they want and still not be able to speak to one another. (This is because you must pipe(), then fork() to get a child process that can communicate to the parent via the pipe.) With FIFOs, though, each unrelated process can simply open() the pipe and transfer data through it.

A New FIFO is Born

Since the FIFO is actually a file on disk, you have to do some fancy-schmancy stuff to create it. It's not that hard. You just have to call mknod() with the proper arguments. Here is a mknod() call that creates a FIFO:
    mknod("myfifo", S_IFIFO | 0644 , 0);

In the above example, the FIFO file will be called "myfifo". The second argument is the creation mode, which is used to tell mknod() to make a FIFO (the S_IFIFO part of the OR) and sets access permissions to that file (octal 644, or rw-r--r--) which can also be set by ORing together macros from sys/stat.h. This permission is just like the one you'd set using the chmod command. Finally, a device number is passed. This is ignored when creating a FIFO, so you can put anything you want in there.

(An aside: a FIFO can also be created from the command line using the Unix mknod command.)

Producers and Consumers

Once the FIFO has been created, a process can start up and open it for reading or writing using the standard open() system call.

Since the process is easier to understand once you get some code in your belly, I'll present here two programs which will send data through a FIFO. One is speak.c which sends data through the FIFO, and the other is called tick.c, as it sucks data out of the FIFO.

Here is speak.c:

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    #include <errno.h>
    #include <string.h>
    #include <fcntl.h>
    #include <sys/types.h>
    #include <sys/stat.h>
    #include <unistd.h>

    #define FIFO_NAME "american_maid"

    main()
    {
        char s[300];
        int num, fd;

        /* don't forget to error check this stuff!! */
        mknod(FIFO_NAME, S_IFIFO | 0666, 0);

        printf("waiting for readers...\n");
        fd = open(FIFO_NAME, O_WRONLY);
        printf("got a reader--type some stuff\n");

        while (gets(s), !feof(stdin)) {
            if ((num = write(fd, s, strlen(s))) == -1)
                perror("write");
            else
                printf("speak: wrote %d bytes\n", num);
        }
    }

What speak does is create the FIFO, then try to open() it. Now, what will happen is that the open() call will block until some other process opens the other end of the pipe for reading. (There is a way around this--see O_NDELAY, below.) That process is tick.c, shown here:

    #include <stdio.h>
    #include <stdlib.h>
    #include <errno.h>
    #include <string.h>
    #include <fcntl.h>
    #include <sys/types.h>
    #include <sys/stat.h>
    #include <unistd.h>

    #define FIFO_NAME "american_maid"

    main()
    {
        char s[300];
        int num, fd;

        /* don't forget to error check this stuff!! */
        mknod(FIFO_NAME, S_IFIFO | 0666, 0);

        printf("waiting for writers...\n");
        fd = open(FIFO_NAME, O_RDONLY);
        printf("got a writer:\n");

        do {
            if ((num = read(fd, s, 300)) == -1)
                perror("read");
            else {
                s[num] = '\0';
                printf("tick: read %d bytes: \"%s\"\n", num, s);
            }
        } while (num > 0);
    }

Like speak.c, tick will block on the open() if there is no one writing to the FIFO. As soon as someone opens the FIFO for writing, tick will spring to life.

Try it! Start speak and it will block until you start tick in another window. (Conversely, if you start tick, it will block until you start speak in another window.) Type away in the speak window and tick will suck it all up.

Now, break out of speak. Notice what happens: the read() in tick returns 0, signifying EOF. In this way, the reader can tell when all writers have closed their connection to the FIFO. "What?" you ask "There can be multiple writers to the same pipe?" Sure! That can be very useful, you know. Perhaps I'll show you later in the document how this can be exploited.

But for now, lets finish this topic by seeing what happens when you break out of tick while speak is running. "Broken Pipe"! What does this mean? Well, what has happened is that when all readers for a FIFO close and the writer is still open, the writer will receiver the signal SIGPIPE the next time it tries to write(). The default signal handler for this signal prints "Broken Pipe" and exits. Of course, you can handle this more gracefully by catching SIGPIPE through the signal() call.

Finally, what happens if you have multiple readers? Well, strange things happen. Sometimes one of the readers get everything. Sometimes it alternates between readers. Why do you want to have multiple readers, anyway?

O_NDELAY! I'm UNSTOPPABLE!

Earlier, I mentioned that you could get around the blocking open() call if there was no corresponding reader or writer. The way to do this is to call open() with the O_NDELAY flag set in the mode argument:
    fd = open(FIFO_NAME, O_RDONLY | O_NDELAY);
This will cause open() to return -1 if there are no processes that have the file open for reading.

Likewise, you can open the reader process using the O_NDELAY flag, but this has a different effect: all attempts to read() from the pipe will simply return 0 bytes read if there is no data in the pipe. (That is, the read() will no longer block until there is some data in the pipe.) Note that you can no longer tell if read() is returning 0 because there is no data in the pipe, or because the writer has exited. This is the price of power, but my suggestion is to try to stick with blocking whenever possible.

Multiple Writers--How do I multiplex all these?

Lets say you have a pipe with one reader and one writer connected to it. There's no problem for the reader, since there is only one place its data could be coming from (namely, the one writer.) Suddenly another writer leaps snarling from the shadows! Without provocation, it begins spewing random data into the pipe! How is the poor reader going to sort the data from the two writers?

Well, there are lots of ways, and they all depend on what kind of data you are passing back and forth. One of the simpliest ways would occur if all the writers were sending the same amount of data every time (lets say, 1024 bytes). Then the reader could read 1024 bytes at a time and be assured that it's getting a single packet (as opposed to, say 512 bytes from one writer and 512 from the other.) Still, though, there is no way to tell which writer sent which packet.

One of the best solutions to this is for each writer to use (or prepend to) the first couple bytes of the packet for some kind of unique identifier. The reader can pick up this identifier and determine which writer sent the packet. This "id" can be thought of as a petite packet header.

Allowing for a packet header gives us a lot more flexibility with what we can send through a pipe. For instance, you could also add a length field that tells the reader how many bytes of data accompany the header. A sample data structure to hold one of these packets might be:

    typedef struct {
        short id;
        short length; 
        char data[1024]
    } PACKET;
By transmitting a packet with structure similar to the above, you could have an arbitrary number of writers sending packets of varying lengths. The reader will be able to sort it all out since it gets the "id" of the source writer and the length of the packet.

Concluding notes

Having the name of the pipe right there on disk sure makes it easier, doesn't it? Unrelated processes can communicate via pipes! (This is an ability you will find yourself wishing for if you use normal pipes for too long.) Still, though, the functionality of pipes might not be quite what you need for your applications. Message queues might be more your speed, if your system supports them.

HPUX man pages

If you don't run HPUX, be sure to check your local man pages!

Copyright © 1997 by Brian "Beej" Hall. This guide may be reprinted in any medium provided that its content is not altered, it is presented in its entirety, and this copyright notice remains intact. Contact beej@ecst.csuchico.edu for more information.