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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

       pselect, select — synchronous I/O multiplexing

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/select.h>

       int pselect(int nfds, fd_set *restrict readfds,
           fd_set *restrict writefds, fd_set *restrict errorfds,
           const struct timespec *restrict timeout,
           const sigset_t *restrict sigmask);
       int select(int nfds, fd_set *restrict readfds,
           fd_set *restrict writefds, fd_set *restrict errorfds,
           struct timeval *restrict timeout);
       void FD_CLR(int fd, fd_set *fdset);
       int FD_ISSET(int fd, fd_set *fdset);
       void FD_SET(int fd, fd_set *fdset);
       void FD_ZERO(fd_set *fdset);

DESCRIPTION

       The  pselect()  function shall examine the file descriptor sets whose addresses are passed
       in the readfds, writefds, and errorfds parameters to see whether some of their descriptors
       are  ready  for  reading, are ready for writing, or have an exceptional condition pending,
       respectively.

       The select() function shall be equivalent to the pselect() function, except as follows:

        *  For the select() function, the timeout period is given in seconds and microseconds  in
           an  argument  of  type  struct timeval, whereas for the pselect() function the timeout
           period is given in seconds and nanoseconds in an argument of type struct timespec.

        *  The select() function has no sigmask argument; it shall behave as pselect() does  when
           sigmask is a null pointer.

        *  Upon  successful completion, the select() function may modify the object pointed to by
           the timeout argument.

       The pselect() and select() functions shall support regular  files,  terminal  and  pseudo-
       terminal  devices,  STREAMS-based  files,  FIFOs,  pipes,  and  sockets.  The  behavior of
       pselect() and select()  on  file  descriptors  that  refer  to  other  types  of  file  is
       unspecified.

       The  nfds  argument  specifies  the  range  of  descriptors  to  be tested. The first nfds
       descriptors shall be checked in each set; that  is,  the  descriptors  from  zero  through
       nfds−1 in the descriptor sets shall be examined.

       If  the readfds argument is not a null pointer, it points to an object of type fd_set that
       on input specifies the file descriptors to be checked for being  ready  to  read,  and  on
       output indicates which file descriptors are ready to read.

       If the writefds argument is not a null pointer, it points to an object of type fd_set that
       on input specifies the file descriptors to be checked for being ready  to  write,  and  on
       output indicates which file descriptors are ready to write.

       If the errorfds argument is not a null pointer, it points to an object of type fd_set that
       on input specifies the file descriptors to be checked for error conditions pending, and on
       output indicates which file descriptors have error conditions pending.

       Upon  successful  completion,  the pselect() or select() function shall modify the objects
       pointed to by the readfds,  writefds,  and  errorfds  arguments  to  indicate  which  file
       descriptors  are ready for reading, ready for writing, or have an error condition pending,
       respectively, and shall return the total number of ready descriptors  in  all  the  output
       sets.  For  each  file  descriptor less than nfds, the corresponding bit shall be set upon
       successful completion if it was set on input and the associated condition is true for that
       file descriptor.

       If  none  of the selected descriptors are ready for the requested operation, the pselect()
       or select() function shall block until at least one of the  requested  operations  becomes
       ready,  until the timeout occurs, or until interrupted by a signal.  The timeout parameter
       controls how long the pselect() or select() function shall take before timing out. If  the
       timeout  parameter  is not a null pointer, it specifies a maximum interval to wait for the
       selection to complete. If the  specified  time  interval  expires  without  any  requested
       operation  becoming  ready,  the function shall return. If the timeout parameter is a null
       pointer, then the call to pselect() or select() shall block indefinitely  until  at  least
       one  descriptor  meets  the  specified  criteria.  To effect a poll, the timeout parameter
       should not be a null pointer, and should point to a zero-valued timespec structure.

       The use of a timeout does not affect any pending timers set up by alarm() or setitimer().

       Implementations may place limitations on  the  maximum  timeout  interval  supported.  All
       implementations  shall  support  a  maximum  timeout  interval of at least 31 days. If the
       timeout argument specifies a timeout  interval  greater  than  the  implementation-defined
       maximum   value,   the   maximum  value  shall  be  used  as  the  actual  timeout  value.
       Implementations may also place limitations on the granularity of timeout intervals. If the
       requested  timeout interval requires a finer granularity than the implementation supports,
       the actual timeout interval shall be rounded up to the next supported value.

       If sigmask is not a null pointer, then the pselect() function  shall  replace  the  signal
       mask  of  the  caller  by  the  set  of signals pointed to by sigmask before examining the
       descriptors, and shall restore the signal mask of the calling thread before returning.

       A descriptor shall be considered ready for reading when a call to an input  function  with
       O_NONBLOCK  clear  would  not  block,  whether  or  not  the  function would transfer data
       successfully. (The function might return data, an  end-of-file  indication,  or  an  error
       other  than  one  indicating that it is blocked, and in each of these cases the descriptor
       shall be considered ready for reading.)

       A descriptor shall be considered ready for writing when a call to an output function  with
       O_NONBLOCK  clear  would  not  block,  whether  or  not  the  function would transfer data
       successfully.

       If a socket has a pending error, it shall be considered to have an  exceptional  condition
       pending. Otherwise, what constitutes an exceptional condition is file type-specific. For a
       file descriptor for use with a socket, it is protocol-specific except as noted below.  For
       other  file  types  it  is  implementation-defined.  If the operation is meaningless for a
       particular file type, pselect() or select() shall indicate that the  descriptor  is  ready
       for  read  or  write operations, and shall indicate that the descriptor has no exceptional
       condition pending.

       If a descriptor refers to a socket, the implied input function is the  recvmsg()  function
       with  parameters  requesting  normal  and ancillary data, such that the presence of either
       type shall cause the socket to be marked as readable. The  presence  of  out-of-band  data
       shall  be  checked if the socket option SO_OOBINLINE has been enabled, as out-of-band data
       is enqueued with normal data. If the socket is  currently  listening,  then  it  shall  be
       marked  as readable if an incoming connection request has been received, and a call to the
       accept() function shall complete without blocking.

       If a descriptor refers to a socket, the implied output function is the sendmsg()  function
       supplying  an  amount  of normal data equal to the current value of the SO_SNDLOWAT option
       for the socket. If a non-blocking call to the connect()  function  has  been  made  for  a
       socket, and the connection attempt has either succeeded or failed leaving a pending error,
       the socket shall be marked as writable.

       A socket shall be considered to  have  an  exceptional  condition  pending  if  a  receive
       operation  with  O_NONBLOCK  clear for the open file description and with the MSG_OOB flag
       set would return out-of-band data without blocking. (It is protocol-specific  whether  the
       MSG_OOB flag would be used to read out-of-band data.) A socket shall also be considered to
       have an exceptional condition pending if an  out-of-band  data  mark  is  present  in  the
       receive  queue.  Other  circumstances  under  which  a socket may be considered to have an
       exceptional condition pending are protocol-specific and implementation-defined.

       If the readfds, writefds, and errorfds arguments are all null  pointers  and  the  timeout
       argument  is  not  a  null pointer, the pselect() or select() function shall block for the
       time specified, or until interrupted by a signal. If the readfds, writefds,  and  errorfds
       arguments  are all null pointers and the timeout argument is a null pointer, the pselect()
       or select() function shall block until interrupted by a signal.

       File descriptors associated with regular files shall always select true for ready to read,
       ready to write, and error conditions.

       On  failure, the objects pointed to by the readfds, writefds, and errorfds arguments shall
       not be modified. If the timeout interval expires without  the  specified  condition  being
       true  for  any  of  the specified file descriptors, the objects pointed to by the readfds,
       writefds, and errorfds arguments shall have all bits set to 0.

       File descriptor masks of  type  fd_set  can  be  initialized  and  tested  with  FD_CLR(),
       FD_ISSET(),  FD_SET(),  and FD_ZERO().  It is unspecified whether each of these is a macro
       or a function. If a macro definition is suppressed in order to access an actual  function,
       or  a  program  defines  an  external  identifier with any of these names, the behavior is
       undefined.

       FD_CLR(fd, fdsetp) shall remove the file descriptor fd from the set pointed to by  fdsetp.
       If  fd is not a member of this set, there shall be no effect on the set, nor will an error
       be returned.

       FD_ISSET(fd, fdsetp) shall evaluate to non-zero if the file descriptor fd is a  member  of
       the set pointed to by fdsetp, and shall evaluate to zero otherwise.

       FD_SET(fd,  fdsetp)  shall add the file descriptor fd to the set pointed to by fdsetp.  If
       the file descriptor fd is already in this set, there shall be no effect on  the  set,  nor
       will an error be returned.

       FD_ZERO(fdsetp)  shall initialize the descriptor set pointed to by fdsetp to the null set.
       No error is returned if the set is not empty at the time FD_ZERO() is invoked.

       The behavior of these macros is undefined if the fd argument is less  than  0  or  greater
       than  or  equal  to  FD_SETSIZE, or if fd is not a valid file descriptor, or if any of the
       arguments are expressions with side-effects.

       If a thread gets canceled during  a  pselect()  call,  the  signal  mask  in  effect  when
       executing  the  registered  cleanup  functions  is  either the original signal mask or the
       signal mask installed as part of the pselect() call.

RETURN VALUE

       Upon successful completion, the pselect() and select() functions shall  return  the  total
       number  of bits set in the bit masks.  Otherwise, −1 shall be returned, and errno shall be
       set to indicate the error.

       FD_CLR(), FD_SET(), and FD_ZERO() do not return a value.  FD_ISSET() shall return  a  non-
       zero value if the bit for the file descriptor fd is set in the file descriptor set pointed
       to by fdset, and 0 otherwise.

ERRORS

       Under the following conditions, pselect() and select() shall fail and set errno to:

       EBADF  One or more of the file descriptor sets specified a file descriptor that is  not  a
              valid open file descriptor.

       EINTR  The  function was interrupted before any of the selected events occurred and before
              the timeout interval expired.

                   If SA_RESTART has been set for the interrupting signal, it is  implementation-
                   defined whether the function restarts or returns with [EINTR].

       EINVAL An invalid timeout interval was specified.

       EINVAL The nfds argument is less than 0 or greater than FD_SETSIZE.

       EINVAL One  of  the  specified  file descriptors refers to a STREAM or multiplexer that is
              linked (directly or indirectly) downstream from a multiplexer.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

       None.

APPLICATION USAGE

       None.

RATIONALE

       In earlier versions of the Single UNIX Specification, the select() function was defined in
       the  <sys/time.h>  header.  This is now changed to <sys/select.h>.  The rationale for this
       change  was  as  follows:  the  introduction  of  the  pselect()  function  included   the
       <sys/select.h>  header  and  the <sys/select.h> header defines all the related definitions
       for  the  pselect()  and  select()  functions.  Backwards-compatibility  to  existing  XSI
       implementations is handled by allowing <sys/time.h> to include <sys/select.h>.

       Code  which  wants  to  avoid  the  ambiguity  of  the signal mask for thread cancellation
       handlers can install an additional cancellation handler which resets the  signal  mask  to
       the expected value.

           void cleanup(void *arg)
           {
               sigset_t *ss = (sigset_t *) arg;
               pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, ss, NULL);
           }

           int call_pselect(int nfds, fd_set *readfds, fd_set *writefds,
               fd_set errorfds, const struct timespec *timeout,
               const sigset_t *sigmask)
           {
               sigset_t oldmask;
               int result;
               pthread_sigmask(SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &oldmask);
               pthread_cleanup_push(cleanup, &oldmask);
               result = pselect(nfds, readfds, writefds, errorfds, timeout, sigmask);
               pthread_cleanup_pop(0);
               return result;
           }

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       accept(),  alarm(), connect(), fcntl(), getitimer(), poll(), read(), recvmsg(), sendmsg(),
       write()

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, <sys_select.h>, <sys_time.h>

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and  reproduced  in  electronic  form  from  IEEE  Std
       1003.1,  2013  Edition,  Standard  for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System
       Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013  by  the
       Institute  of  Electrical  and  Electronics  Engineers,  Inc and The Open Group.  (This is
       POSIX.1-2008 with the  2013  Technical  Corrigendum  1  applied.)  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.unix.org/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or  formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have
       been introduced during the conversion of the source files to man page  format.  To  report
       such errors, see https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .