Provided by: libfabric-dev_1.17.0-3build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       fi_msg - Message data transfer operations

       fi_recv / fi_recvv / fi_recvmsg
              Post a buffer to receive an incoming message

       fi_send / fi_sendv / fi_sendmsg fi_inject / fi_senddata : Initiate an operation to send a message

SYNOPSIS

              #include <rdma/fi_endpoint.h>

              ssize_t fi_recv(struct fid_ep *ep, void * buf, size_t len,
                  void *desc, fi_addr_t src_addr, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_recvv(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct iovec *iov, void **desc,
                  size_t count, fi_addr_t src_addr, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_recvmsg(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_msg *msg,
                  uint64_t flags);

              ssize_t fi_send(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf, size_t len,
                  void *desc, fi_addr_t dest_addr, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_sendv(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct iovec *iov,
                  void **desc, size_t count, fi_addr_t dest_addr, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_sendmsg(struct fid_ep *ep, const struct fi_msg *msg,
                  uint64_t flags);

              ssize_t fi_inject(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf, size_t len,
                  fi_addr_t dest_addr);

              ssize_t fi_senddata(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf, size_t len,
                  void *desc, uint64_t data, fi_addr_t dest_addr, void *context);

              ssize_t fi_injectdata(struct fid_ep *ep, const void *buf, size_t len,
                  uint64_t data, fi_addr_t dest_addr);

ARGUMENTS

       ep     Fabric endpoint on which to initiate send or post receive buffer.

       buf    Data buffer to send or receive.

       len    Length of data buffer to send or receive, specified in bytes.  Valid transfers are from 0 bytes up
              to the endpoint’s max_msg_size.

       iov    Vectored data buffer.

       count  Count of vectored data entries.

       desc   Descriptor associated with the data buffer.  See fi_mr(3).

       data   Remote CQ data to transfer with the sent message.

       dest_addr
              Destination address for connectionless transfers.  Ignored for connected endpoints.

       src_addr
              Source address to receive from for  connectionless  transfers.   Applies  only  to  connectionless
              endpoints  with  the FI_DIRECTED_RECV capability enabled, otherwise this field is ignored.  If set
              to FI_ADDR_UNSPEC, any source address may match.

       msg    Message descriptor for send and receive operations.

       flags  Additional flags to apply for the send or receive operation.

       context
              User specified pointer to associate  with  the  operation.   This  parameter  is  ignored  if  the
              operation  will  not  generate  a  successful  completion, unless an op flag specifies the context
              parameter be used for required input.

DESCRIPTION

       The send functions – fi_send, fi_sendv, fi_sendmsg, fi_inject, and fi_senddata – are used to  transmit  a
       message from one endpoint to another endpoint.  The main difference between send functions are the number
       and type of parameters that they accept as input.  Otherwise, they perform  the  same  general  function.
       Messages  sent  using fi_msg operations are received by a remote endpoint into a buffer posted to receive
       such messages.

       The receive functions – fi_recv, fi_recvv, fi_recvmsg – post a data buffer  to  an  endpoint  to  receive
       inbound  messages.   Similar  to  the  send operations, receive operations operate asynchronously.  Users
       should not touch the posted data buffer(s) until the receive operation has completed.

       An endpoint must be enabled before an application can  post  send  or  receive  operations  to  it.   For
       connected  endpoints,  receive  buffers  may  be  posted  prior  to connect or accept being called on the
       endpoint.  This ensures that buffers are  available  to  receive  incoming  data  immediately  after  the
       connection has been established.

       Completed  message  operations  are  reported to the user through one or more event collectors associated
       with the endpoint.  Users provide context which are associated with each operation, and  is  returned  to
       the user as part of the event completion.  See fi_cq for completion event details.

   fi_send
       The  call  fi_send  transfers  the data contained in the user-specified data buffer to a remote endpoint,
       with message boundaries being maintained.

   fi_sendv
       The fi_sendv call adds support for a scatter-gather list to fi_send.  The fi_sendv transfers the  set  of
       data buffers referenced by the iov parameter to a remote endpoint as a single message.

   fi_sendmsg
       The  fi_sendmsg  call  supports data transfers over both connected and connectionless endpoints, with the
       ability to control the send operation per call through the use of flags.  The fi_sendmsg function takes a
       struct fi_msg as input.

              struct fi_msg {
                  const struct iovec *msg_iov; /* scatter-gather array */
                  void               **desc;   /* local request descriptors */
                  size_t             iov_count;/* # elements in iov */
                  fi_addr_t          addr;     /* optional endpoint address */
                  void               *context; /* user-defined context */
                  uint64_t           data;     /* optional message data */
              };

   fi_inject
       The  send  inject  call  is an optimized version of fi_send with the following characteristics.  The data
       buffer is available for reuse immediately on return from the call, and no CQ entry will be written if the
       transfer completes successfully.

       Conceptually,  this means that the fi_inject function behaves as if the FI_INJECT transfer flag were set,
       selective completions are enabled, and the FI_COMPLETION flag is not specified.  Note that the  CQ  entry
       will be suppressed even if the default behavior of the endpoint is to write CQ entries for all successful
       completions.  See the flags discussion below for more details.  The requested message size  that  can  be
       used with fi_inject is limited by inject_size.

   fi_senddata
       The  send  data  call  is  similar  to  fi_send,  but  allows  for  the  sending  of  remote CQ data (see
       FI_REMOTE_CQ_DATA flag) as part of the transfer.

   fi_injectdata
       The inject data call is similar to fi_inject,  but  allows  for  the  sending  of  remote  CQ  data  (see
       FI_REMOTE_CQ_DATA flag) as part of the transfer.

   fi_recv
       The fi_recv call posts a data buffer to the receive queue of the corresponding endpoint.  Posted receives
       are searched in the order in which they were posted in order to  match  sends.   Message  boundaries  are
       maintained.   The  order  in  which the receives complete is dependent on the endpoint type and protocol.
       For connectionless endpoints, the src_addr parameter can be used to indicate  that  a  buffer  should  be
       posted to receive incoming data from a specific remote endpoint.

   fi_recvv
       The  fi_recvv call adds support for a scatter-gather list to fi_recv.  The fi_recvv posts the set of data
       buffers referenced by the iov parameter to a receive incoming data.

   fi_recvmsg
       The fi_recvmsg call supports posting buffers over both connected and connectionless endpoints,  with  the
       ability  to  control  the  receive  operation per call through the use of flags.  The fi_recvmsg function
       takes a struct fi_msg as input.

FLAGS

       The fi_recvmsg and fi_sendmsg calls allow the user to specify flags which can change the default  message
       handling  of  the  endpoint.  Flags specified with fi_recvmsg / fi_sendmsg override most flags previously
       configured with the endpoint, except where noted (see fi_endpoint.3).  The following list  of  flags  are
       usable with fi_recvmsg and/or fi_sendmsg.

       FI_REMOTE_CQ_DATA
              Applies  to  fi_sendmsg and fi_senddata.  Indicates that remote CQ data is available and should be
              sent as part of the request.  See fi_getinfo for additional details on FI_REMOTE_CQ_DATA.

       FI_CLAIM
              Applies  to  posted  receive  operations  for  endpoints  configured   for   FI_BUFFERED_RECV   or
              FI_VARIABLE_MSG.   This flag is used to retrieve a message that was buffered by the provider.  See
              the Buffered Receives section for details.

       FI_COMPLETION
              Indicates that a completion entry should be generated for the specified operation.   The  endpoint
              must be bound to a completion queue with FI_SELECTIVE_COMPLETION that corresponds to the specified
              operation, or this flag is ignored.

       FI_DISCARD
              Applies  to  posted  receive  operations  for  endpoints  configured   for   FI_BUFFERED_RECV   or
              FI_VARIABLE_MSG.   This flag is used to free a message that was buffered by the provider.  See the
              Buffered Receives section for details.

       FI_MORE
              Indicates that the user has additional requests that will immediately be posted after the  current
              call  returns.   Use of this flag may improve performance by enabling the provider to optimize its
              access to the fabric hardware.

       FI_INJECT
              Applies to fi_sendmsg.  Indicates that the  outbound  data  buffer  should  be  returned  to  user
              immediately  after  the  send call returns, even if the operation is handled asynchronously.  This
              may require that the underlying provider implementation copy the data  into  a  local  buffer  and
              transfer out of that buffer.  This flag can only be used with messages smaller than inject_size.

       FI_MULTI_RECV
              Applies to posted receive operations.  This flag allows the user to post a single buffer that will
              receive multiple incoming messages.  Received messages will be  packed  into  the  receive  buffer
              until  the buffer has been consumed.  Use of this flag may cause a single posted receive operation
              to generate multiple events as messages are placed into the buffer.   The  placement  of  received
              data into the buffer may be subjected to provider specific alignment restrictions.

       The  buffer  will  be  released by the provider when the available buffer space falls below the specified
       minimum (see FI_OPT_MIN_MULTI_RECV).  Note that an entry to the associated receive completion queue  will
       always  be  generated  when  the  buffer  has  been consumed, even if other receive completions have been
       suppressed (i.e. the Rx context has been configured for FI_SELECTIVE_COMPLETION).  See the  FI_MULTI_RECV
       completion flag fi_cq(3).

       FI_INJECT_COMPLETE
              Applies  to fi_sendmsg.  Indicates that a completion should be generated when the source buffer(s)
              may be reused.

       FI_TRANSMIT_COMPLETE
              Applies to fi_sendmsg and fi_recvmsg.  For sends,  indicates  that  a  completion  should  not  be
              generated  until the operation has been successfully transmitted and is no longer being tracked by
              the provider.  For receive operations, indicates that a completion may be generated as soon as the
              message  has  been processed by the local provider, even if the message data may not be visible to
              all processing elements.  See fi_cq(3) for target side completion semantics.

       FI_DELIVERY_COMPLETE
              Applies to fi_sendmsg.  Indicates that a completion should be generated  when  the  operation  has
              been processed by the destination.

       FI_FENCE
              Applies to transmits.  Indicates that the requested operation, also known as the fenced operation,
              and any operation posted after the fenced operation will be deferred until all previous operations
              targeting  the  same  peer  endpoint have completed.  Operations posted after the fencing will see
              and/or replace the results of any operations initiated prior to the fenced operation.

       The ordering of operations starting at the posting of the fenced operation (inclusive) to the posting  of
       a subsequent fenced operation (exclusive) is controlled by the endpoint’s ordering semantics.

       FI_MULTICAST
              Applies  to  transmits.   This  flag  indicates  that  the  address specified as the data transfer
              destination is a multicast address.  This flag  must  be  used  in  all  multicast  transfers,  in
              conjunction with a multicast fi_addr_t.

Buffered Receives

       Buffered  receives  indicate  that  the  networking  layer allocates and manages the data buffers used to
       receive network data transfers.  As a result, received messages must be copied from the  network  buffers
       into  application  buffers for processing.  However, applications can avoid this copy if they are able to
       process the message in place (directly from the networking buffers).

       Handling buffered receives differs based on the size of the message  being  sent.   In  general,  smaller
       messages  are  passed  directly  to  the  application  for  processing.   However, for large messages, an
       application will only receive the start of the message and must claim the  rest.   The  details  for  how
       small messages are reported and large messages may be claimed are described below.

       When  a  provider  receives a message, it will write an entry to the completion queue associated with the
       receiving endpoint.  For discussion purposes, the completion  queue  is  assumed  to  be  configured  for
       FI_CQ_FORMAT_DATA.   Since  buffered  receives are not associated with application posted buffers, the CQ
       entry op_context will point to a struct fi_recv_context.

              struct fi_recv_context {
                  struct fid_ep *ep;
                  void *context;
              };

       The `ep' field will point to the receiving endpoint or Rx context, and `context' will be  NULL.   The  CQ
       entry’s `buf' will point to a provider managed buffer where the start of the received message is located,
       and `len' will be set to the total size of the message.

       The maximum sized message that a provider can  buffer  is  limited  by  an  FI_OPT_BUFFERED_LIMIT.   This
       threshold can be obtained and may be adjusted by the application using the fi_getopt and fi_setopt calls,
       respectively.  Any adjustments must be made prior to enabling the endpoint.   The  CQ  entry  `buf'  will
       point to a buffer of received data.  If the sent message is larger than the buffered amount, the CQ entry
       `flags' will have the FI_MORE bit set.  When the FI_MORE bit  is  set,  `buf'  will  reference  at  least
       FI_OPT_BUFFERED_MIN bytes of data (see fi_endpoint.3 for more info).

       After  being  notified that a buffered receive has arrived, applications must either claim or discard the
       message.  Typically, small messages are processed  and  discarded,  while  large  messages  are  claimed.
       However, an application is free to claim or discard any message regardless of message size.

       To  claim a message, an application must post a receive operation with the FI_CLAIM flag set.  The struct
       fi_recv_context returned as part of the notification must be provided as the receive operation’s context.
       The  struct  fi_recv_context  contains  a  `context'  field.  Applications may modify this field prior to
       claiming the message.  When the claim operation completes, a standard receive completion  entry  will  be
       generated on the completion queue.  The `context' of the associated CQ entry will be set to the `context'
       value passed in through the fi_recv_context structure, and the CQ entry flags will have the FI_CLAIM  bit
       set.

       Buffered  receives  that  are not claimed must be discarded by the application when it is done processing
       the CQ entry data.  To discard a  message,  an  application  must  post  a  receive  operation  with  the
       FI_DISCARD flag set.  The struct fi_recv_context returned as part of the notification must be provided as
       the receive operation’s context.  When the FI_DISCARD flag is set for a receive  operation,  the  receive
       input buffer(s) and length parameters are ignored.

       IMPORTANT:  Buffered  receives  must  be  claimed  or discarded in a timely manner.  Failure to do so may
       result in increased memory usage for network buffering or communication stalls.  Once a buffered  receive
       has  been  claimed or discarded, the original CQ entry `buf' or struct fi_recv_context data may no longer
       be accessed by the application.

       The use of the FI_CLAIM and FI_DISCARD operation flags is also described with respect to  tagged  message
       transfers  in  fi_tagged.3.  Buffered receives of tagged messages will include the message tag as part of
       the CQ entry, if available.

       The handling of buffered receives follows all message ordering restrictions assigned to an endpoint.  For
       example,  completions  may indicate the order in which received messages arrived at the receiver based on
       the endpoint attributes.

Variable Length Messages

       Variable length messages, or simply variable messages, are transfers where the size  of  the  message  is
       unknown  to  the  receiver prior to the message being sent.  It indicates that the recipient of a message
       does not know the amount of data to expect prior to the message arriving.  It is most commonly used  when
       the  size  of  message  transfers varies greatly, with very large messages interspersed with much smaller
       messages, making receive side message buffering difficult to manage.  Variable messages are  not  subject
       to  max  message  length restrictions (i.e. struct fi_ep_attr::max_msg_size limits), and may be up to the
       maximum value of size_t (e.g. SIZE_MAX) in length.

       Variable length messages support requests that the provider  allocate  and  manage  the  network  message
       buffers.   As  a result, the application requirements and provider behavior is identical as those defined
       for supporting the FI_BUFFERED_RECV mode bit.  See the Buffered Receive section above for  details.   The
       main  difference is that buffered receives are limited by the fi_ep_attr::max_msg_size threshold, whereas
       variable length messages are not.

       Support for variable messages is indicated through the FI_VARIABLE_MSG capability bit.

NOTES

       If an endpoint has been configured with FI_MSG_PREFIX, the application must include buffer space of  size
       msg_prefix_size,  as  specified by the endpoint attributes.  The prefix buffer must occur at the start of
       the data referenced by the buf parameter, or be referenced by the first IO vector.  Message prefix  space
       cannot be split between multiple IO vectors.  The size of the prefix buffer should be included as part of
       the total buffer length.

RETURN VALUE

       Returns 0 on success.  On error, a negative value corresponding to  fabric  errno  is  returned.   Fabric
       errno values are defined in rdma/fi_errno.h.

       See the discussion below for details handling FI_EAGAIN.

ERRORS

       -FI_EAGAIN
              Indicates  that  the  underlying  provider  currently  lacks  the resources needed to initiate the
              requested operation.  The reasons for a provider returning FI_EAGAIN are varied.  However,  common
              reasons include insufficient internal buffering or full processing queues.

       Insufficient  internal  buffering is often associated with operations that use FI_INJECT.  In such cases,
       additional buffering may become available as posted operations complete.

       Full processing queues may be a temporary state related to local processing (for example, a large message
       is  being  transferred), or may be the result of flow control.  In the latter case, the queues may remain
       blocked until additional resources are made available at the remote side of the transfer.

       In all cases, the operation may be retried after additional resources become available.  It  is  strongly
       recommended  that  applications check for transmit and receive completions after receiving FI_EAGAIN as a
       return value, independent of the operation which failed.  This is particularly important in  cases  where
       manual  progress  is  employed,  as acknowledgements or flow control messages may need to be processed in
       order to resume execution.

SEE ALSO

       fi_getinfo(3), fi_endpoint(3), fi_domain(3), fi_cq(3)

AUTHORS

       OpenFabrics.