Provided by: libpmempool-dev_1.13.1-1.1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       libpmempool - persistent memory pool management library

              NOTE:  Support for Windows and FreeBSD deprecated since PMDK 1.13.0 release and will be removed in
              the PMDK 1.14.0 release.

SYNOPSIS

              #include <libpmempool.h>
              cc -std=gnu99 ... -lpmempool -lpmem

   Library API versioning:
              const char *pmempool_check_version(
                  unsigned major_required,
                  unsigned minor_required);

   Error handling:
              const char *pmempool_errormsg(void);

   Other library functions:
       A description of other libpmempool functions can be found on the following manual pages:

       • health check functions: pmempool_check_init(3)

       • pool set synchronization and transformation: pmempool_sync(3)

       • pool set management functions: pmempool_rm(3)

       • toggle or query pool set features: pmempool_feature_query(3)

DESCRIPTION

       libpmempool provides a set of utilities for off-line analysis and manipulation of a pool.  A pool in this
       manpage  means  a  pmemobj  pool, pmemblk pool, pmemlog pool or BTT layout, independent of the underlying
       storage.  Some libpmempool functions are required to work without any impact on the  pool  but  some  may
       create a new or modify an existing pool.

       libpmempool is for applications that need high reliability or built-in troubleshooting.  It may be useful
       for testing and debugging purposes also.

       libpmempool introduces functionality of  pool  set  health  check,  synchronization,  transformation  and
       removal.

CAVEATS

       libpmempool  relies  on  the  library destructor being called from the main thread.  For this reason, all
       functions that might trigger destruction  (e.g.   dlclose(3))  should  be  called  in  the  main  thread.
       Otherwise some of the resources associated with that thread might not be cleaned up properly.

       libpmempool requires the -std=gnu99 compilation flag to build properly.

LIBRARY API VERSIONING

       This  section  describes how the library API is versioned, allowing applications to work with an evolving
       API.

       The pmempool_check_version() function is used to see if the installed libpmempool supports the version of
       the  library API required by an application.  The easiest way to do this for the application is to supply
       the compile-time version information, supplied by defines in <libpmempool.h>, like this:

              reason = pmempool_check_version(PMEMPOOL_MAJOR_VERSION,
                                              PMEMPOOL_MINOR_VERSION);
              if (reason != NULL) {
                  /* version check failed, reason string tells you why */
              }

       Any mismatch in the major version number is considered a failure,  but  a  library  with  a  newer  minor
       version number will pass this check since increasing minor versions imply backwards compatibility.

       An  application can also check specifically for the existence of an interface by checking for the version
       where that interface was introduced.  These versions are documented in this man page as  follows:  unless
       otherwise  specified,  all  interfaces  described  here  are  available  in  version  1.0 of the library.
       Interfaces added after version 1.0 will contain the text introduced in version x.y in the section of this
       manual describing the feature.

       When  the  version  check  performed by pmempool_check_version() is successful, the return value is NULL.
       Otherwise the return value is a static string describing the reason for failing the version  check.   The
       string returned by pmempool_check_version() must not be modified or freed.

DEBUGGING AND ERROR HANDLING

       If  an error is detected during the call to a libpmempool function, the application may retrieve an error
       message describing the reason for the failure from pmempool_errormsg().  This function returns a  pointer
       to  a  static  buffer containing the last error message logged for the current thread.  If errno was set,
       the error message may include a description of the corresponding error code as returned  by  strerror(3).
       The  error  message  buffer  is thread-local; errors encountered in one thread do not affect its value in
       other threads.  The buffer is never cleared by any library function; its content is significant only when
       the  return  value  of the immediately preceding call to a libpmempool function indicated an error, or if
       errno was set.  The application must not modify or free the error message string, but it may be  modified
       by subsequent calls to other library functions.

       Two  versions  of  libpmempool  are  typically  available  on  a development system.  The normal version,
       accessed when a program is linked using the  -lpmempool  option,  is  optimized  for  performance.   That
       version  skips  checks  that impact performance and never logs any trace information or performs any run-
       time assertions.

       A second version of libpmempool, accessed when a program uses the  libraries  under  /usr/lib/pmdk_debug,
       contains run-time assertions and trace points.  The typical way to access the debug version is to set the
       environment variable LD_LIBRARY_PATH to /usr/lib/pmdk_debug  or  /usr/lib64/pmdk_debug,  as  appropriate.
       Debugging output is controlled using the following environment variables.  These variables have no effect
       on the non-debug version of the library.

              NOTE: On Debian/Ubuntu systems, this extra  debug  version  of  the  library  is  shipped  in  the
              respective -debug Debian package and placed in the /usr/lib/$ARCH/pmdk_dbg/ directory.

       • PMEMPOOL_LOG_LEVEL

       The value of PMEMPOOL_LOG_LEVEL enables trace points in the debug version of the library, as follows:

       • 0  - This is the default level when PMEMPOOL_LOG_LEVEL is not set.  No log messages are emitted at this
         level.

       • 1 - Additional details on any errors detected are logged (in  addition  to  returning  the  errno-based
         errors as usual).  The same information may be retrieved using pmempool_errormsg().

       • 2 - A trace of basic operations is logged.

       • 3 - Enables a very verbose amount of function call tracing in the library.

       • 4  -  Enables  voluminous  and  fairly  obscure  tracing  information that is likely only useful to the
         libpmempool developers.

       Unless PMEMPOOL_LOG_FILE is set, debugging output is written to stderr.

       • PMEMPOOL_LOG_FILE

       Specifies the name of a file where all logging information should be written.  If the last  character  in
       the  name  is  “-”, the PID of the current process will be appended to the file name when the log file is
       created.  If PMEMPOOL_LOG_FILE is not set, output is written to stderr.

EXAMPLE

       The following example illustrates how the libpmempool API is used.  The  program  detects  the  type  and
       checks consistency of given pool.  If there are any issues detected, the pool is automatically repaired.

              #include <stddef.h>
              #include <unistd.h>
              #include <stdlib.h>
              #include <stdio.h>
              #include <libpmempool.h>

              #define PATH "./pmem-fs/myfile"
              #define CHECK_FLAGS (PMEMPOOL_CHECK_FORMAT_STR|PMEMPOOL_CHECK_REPAIR|\
                                   PMEMPOOL_CHECK_VERBOSE)

              int
              main(int argc, char *argv[])
              {
                  PMEMpoolcheck *ppc;
                  struct pmempool_check_status *status;
                  enum pmempool_check_result ret;

                  /* arguments for check */
                  struct pmempool_check_args args = {
                      .path       = PATH,
                      .backup_path    = NULL,
                      .pool_type  = PMEMPOOL_POOL_TYPE_DETECT,
                      .flags      = CHECK_FLAGS
                  };

                  /* initialize check context */
                  if ((ppc = pmempool_check_init(&args, sizeof(args))) == NULL) {
                      perror("pmempool_check_init");
                      exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
                  }

                  /* perform check and repair, answer 'yes' for each question */
                  while ((status = pmempool_check(ppc)) != NULL) {
                      switch (status->type) {
                      case PMEMPOOL_CHECK_MSG_TYPE_ERROR:
                          printf("%s\n", status->str.msg);
                          break;
                      case PMEMPOOL_CHECK_MSG_TYPE_INFO:
                          printf("%s\n", status->str.msg);
                          break;
                      case PMEMPOOL_CHECK_MSG_TYPE_QUESTION:
                          printf("%s\n", status->str.msg);
                          status->str.answer = "yes";
                          break;
                      default:
                          pmempool_check_end(ppc);
                          exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
                      }
                  }

                  /* finalize the check and get the result */
                  ret = pmempool_check_end(ppc);
                  switch (ret) {
                      case PMEMPOOL_CHECK_RESULT_CONSISTENT:
                      case PMEMPOOL_CHECK_RESULT_REPAIRED:
                          return 0;
                      default:
                          return 1;
                  }
              }

       See <https://pmem.io/pmdk/libpmempool> for more examples using the libpmempool API.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       libpmempool  builds  on  the  persistent memory programming model recommended by the SNIA NVM Programming
       Technical Work Group: <https://snia.org/nvmp>

SEE ALSO

       dlclose(3),   pmempool_check_init(3),   pmempool_feature_query(3),   pmempool_rm(3),    pmempool_sync(3),
       strerror(3), libpmem(7), libpmemblk(7), libpmemlog(7), libpmemobj(7) and <https://pmem.io>**