curl_multi_fdset(3) | Introduction to Library Functions | curl_multi_fdset(3) |
curl_multi_fdset - extract file descriptor information from a multi handle
#include <curl/curl.h> CURLMcode curl_multi_fdset(CURLM *multi_handle,
fd_set *read_fd_set,
fd_set *write_fd_set,
fd_set *exc_fd_set,
int *max_fd);
This function extracts file descriptor information from a given multi_handle. libcurl returns its fd_set sets. The application can use these to select() on, but be sure to FD_ZERO them before calling this function as curl_multi_fdset(3) only adds its own descriptors, it does not zero or otherwise remove any others. The curl_multi_perform(3) function should be called as soon as one of them is ready to be read from or written to.
The read_fd_set argument should point to an object of type fd_set that on returns specifies the file descriptors to be checked for being ready to read.
The write_fd_set argument should point to an object of type fd_set that on return specifies the file descriptors to be checked for being ready to write.
The exc_fd_set argument should point to an object of type fd_set that on return specifies the file descriptors to be checked for error conditions.
If no file descriptors are set by libcurl, max_fd contain -1 when this function returns. Otherwise it contains the highest descriptor number libcurl set. When libcurl returns -1 in max_fd, it is because libcurl currently does something that is not possible for your application to monitor with a socket and unfortunately you can then not know exactly when the current action is completed using select(). You then need to wait a while before you proceed and call curl_multi_perform(3) anyway. How long to wait? Unless curl_multi_timeout(3) gives you a lower number, we suggest 100 milliseconds or so, but you may want to test it out in your own particular conditions to find a suitable value.
When doing select(), you should use curl_multi_timeout(3) to figure out how long to wait for action. Call curl_multi_perform(3) even if no activity has been seen on the fd_sets after the timeout expires as otherwise internal retries and timeouts may not work as you would think and want.
If one of the sockets used by libcurl happens to be larger than what can be set in an fd_set, which on POSIX systems means that the file descriptor is larger than FD_SETSIZE, then libcurl tries to not set it. Setting a too large file descriptor in an fd_set implies an out of bounds write which can cause crashes, or worse. The effect of NOT storing it might possibly save you from the crash, but makes your program NOT wait for sockets it should wait for...
This functionality affects all supported protocols
int main(void) {
fd_set fdread;
fd_set fdwrite;
fd_set fdexcep;
int maxfd;
int rc;
CURLMcode mc;
struct timeval timeout = {1, 0};
CURLM *multi = curl_multi_init();
do {
/* call curl_multi_perform() */
/* get file descriptors from the transfers */
mc = curl_multi_fdset(multi, &fdread, &fdwrite, &fdexcep, &maxfd);
if(mc != CURLM_OK) {
fprintf(stderr, "curl_multi_fdset() failed, code %d.\n", mc);
break;
}
/* wait for activity on one of the sockets */
rc = select(maxfd + 1, &fdread, &fdwrite, &fdexcep, &timeout);
} while(!mc); }
Added in curl 7.9.6
CURLMcode type, general libcurl multi interface error code. See libcurl-errors(3)
curl_multi_cleanup(3), curl_multi_init(3), curl_multi_perform(3), curl_multi_timeout(3), curl_multi_wait(3), curl_multi_waitfds(3), select(2)
2024-10-05 | libcurl |