table of contents
| AIO_SUSPEND(2) | System Calls Manual | AIO_SUSPEND(2) | 
NAME¶
aio_suspend —
    suspend until asynchronous I/O operations or timeout
    complete (REALTIME)
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
  <aio.h>
int
  
  aio_suspend(const
    struct aiocb *const iocbs[],
    int niocb,
    const struct timespec
    *timeout);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    aio_suspend()
    system call suspends the calling process until at least one of the specified
    asynchronous I/O requests have completed, a signal is delivered, or the
    timeout has passed.
The iocbs argument is an array of niocb pointers to asynchronous I/O requests. Array members containing null pointers will be silently ignored.
If timeout is not a null pointer, it specifies a maximum interval to suspend. If timeout is a null pointer, the suspend blocks indefinitely. To effect a poll, the timeout should point to a zero-value timespec structure.
RETURN VALUES¶
If one or more of the specified asynchronous I/O requests have
    completed, aio_suspend() returns 0. Otherwise it
    returns -1 and sets errno to indicate the error, as
    enumerated below.
ERRORS¶
The aio_suspend() system call will fail
    if:
SEE ALSO¶
aio_cancel(2), aio_error(2), aio_return(2), aio_waitcomplete(2), aio_write(2), aio(4)
STANDARDS¶
The aio_suspend() system call is expected
    to conform to the IEEE Std 1003.1
    (“POSIX.1”) standard.
HISTORY¶
The aio_suspend() system call first
    appeared in FreeBSD 3.0.
AUTHORS¶
This manual page was written by Wes Peters <wes@softweyr.com>.
| October 23, 2017 | Debian |