table of contents
MIO_OPEN(3) | Library Functions Manual | MIO_OPEN(3) |
NAME¶
mio_open
, mio_close
,
mio_read
, mio_write
,
mio_nfds
, mio_pollfd
,
mio_revents
, mio_eof
—
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sndio.h>
struct mio_hdl *
mio_open
(const
char *name, unsigned int
mode, int
nbio_flag);
void
mio_close
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl);
size_t
mio_read
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl, void
*addr, size_t
nbytes);
size_t
mio_write
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl, const void
*addr, size_t
nbytes);
int
mio_nfds
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl);
int
mio_pollfd
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl, struct
pollfd *pfd, int
events);
int
mio_revents
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl, struct
pollfd *pfd);
int
mio_eof
(struct
mio_hdl *hdl);
DESCRIPTION¶
Thesndio
library allows user processes to access
midi(4) hardware and sndiod(8) MIDI thru
boxes and control ports in a uniform way.
Opening and closing an MIDI stream¶
First the application must call themio_open
() function
to obtain a handle representing the newly created stream; later it will be
passed as the hdl argument of most other functions. The
name parameter gives the device string discussed in
sndio(7). If the program is using a single device and is
providing no device chooser, it should be set to MIO_PORTANY to allow the user
to select it using the MIDIDEVICE
environment
variable.
The mode parameter gives the direction of the stream. The following are supported:
- MIO_OUT
- The stream is output-only; data written to the stream will be sent to the hardware or other programs.
- MIO_IN
- The stream is input-only; received data from the hardware or other programs must be read from the stream.
- MIO_IN | MIO_OUT
- The stream sends and receives data. This mode should be used rather than
calling
mio_open
() twice.
If the nbio_flag argument is true (i.e.
non-zero), then the mio_read
() and
mio_write
() functions (see below) will be
non-blocking.
The mio_close
() function closes the stream
and frees all allocated resources associated with the
libsndio
handle.
Sending and receiving data¶
When input mode is selected, themio_read
() function
must be called to retrieve received data; it must be called often enough to
ensure that internal buffers will not overrun. It will store at most
nbytes bytes at the addr location.
Unless the nbio_flag flag is set, it will block until
data becomes available and will return zero only on error.
When output mode is selected, the
mio_write
() function can be called to provide data
to transmit. Unless the nbio_flag is set,
mio_write
() will block until the requested amount of
data is written.
Non-blocking mode operation¶
If the nbio_flag is set onmio_open
(), then the
mio_read
() and mio_write
()
functions will never block; if no data is available, they will return zero
immediately.
To avoid busy loops when non-blocking mode is used, the
poll(2) system call can be used to check if data can be
read from or written to the stream. The mio_pollfd
()
function prepares the array pfd of
pollfd structures for use with
poll(2). The optimal size of the pfd
array, which the caller must pre-allocate, is provided by the
mio_nfds
() function.
poll(2) will sleep until any of the
events requested with
mio_pollfd
() have occurred. Events are represented
as a bit-mask of POLLIN and
POLLOUT constants. The events which woke up
poll(2) can be obtained with the
mio_revents
() function. If
POLLIN is set, mio_read
() can
be called without blocking. If POLLOUT is set,
mio_write
() can be called without blocking. POLLHUP
may be set if an error occurs, even if it is not requested with
mio_pollfd
().
Error handling¶
Errors related to the MIDI subsystem (like hardware errors or dropped connections) and programming errors (such as a call tomio_read
() on a play-only stream) are considered
fatal. Once an error occurs, all functions which take a
mio_hdl argument, except
mio_close
() and mio_eof
(),
stop working (i.e. always return 0).
RETURN VALUES¶
Themio_open
() function returns the newly created handle
on success or NULL on failure.
The mio_pollfd
() function returns the
number of pollfd structures filled. The
mio_nfds
() function returns the number of
pollfd structures the caller must preallocate in order
to be sure that mio_pollfd
() will never overrun.
The mio_revents
() function returns the
bit-mask set by poll(2) in the pfd
array of pollfd structures.
The mio_read
() and
mio_write
() functions return the number of bytes
transferred.
The mio_eof
() function returns 0 if
there's no pending error, and a non-zero value if there's an error.
ENVIRONMENT¶
SNDIO_DEBUG
- The debug level: may be a value between 0 and 2.
SEE ALSO¶
poll(2), midi(4), sndio(7), sndiod(8)HISTORY¶
These functions first appeared in OpenBSD 4.7.AUTHORS¶
Alexandre Ratchov <ratchov@openbsd.org>August 8, 2020 | Linux 4.19.0-10-amd64 |