epoll
is a Linux kernel system call for a scalable I/O event notification mechanism, first introduced in version 2.5.44 of the Linux kernel mainline. Its function is to monitor multiple file descriptors to see if I/O is possible on any of them. It is meant to replace the older POSIX select(2)
and poll(2)
system calls, to achieve better performance in more demanding applications, where the number of watched file descriptors is large (unlike the older system calls, which operate in O(n) time, epoll
operates in O(1) time).
epoll
is similar to FreeBSD's kqueue
, in that it operates on a configurable kernel object, exposed to user space as a file descriptor of its own.
Creates an epoll
object and returns its file descriptor. The flags
parameter allows epoll behavior to be modified. It has only one valid value, EPOLL_CLOEXEC
. epoll_create()
is an older variant of epoll_create1()
and is deprecated as of Linux kernel version 2.6.27 and glibc version 2.9.
Controls (configures) which file descriptors are watched by this object, and for which events. op
can be ADD, MODIFY or DELETE.
Waits for any of the events registered for with epoll_ctl
, until at least one occurs or the timeout elapses. Returns the occurred events in events
, up to maxevents
at once.
epoll
provides both edge-triggered and level-triggered modes. In edge-triggered mode, a call to epoll_wait
will return only when a new event is enqueued with the epoll
object, while in level-triggered mode, epoll_wait
will return as long as the condition holds.
For instance, if a pipe registered with epoll
has received data, a call to epoll_wait
will return, signaling the presence of data to be read. Suppose the reader only consumed part of data from the buffer. In level-triggered mode, further calls to epoll_wait
will return immediately, as long as the pipe's buffer contains data to be read. In edge-triggered mode, however, epoll_wait
will return only once new data is written to the pipe.