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| ident | Value used to identify this event. The exact interpretation is determined by the attached filter, but often is a file descriptor. |
| filter | Identifies the kernel filter used to process this event. The pre-defined system filters are described below. |
| flags | Actions to perform on the event. |
| fflags | Filter-specific flags. |
| data | Filter-specific data value. |
| udata | Opaque user-defined value passed through the kernel unchanged. |
The flags field can contain the following values:
| EV_ADD | Adds the event to the kqueue. Re-adding an existing event will modify the parameters of the original event, and not result in a duplicate entry. Adding an event automatically enables it, unless overridden by the EV_DISABLE flag. |
| EV_ENABLE | Permit kevent to return the event if it is triggered. |
| EV_DISABLE | Disable the event so kevent will not return it. The filter itself is not disabled. |
| EV_DELETE | Removes the event from the kqueue. Events which are attached to file descriptors are automatically deleted on the last close of the descriptor. |
| EV_ONESHOT | Causes the event to return only the first occurrence of the filter being triggered. After the user retrieves the event from the kqueue, it is deleted. |
| EV_CLEAR | After the event is retrieved by the user, its state is reset. This is useful for filters which report state transitions instead of the current state. Note that some filters may automatically set this flag internally. |
| EV_EOF | Filters may set this flag to indicate filter-specific EOF condition. |
| EV_ERROR | See RETURN VALUES below. |
The predefined system filters are listed below. Arguments may be passed to and from the filter via the fflags and data fields in the kevent structure.
| EVFILT_READ |
Takes a descriptor as the identifier, and returns whenever
there is data available to read.
The behavior of the filter is slightly different depending
on the descriptor type.
|
| Sockets | |
|
Sockets which have previously been passed to
listen
return when there is an incoming connection pending.
data
contains the size of the listen backlog.
Other socket descriptors return when there is data to be read, subject to the SO_RCVLOWAT value of the socket buffer. This may be overridden with a per-filter low water mark at the time the filter is added by setting the NOTE_LOWAT flag in fflags, and specifying the new low water mark in data. On return, data contains the number of bytes of protocol data available to read. If the read direction of the socket has shutdown, then the filter also sets EV_EOF in flags, and returns the socket error (if any) in fflags. It is possible for EOF to be returned (indicating the connection is gone) while there is still data pending in the socket buffer. | |
| Vnodes | |
| Returns when the file pointer is not at the end of file. data contains the offset from current position to end of file, and may be negative. | |
| Fifos, Pipes | |
|
Returns when the there is data to read;
data
contains the number of bytes available.
When the last writer disconnects, the filter will set EV_EOF in flags. This may be cleared by passing in EV_CLEAR, at which point the filter will resume waiting for data to become available before returning. | |
| BPF devices | |
| Returns when the BPF buffer is full, the BPF timeout has expired, or when the BPF has "immediate mode" enabled and there is any data to read; data contains the number of bytes available. | |
| EVFILT_WRITE | |
|
Takes a descriptor as the identifier, and returns whenever
it is possible to write to the descriptor.
For sockets, pipes
and fifos,
data
will contain the amount of space remaining in the write buffer.
The filter will set EV_EOF when the reader disconnects, and for
the fifo case, this may be cleared by use of EV_CLEAR.
Note that this filter is not supported for vnodes or BPF devices.
For sockets, the low water mark and socket error handling is identical to the EVFILT_READ case. | |
| EVFILT_AIO | |
| The sigevent portion of the AIO request is filled in, with sigev_notify_kqueue containing the descriptor of the kqueue that the event should be attached to, sigev_value containing the udata value, and sigev_notify set to SIGEV_KEVENT. When the aio_* system call is made, the event will be registered with the specified kqueue, and the ident argument set to the struct aiocb returned by the aio_* system call. The filter returns under the same conditions as aio_error. | |
| EVFILT_VNODE | |
| Takes a file descriptor as the identifier and the events to watch for in fflags, and returns when one or more of the requested events occurs on the descriptor. The events to monitor are: | |
| NOTE_DELETE | The unlink system call was called on the file referenced by the descriptor. |
| NOTE_WRITE | A write occurred on the file referenced by the descriptor. |
| NOTE_EXTEND | The file referenced by the descriptor was extended. |
| NOTE_ATTRIB | The file referenced by the descriptor had its attributes changed. |
| NOTE_LINK | The link count on the file changed. |
| NOTE_RENAME | The file referenced by the descriptor was renamed. |
| NOTE_REVOKE | Access to the file was revoked via revoke(2) or the underlying file system was unmounted. |
On return, fflags contains the events which triggered the filter.
| EVFILT_PROC | Takes the process ID to monitor as the identifier and the events to watch for in fflags, and returns when the process performs one or more of the requested events. If a process can normally see another process, it can attach an event to it. The events to monitor are: |
| NOTE_EXIT | The process has exited. |
| NOTE_FORK | The process has called fork. |
| NOTE_EXEC | The process has executed a new process via execve(2) or similar call. |
| NOTE_TRACK | Follow a process across fork calls. The parent process will return with NOTE_TRACK set in the fflags field, while the child process will return with NOTE_CHILD set in fflags and the parent PID in data. |
| NOTE_TRACKERR | This flag is returned if the system was unable to attach an event to the child process, usually due to resource limitations. |
On return, fflags contains the events which triggered the filter.
| EVFILT_SIGNAL | Takes the signal number to monitor as the identifier and returns when the given signal is delivered to the process. This coexists with the signal and sigaction facilities, and has a lower precedence. The filter will record all attempts to deliver a signal to a process, even if the signal has been marked as SIG_IGN. Event notification happens after normal signal delivery processing. data returns the number of times the signal has occurred since the last call to kevent. This filter automatically sets the EV_CLEAR flag internally. |
| EVFILT_TIMER | Establishes an arbitrary timer identified by ident. When adding a timer, data specifies the timeout period in milliseconds. The timer will be periodic unless EV_ONESHOT is specified. On return, data contains the number of times the timeout has expired since the last call to kevent. This filter automatically sets the EV_CLEAR flag internally. There is a system wide limit on the number of timers which is controlled by the kern.kq_calloutmax sysctl. |
| EVFILT_NETDEV | Takes a descriptor to a network interface as the identifier, and the events to watch for in fflags. It returns, when one or more of the requested events occur on the descriptor. The events to monitor are: |
| NOTE_LINKUP | The link is up. |
| NOTE_LINKDOWN | The link is down. |
| NOTE_LINKINV | The link state is invalid. |
On return, fflags contains the events which triggered the filter.
The kqueue system call creates a new kernel event queue and returns a file descriptor. If there was an error creating the kernel event queue, a value of -1 is returned and errno set.The kevent system call returns the number of events placed in the eventlist, up to the value given by nevents. If an error occurs while processing an element of the changelist and there is enough room in the eventlist, then the event will be placed in the eventlist with EV_ERROR set in flags and the system error in data. Otherwise, -1 will be returned, and errno will be set to indicate the error condition. If the time limit expires, then kevent returns 0.
The kqueue system call fails if:
[ENOMEM] The kernel failed to allocate enough memory for the kernel queue. [EMFILE] The per-process descriptor table is full. [ENFILE] The system file table is full. The kevent system call fails if:
[EACCES] The process does not have permission to register a filter. [EFAULT] There was an error reading or writing the kevent structure. [EBADF] The specified descriptor is invalid. [EINTR] A signal was delivered before the timeout expired and before any events were placed on the kqueue for return. [EINVAL] The specified time limit or filter is invalid. [ENOENT] The event could not be found to be modified or deleted. [ENOMEM] No memory was available to register the event or, in the special case of a timer, the maximum number of timers has been exceeded. This maximum is configurable via the kern.kq_calloutmax sysctl. [ESRCH] The specified process to attach to does not exist.
aio_error(2), aio_read(2), aio_return(2), poll(2), read(2), select(2), sigaction(2), write(2), signal(3)
The kqueue and kevent system calls first appeared in
.Fx 4.1 .
The kqueue system and this manual page were written by
.An Jonathan Lemon Aq jlemon@FreeBSD.org .
The EVFILT_NETDEV filter is currently only implemented for devices that use the miibus(4) driver for LINKUP and LINKDOWN operations. Therefore, it will not work with many non-ethernet devices.The timeout value is limited to 24 hours; longer timeouts will be silently reinterpreted as 24 hours.
| September 6, 2007 | KQUEUE (2) |
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