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man pages section 2: System Calls

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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

putmsg(2)

Name

putmsg, putpmsg - send a message on a stream

Synopsis

#include <stropts.h>

int putmsg(int fildes, const struct strbuf *ctlptr,
     const struct strbuf *dataptr, int flags);
int putpmsg(int fildes, const struct strbuf *ctlptr,
     const struct strbuf *dataptr,int band, int flags);

Description

The putmsg() function creates a message from user-specified buffer(s) and sends the message to a streams file. The message may contain either a data part or a control part, or even both. The data and control parts to be sent are distinguished by placement in separate buffers, as described below. The semantics of each part is defined by the streams module that receives the message.

The putpmsg() function does the same thing as putmsg(), but provides the user the ability to send messages in different priority bands. Except where noted, all information pertaining to putmsg() also pertains to putpmsg().

The fildes argument specifies a file descriptor referencing an open stream. The ctlptr and dataptr arguments each point to a strbuf structure, which contains the following members:

int      maxlen;     /* not used here */
int      len;        /* length of data */
void     *buf;       /* ptr to buffer */

The ctlptr argument points to the structure describing the control part, if any, to be included in the message. The buf member in the strbuf structure points to the buffer where the control information resides, and the len member indicates the number of bytes to be sent. The maxlen member is not used in putmsg() (see getmsg(2)). In a similar manner, dataptr specifies the data, if any, to be included in the message. The flags argument indicates what type of message should be sent and is described later.

To send the data part of a message, dataptr is not NULL, and the len member of dataptr has a value of 0 or greater. To send the control part of a message, the corresponding values are set for ctlptr. No data (control) part is sent if either dataptr (ctlptr) is NULL or the len member of dataptr (ctlptr) is negative.

For putmsg(), if a control part is specified, and flags is set to RS_HIPRI, a high priority message is sent. If no control part is specified, and flags is set to RS_HIPRI, putmsg() fails and sets errno to EINVAL. If flags is set to 0, a normal (non-priority) message is sent. If no control part and no data part are specified, and flags is set to 0, no message is sent, and 0 is returned.

The stream head guarantees that the control part of a message generated by putmsg() is at least 64 bytes in length.

For putpmsg(), the flags are different. The flags argument is a bitmask with the following mutually-exclusive flags defined: MSG_HIPRI and MSG_BAND. If flags is set to 0, putpmsg() fails and sets errno to EINVAL. If a control part is specified and flags is set to MSG_HIPRI and band is set to 0, a high-priority message is sent. If flags is set to MSG_HIPRI and either no control part is specified or band is set to a non-zero value, putpmsg() fails and sets errno to EINVAL. If flags is set to MSG_BAND, then a message is sent in the priority band specified by band. If a control part and data part are not specified and flags is set to MSG_BAND, no message is sent and 0 is returned.

Normally, putmsg() will block if the stream write queue is full due to internal flow control conditions. For high-priority messages, putmsg() does not block on this condition. For other messages, putmsg() does not block when the write queue is full, and O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK is set. Instead, it fails and sets errno to EAGAIN.

The putmsg() or putpmsg() function also blocks, unless prevented by lack of internal resources, waiting for the availability of message blocks in the stream, regardless of priority or whether O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK has been specified. No partial message is sent.

Return Values

Upon successful completion, 0 is returned. Otherwise, −1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.

Errors

The putmsg() and putpmsg() functions will fail if:

EADI

The user-specified buffer for the data part of a message is enabled for ADI, and an ADI version mismatch is detected while the system reads data from the buffer. For more information, see the adi(3C) man page.

EAGAIN

A non-priority message is specified, the O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK flag is set and the stream write queue is full due to internal flow control conditions.

EBADF

The fildes argument is not a valid file descriptor open for writing.

EFAULT

The ctlptr or dataptr argument points to an illegal address.

EINTR

A signal is caught during the execution of the putmsg() function.

EINVAL

An undefined value is specified in flags; flags is set to RS_HIPRI and no control part was supplied; or the stream referenced by fildes is linked below a multiplexor.

ENOSR

Buffers are not allocated for the message that are not to be created due to insufficient streams memory resources.

ENOSTR

The fildes argument is not associated with a stream.

ENXIO

A hangup condition is generated downstream for the specified stream, or the other end of the pipe is closed.

EPIPE or EIO

The fildes argument refers to a streams-based pipe and the other end of the pipe is closed. A SIGPIPE signal is generated for the calling thread. This error condition occurs only with SUS-conforming applications. See standards(7).

ERANGE

The size of the data part of the message is not within the range specified by the maximum and minimum packet sizes of the topmost stream module. This value is also returned if the control part of the message is larger than the maximum configured size of the control part of a message, or if the data part of a message is larger than the maximum configured size of the data part of a message.

In addition, putmsg() and putpmsg() fails if the stream head has processed an asynchronous error before the call. In this case, the value of errno does not reflect the result of putmsg() or putpmsg(), but reflects the prior error.

The putpmsg() function will fail if:

EINVAL

The flags argument is set to MSG_HIPRI and band is non-zero.

Attributes

See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface Stability
Committed
Standard

See Also

getmsg(2), Intro(2), poll(2), read(2), write(2), attributes(7), standards(7)

STREAMS Programming Guide