sendfile — transfer data between file descriptors
#include <sys/sendfile.h>
ssize_t
sendfile( |
int out_fd, |
int in_fd, | |
off_t *offset, | |
size_t count) ; |
sendfile
() copies data
between one file descriptor and another. Because this copying
is done within the kernel, sendfile
() is more efficient than the
combination of read(2) and write(2), which would
require transferring data to and from user space.
in_fd
should be a
file descriptor opened for reading and out_fd
should be a descriptor
opened for writing.
If offset
is not
NULL, then it points to a variable holding the file offset
from which sendfile
() will
start reading data from in_fd
. When sendfile
() returns, this variable will be
set to the offset of the byte following the last byte that
was read. If offset
is not NULL, then sendfile
()
does not modify the file offset of in_fd
; otherwise the file
offset is adjusted to reflect the number of bytes read from
in_fd
.
If offset
is NULL,
then data will be read from in_fd
starting at the file
offset, and the file offset will be updated by the call.
count
is the
number of bytes to copy between the file descriptors.
The in_fd
argument
must correspond to a file which supports mmap(2)-like operations
(i.e., it cannot be a socket).
In Linux kernels before 2.6.33, out_fd
must refer to a socket.
Since Linux 2.6.33 it can be any file. If it is a regular
file, then sendfile
() changes
the file offset appropriately.
If the transfer was successful, the number of bytes
written to out_fd
is
returned. Note that a successful call to sendfile
() may write fewer bytes than
requested; the caller should be prepared to retry the call if
there were unsent bytes. See also NOTES.
On error, −1 is returned, and errno
is set appropriately.
Nonblocking I/O has been selected using O_NONBLOCK
and the write would
block.
The input file was not opened for reading or the output file was not opened for writing.
Bad address.
Descriptor is not valid or locked, or an mmap(2)-like
operation is not available for in_fd
, or count
is negative.
out_fd
has
the O_APPEND
flag set.
This is not currently supported by sendfile
().
Unspecified error while reading from in_fd
.
Insufficient memory to read from in_fd
.
count
is too
large, the operation would result in exceeding the
maximum size of either the input file or the output
file.
offset
is
not NULL but the input file is not seek(2)-able.
sendfile
() first appeared in
Linux 2.2. The include file <
sys/sendfile.h
>
is present since glibc 2.1.
Not specified in POSIX.1-2001, nor in other standards.
Other UNIX systems implement sendfile
() with different semantics and
prototypes. It should not be used in portable programs.
sendfile
() will transfer at
most 0x7ffff000 (2,147,479,552) bytes, returning the number
of bytes actually transferred. (This is true on both 32-bit
and 64-bit systems.)
If you plan to use sendfile
() for sending files to a TCP
socket, but need to send some header data in front of the
file contents, you will find it useful to employ the
TCP_CORK
option, described in
tcp(7), to minimize the
number of packets and to tune performance.
In Linux 2.4 and earlier, out_fd
could also refer to a
regular file; this possibility went away in the Linux 2.6.x
kernel series, but was restored in Linux 2.6.33.
The original Linux sendfile
() system call was not designed to
handle large file offsets. Consequently, Linux 2.4 added
sendfile64
(), with a wider type
for the offset
argument. The glibc sendfile
()
wrapper function transparently deals with the kernel
differences.
Applications may wish to fall back to read(2)/write(2) in the case where
sendfile
() fails with
EINVAL or ENOSYS.
If out_fd
refers
to a socket or pipe with zero-copy support, callers must
ensure the transferred portions of the file referred to by
in_fd
remain
unmodified until the reader on the other end of out_fd
has consumed the
transferred data.
The Linux-specific splice(2) call supports transferring data between arbitrary file descriptors provided one (or both) of them is a pipe.
This page is part of release 4.07 of the Linux man-pages
project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs,
and the latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man−pages/.
This man page is Copyright (C) 1998 Pawel Krawczyk. %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM_ONE_PARA) Permission is granted to distribute possibly modified copies of this page provided the header is included verbatim, and in case of nontrivial modification author and date of the modification is added to the header. %%%LICENSE_END $Id: sendfile.2,v 1.5 1999/05/18 11:54:11 freitag Exp $ 2000-11-19 bert hubert <ahuds9a.nl>: in_fd cannot be socket 2004-12-17, mtk updated description of in_fd and out_fd for 2.6 Various wording and formatting changes 2005-03-31 Martin Pool <mbpsourcefrog.net> mmap() improvements |