A library for integrating file I/O with [mio], using POSIX AIO and kqueue. File I/O can be seamlessly mixed with network I/O and timers in the same event loop.
[mio]: https://github.com/carllerche/mio
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
mio-aio = "0.7.0"
mio = "0.8.0"
Usage of this crate is based on the mio_aio::AioCb
type, which is a wrapper
around nix::AioCb
. You can create one using constructors that are similar to
what nix
provides. Registration is the same as any mio
type, except that
AioCb
must be individually registered. The underlying file does not get
registered with mio
. Once registered, you can issue the AioCb
using
methods that wrap the nix
type: read
, write
, etc. After mio
's poll
method returns the event, call AioCb::aio_return
to get the final status. At
this point, the kernel has forgotten about the AioCb
. There is no need to
deregister it (though deregistration does not hurt).
mio-aio
works on FreeBSD. It will probably also work on DragonflyBSD.
It does not work on Linux or MacOS.
Unfortunately, Linux includes a poor implementation of POSIX AIO that emulates
asynchronous I/O in glibc using userland threads. Worse, epoll(2) can't
deliver completion notifications for POSIX AIO. That means that it can't be
supported by mio-aio
. But there's still hope for Linux users! Linux has a
non-standard asynchronous file I/O API called libaio. Libaio has better
performance than Linux's POSIX AIO. It still can't deliver completion
notification throuh epoll(2), however. What it can do is deliver completion
notification through an eventfd(2). And epoll can poll an eventfd. So a Linux
programmer wishing to use mio
with files could theoretically write a
mio-libaio
crate that uses one eventfd per reactor to poll all libaio
operations . Then he could implement a portability layer above mio
, for
example in tokio
.
On MacOS AIO only supports notification using signals, not kqueue. On MacOS
mio-aio
could theoretically run aio-suspend
in a separate thread, which
would send completion notification to the main thread's reactor. Performance
would suffer, however.
mio-aio
is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and
the Apache License (Version 2.0).
See LICENSE-APACHE, and LICENSE-MIT for details.