This is probably trivial question for some people, but somehow I'm not sure about it.
When waiting with poll for event from kernel, is it that the handling of new event is done in interrupt context ?
If not, does it mean we can sleep/wait (using other commands in handler) in the handler ?
int main (void)
{
struct pollfd fds[2];
int ret;
fds[0].fd = FILENO;
fds[0].events = POLLIN;
fds[1].fd = FILENO;
fds[1].events = POLLOUT;
ret = poll(fds, 2, TIMEOUT * 1000);
if (ret == -1) {
perror ("poll");
return 1;
}
if (!ret) {
return 0;
}
if (fds[0].revents & POLLIN)
{
/********** HANDLING EVENTS HERE ***************/
printf ("FILENO is POLLIN\n");
}
if (fds[1].revents & POLLOUT)
{
/********** HANDLING EVENTS HERE ***************/
printf ("FILENO is POLLOUT\n");
}
return 0;
}
Thank you, Ran
No (in general).
When you call
poll()
, the processor context switches to a kernel context, and other processes (and kernel threads) run. Your process will be context switched back in at some point after at least one of your FDs is ready. In general (consider for instance a pipe), interrupt context is not required for this, though note some I/O requires interrupt context to happen (not directly connected topoll()
).