mq_overview - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


MQ_OVERVIEW(7)             Linux Programmer's Manual            MQ_OVERVIEW(7)



NAME
       mq_overview - Overview of POSIX message queues

DESCRIPTION
       POSIX  message  queues  allow  processes  to exchange data in the form of messages.
       This API is distinct from that provided by  System  V  message  queues  (msgget(2),
       msgsnd(2), msgrcv(2), etc.), but provides similar functionality.

       Message  queues  are  created  and opened using mq_open(3); this function returns a
       message queue descriptor (mqd_t), which is used to refer to the open message  queue
       in  later calls.  Each message queue is identified by a name of the form /somename.
       Two processes can operate on the same queue by passing the same name to  mq_open().

       Messages  are  transferred  to and from a queue using mq_send(3) and mq_receive(3).
       When a process has finished using the queue, it closes it  using  mq_close(3),  and
       when  the queue is no longer required, it can be deleted using mq_unlink(3).  Queue
       attributes can be retrieved and (in some cases) modified  using  mq_getattr(3)  and
       mq_setattr(3).  A process can request asynchronous notification of the arrival of a
       message on a previously empty queue using mq_notify(3).

       A message queue descriptor is a reference to an open message queue description (cf.
       open(2)).   After  a fork(2), a child inherits copies of its parent's message queue
       descriptors, and these descriptors refer to the same open  message  queue  descrip-
       tions as the corresponding descriptors in the parent.  Corresponding descriptors in
       the two processes share the flags (mq_flags) that are associated with the open mes-
       sage queue description.

       Each  message  has an associated priority, and messages are always delivered to the
       receiving process highest priority first.  Message priorities range from 0 (low) to
       sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX) - 1  (high).   On  Linux, sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX) returns
       32768, but POSIX.1-2001 only requires an implementation to  support  priorities  in
       the range 0 to 31; some implementations only provide this range.

   Library interfaces and system calls
       In  most cases the mq_*() library interfaces listed above are implemented on top of
       underlying system calls of the same name.  Deviations from this  scheme  are  indi-
       cated in the following table:

         Library interface    System call
         mq_close(3)          close(2)
         mq_getattr(3)        mq_getsetattr(2)
         mq_open(3)           mq_open(2)
         mq_receive(3)        mq_timedreceive(2)
         mq_send(3)           mq_timedsend(2)
         mq_setattr(3)        mq_getsetattr(2)
         mq_timedreceive(3)   mq_timedreceive(2)
         mq_timedsend(3)      mq_timedsend(2)
         mq_unlink(3)         mq_unlink(2)

LINUX SPECIFIC DETAILS
   Versions
       POSIX  message  queues have been supported on Linux since kernel 2.6.6.  Glibc sup-
       port has been provided since version 2.3.4.

   Kernel configuration
       Support for POSIX message queues is configurable via the CONFIG_POSIX_MQUEUE kernel
       configuration option.  This option is enabled by default.

   Persistence
       POSIX message queues have kernel persistence: if not removed by mq_unlink(), a mes-
       sage queue will exist until the system is shut down.

   Linking
       Programs using the POSIX message queue API must be compiled with cc  -lrt  to  link
       against the real-time library, librt.

   /proc interfaces
       The  following interfaces can be used to limit the amount of kernel memory consumed
       by POSIX message queues:

       /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msg_max
              This file can be used to view and change the ceiling value for  the  maximum
              number  of  messages  in  a  queue.   This  value  acts  as a ceiling on the
              attr->mq_maxmsg argument given to mq_open(3).  The default and minimum value
              for  msg_max  is  10; the upper limit is HARD_MAX: (131072 / sizeof(void *))
              (32768 on  Linux/86).   This  limit  is  ignored  for  privileged  processes
              (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE), but the HARD_MAX ceiling is nevertheless imposed.

       /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msgsize_max
              This  file can be used to view and change the ceiling on the maximum message
              size.  This value acts as a ceiling on the attr->mq_msgsize  argument  given
              to mq_open(3).  The default and minimum value for msgsize_max is 8192 bytes;
              the upper limit is INT_MAX (2147483647 on Linux/86).  This limit is  ignored
              for privileged processes (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE).

       /proc/sys/fs/mqueue/queues_max
              This file can be used to view and change the system-wide limit on the number
              of  message  queues  that  can  be  created.   Only   privileged   processes
              (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE)  can  create  new message queues once this limit has been
              reached.  The default value for queues_max is 256; it can be changed to  any
              value in the range 0 to INT_MAX.

   Resource limit
       The  RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE  resource  limit,  which places a limit on the amount of space
       that can be consumed by all of the message queues belonging  to  a  process's  real
       user ID, is described in getrlimit(2).

   Mounting the message queue file system
       On  Linux, message queues are created in a virtual file system.  (Other implementa-
       tions may also provide such a feature, but the details are likely to differ.)  This
       file system can be mounted using the following commands:

         $ mkdir /dev/mqueue
         $ mount -t mqueue none /dev/mqueue

       The sticky bit is automatically enabled on the mount directory.

       After  the  file  system  has been mounted, the message queues on the system can be
       viewed and manipulated using the commands usually used for files (e.g.,  ls(1)  and
       rm(1)).

       The  contents  of  each  file  in the directory consist of a single line containing
       information about the queue:

         $ ls /dev/mqueue/mymq
         QSIZE:129     NOTIFY:2    SIGNO:0    NOTIFY_PID:8260
         $ mount -t mqueue none /dev/mqueue

       These fields are as follows:

       QSIZE  Number of bytes of data in all messages in the queue.

       NOTIFY_PID
              If this is non-zero, then the process with this PID has used mq_notify(3) to
              register  for  asynchronous  message  notification, and the remaining fields
              describe how notification occurs.

       NOTIFY Notification  method:  0  is  SIGEV_SIGNAL;  1  is  SIGEV_NONE;  and  2   is
              SIGEV_THREAD.

       SIGNO  Signal number to be used for SIGEV_SIGNAL.

   Polling message queue descriptors
       On Linux, a message queue descriptor is actually a file descriptor, and can be mon-
       itored using select(2), poll(2), or epoll(7).  This is not portable.

CONFORMING TO
       POSIX.1-2001.

NOTES
       System V message queues (msgget(2), msgsnd(2), msgrcv(2), etc.) are  an  older  API
       for  exchanging  messages between processes.  POSIX message queues provide a better
       designed interface than System V message queues; on the other  hand  POSIX  message
       queues  are  less widely available (especially on older systems) than System V mes-
       sage queues.

EXAMPLE
       An example of the use of various message queue functions is shown in  mq_notify(3).

SEE ALSO
       getrlimit(2),    mq_getsetattr(2),    mq_close(3),   mq_getattr(3),   mq_notify(3),
       mq_open(3), mq_receive(3), mq_send(3), mq_unlink(3), poll(2), select(2), epoll(4)



Linux 2.6.16                      2006-02-25                    MQ_OVERVIEW(7)

Generated by $Id: phpMan.php,v 4.49 2006/02/26 13:18:18 chedong Exp $ Author: Che Dong
On Apache/1.3.37 (Unix) mod_throttle/3.1.2 FrontPage/5.0.2.2635 mod_psoft_traffic/0.2 mod_ssl/2.8.28 OpenSSL/0.9.8b
Under GNU General Public License
2008-11-21 07:58 @38.103.63.55 Crawled by CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)
Valid XHTML 1.0!Valid CSS!