SPLICE(2) manual page
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splice - splice data to/from a pipe
#define _GNU_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */#include <fcntl.h>ssize_t
splice(int fd_in, loff_t *off_in, int fd_out, loff_t *off_out,
size_t lenunsigned int " flags );
splice() moves data between two file descriptors without copying
between kernel address space and user address space. It transfers up to
len bytes of data from the file descriptor fd_in to the file descriptor
fd_out, where one of the descriptors must refer to a pipe.
The following
semantics apply for fd_in and off_in:
- *
- If fd_in refers to a pipe, then
off_in must be NULL.
- *
- If fd_in does not refer to a pipe and off_in is NULL,
then bytes are read from fd_in starting from the current file offset, and
the current file offset is adjusted appropriately.
- *
- If fd_in does not refer
to a pipe and off_in is not NULL, then off_in must point to a buffer which
specifies the starting offset from which bytes will be read from fd_in;
in this case, the current file offset of fd_in is not changed.
Analogous
statements apply for fd_out and off_out.
The flags argument is a bit mask
that is composed by ORing together zero or more of the following values:
- SPLICE_F_MOVE
- Attempt to move pages instead of copying. This is only a hint
to the kernel: pages may still be copied if the kernel cannot move the
pages from the pipe, or if the pipe buffers don’t refer to full pages. The
initial implementation of this flag was buggy: therefore starting in Linux
2.6.21 it is a no-op (but is still permitted in a splice() call); in the future,
a correct implementation may be restored.
- SPLICE_F_NONBLOCK
- Do not block
on I/O. This makes the splice pipe operations nonblocking, but splice()
may nevertheless block because the file descriptors that are spliced to/from
may block (unless they have the O_NONBLOCK flag set).
- SPLICE_F_MORE
- More
data will be coming in a subsequent splice. This is a helpful hint when
the fd_out refers to a socket (see also the description of MSG_MORE in
send(2)
, and the description of TCP_CORK in tcp(7)
)
- SPLICE_F_GIFT
- Unused
for splice(); see vmsplice(2)
.
Upon successful completion, splice()
returns the number of bytes spliced to or from the pipe. A return value
of 0 means that there was no data to transfer, and it would not make sense
to block, because there are no writers connected to the write end of the
pipe referred to by fd_in.
On error, splice() returns -1 and errno is set
to indicate the error.
- EAGAIN
- SPLICE_F_NONBLOCK was specified in flags,
and the operation would block.
- EBADF
- One or both file descriptors are not
valid, or do not have proper read-write mode.
- EINVAL
- Target filesystem doesn’t
support splicing; target file is opened in append mode; neither of the
descriptors refers to a pipe; or offset given for nonseekable device.
- ENOMEM
- Out of memory.
- ESPIPE
- Either off_in or off_out was not NULL, but the corresponding
file descriptor refers to a pipe.
The splice() system call first
appeared in Linux 2.6.17; library support was added to glibc in version 2.5.
This system call is Linux-specific.
The three system calls
splice(), vmsplice(2)
, and tee(2)
, provide user-space programs with full
control over an arbitrary kernel buffer, implemented within the kernel
using the same type of buffer that is used for a pipe. In overview, these
system calls perform the following tasks:
- splice()
- moves data from the
buffer to an arbitrary file descriptor, or vice versa, or from one buffer
to another.
- tee(2)
- "copies" the data from one buffer to another.
- vmsplice(2)
- "copies" data from user space into the buffer.
Though we talk of copying,
actual copies are generally avoided. The kernel does this by implementing
a pipe buffer as a set of reference-counted pointers to pages of kernel
memory. The kernel creates "copies" of pages in a buffer by creating new
pointers (for the output buffer) referring to the pages, and increasing
the reference counts for the pages: only pointers are copied, not the pages
of the buffer.
See tee(2)
.
sendfile(2)
,
tee(2)
, vmsplice(2)
This page is part of release 3.78 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 http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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