dwww Home | Manual pages | Find package

mpool(3)                    Library Functions Manual                   mpool(3)

NAME
       mpool - shared memory buffer pool

LIBRARY
       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include <db.h>
       #include <mpool.h>

       MPOOL *mpool_open(DBT *key, int fd, pgno_t pagesize, pgno_t maxcache);

       void mpool_filter(MPOOL *mp, void (*pgin)(void *, pgno_t, void *),
                         void (*pgout)(void *, pgno_t, void *),
                         void *pgcookie);

       void *mpool_new(MPOOL *mp, pgno_t *pgnoaddr);
       void *mpool_get(MPOOL *mp, pgno_t pgno, unsigned int flags);
       int mpool_put(MPOOL *mp, void *pgaddr, unsigned int flags);

       int mpool_sync(MPOOL *mp);
       int mpool_close(MPOOL *mp);

DESCRIPTION
       Note  well:  This page documents interfaces provided up until glibc 2.1.
       Since glibc 2.2, glibc no longer provides these  interfaces.   Probably,
       you are looking for the APIs provided by the libdb library instead.

       Mpool  is the library interface intended to provide page oriented buffer
       management of files.  The buffers may be shared between processes.

       The function mpool_open() initializes a memory pool.  The  key  argument
       is  the byte string used to negotiate between multiple processes wishing
       to share buffers.  If the file buffers are mapped in shared memory,  all
       processes  using  the  same key will share the buffers.  If key is NULL,
       the buffers are mapped into private memory.  The fd argument is  a  file
       descriptor  for  the underlying file, which must be seekable.  If key is
       non-NULL and matches a file already being mapped, the fd argument is ig-
       nored.

       The pagesize argument is the size, in bytes, of the pages into which the
       file is broken up.  The maxcache argument is the maximum number of pages
       from the underlying file to cache at any one time.  This  value  is  not
       relative  to  the  number of processes which share a file's buffers, but
       will be the largest value specified by any of the processes sharing  the
       file.

       The  mpool_filter()  function  is intended to make transparent input and
       output processing of the pages possible.  If the pgin function is speci-
       fied, it is called each time a buffer is read into the memory pool  from
       the backing file.  If the pgout function is specified, it is called each
       time  a  buffer  is  written  into the backing file.  Both functions are
       called with the pgcookie pointer, the page number and a pointer  to  the
       page to being read or written.

       The  function mpool_new() takes an MPOOL pointer and an address as argu-
       ments.  If a new page can be allocated, a pointer to  the  page  is  re-
       turned  and the page number is stored into the pgnoaddr address.  Other-
       wise, NULL is returned and errno is set.

       The function mpool_get() takes an MPOOL pointer and a page number as ar-
       guments.  If the page exists, a pointer to the page is returned.  Other-
       wise, NULL is returned and errno is set.  The flags argument is not cur-
       rently used.

       The function mpool_put() unpins the page referenced by  pgaddr.   pgaddr
       must  be  an  address previously returned by mpool_get() or mpool_new().
       The flag value is specified by ORing any of the following values:

       MPOOL_DIRTY
              The page has been modified and needs to be written to the backing
              file.

       mpool_put() returns 0 on success and -1 if an error occurs.

       The function mpool_sync() writes all modified pages associated with  the
       MPOOL  pointer  to  the backing file.  mpool_sync() returns 0 on success
       and -1 if an error occurs.

       The mpool_close() function free's up  any  allocated  memory  associated
       with  the  memory  pool  cookie.   Modified pages are not written to the
       backing file.  mpool_close() returns 0 on success and -1 if an error oc-
       curs.

ERRORS
       The mpool_open() function may fail and set errno for any of  the  errors
       specified for the library routine malloc(3).

       The mpool_get() function may fail and set errno for the following:

       EINVAL         The requested record doesn't exist.

       The mpool_new() and mpool_get() functions may fail and set errno for any
       of  the errors specified for the library routines read(2), write(2), and
       malloc(3).

       The mpool_sync() function may fail and set errno for any of  the  errors
       specified for the library routine write(2).

       The  mpool_close() function may fail and set errno for any of the errors
       specified for the library routine free(3).

STANDARDS
       BSD.

SEE ALSO
       btree(3), dbopen(3), hash(3), recno(3)

4.4 Berkeley Distribution          2024-05-02                          mpool(3)

Generated by dwww version 1.16 on Mon Dec 8 20:32:55 CET 2025.