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NAME
aio — asynchronous I/O
DESCRIPTION
The aio facility provides system calls for asynchronous I/O. Asynchronous I/O operations are not
completed synchronously by the calling thread. Instead, the calling thread invokes one system call to
request an asynchronous I/O operation. The status of a completed request is retrieved later via a
separate system call.
Asynchronous I/O operations on some file descriptor types may block an AIO daemon indefinitely resulting
in process and/or system hangs. Operations on these file descriptor types are considered “unsafe” and
disabled by default. They can be enabled by setting the vfs.aio.enable_unsafe sysctl node to a non-zero
value.
Asynchronous I/O operations on sockets, raw disk devices, and regular files on local filesystems do not
block indefinitely and are always enabled.
The aio facility uses kernel processes (also known as AIO daemons) to service most asynchronous I/O
requests. These processes are grouped into pools containing a variable number of processes. Each pool
will add or remove processes to the pool based on load. Pools can be configured by sysctl nodes that
define the minimum and maximum number of processes as well as the amount of time an idle process will
wait before exiting.
One pool of AIO daemons is used to service asynchronous I/O requests for sockets. These processes are
named “soaiod<N>”. The following sysctl nodes are used with this pool:
kern.ipc.aio.num_procs
The current number of processes in the pool.
kern.ipc.aio.target_procs
The minimum number of processes that should be present in the pool.
kern.ipc.aio.max_procs
The maximum number of processes permitted in the pool.
kern.ipc.aio.lifetime
The amount of time a process is permitted to idle in clock ticks. If a process is idle for this
amount of time and there are more processes in the pool than the target minimum, the process will
exit.
A second pool of AIO daemons is used to service all other asynchronous I/O requests except for I/O
requests to raw disks. These processes are named “aiod<N>”. The following sysctl nodes are used with
this pool:
vfs.aio.num_aio_procs
The current number of processes in the pool.
vfs.aio.target_aio_procs
The minimum number of processes that should be present in the pool.
vfs.aio.max_aio_procs
The maximum number of processes permitted in the pool.
vfs.aio.aiod_lifetime
The amount of time a process is permitted to idle in clock ticks. If a process is idle for this
amount of time and there are more processes in the pool than the target minimum, the process will
exit.
Asynchronous I/O requests for raw disks are queued directly to the disk device layer after temporarily
wiring the user pages associated with the request. These requests are not serviced by any of the AIO
daemon pools.
Several limits on the number of asynchronous I/O requests are imposed both system-wide and per-process.
These limits are configured via the following sysctls:
vfs.aio.max_buf_aio
The maximum number of queued asynchronous I/O requests for raw disks permitted for a single
process. Asynchronous I/O requests that have completed but whose status has not been retrieved
via aio_return(2) or aio_waitcomplete(2) are not counted against this limit.
vfs.aio.num_buf_aio
The number of queued asynchronous I/O requests for raw disks system-wide.
vfs.aio.max_aio_queue_per_proc
The maximum number of asynchronous I/O requests for a single process serviced concurrently by the
default AIO daemon pool.
vfs.aio.max_aio_per_proc
The maximum number of outstanding asynchronous I/O requests permitted for a single process. This
includes requests that have not been serviced, requests currently being serviced, and requests
that have completed but whose status has not been retrieved via aio_return(2) or
aio_waitcomplete(2).
vfs.aio.num_queue_count
The number of outstanding asynchronous I/O requests system-wide.
vfs.aio.max_aio_queue
The maximum number of outstanding asynchronous I/O requests permitted system-wide.
Asynchronous I/O control buffers should be zeroed before initializing individual fields. This ensures
all fields are initialized.
All asynchronous I/O control buffers contain a sigevent structure in the aio_sigevent field which can be
used to request notification when an operation completes.
For SIGEV_KEVENT notifications, the sigevent s sigev_notify_kqueue field should contain the descriptor of
the kqueue that the event should be attached to, its sigev_notify_kevent_flags field may contain
EV_ONESHOT, EV_CLEAR, and/or EV_DISPATCH, and its sigev_notify field should be set to SIGEV_KEVENT. The
posted kevent will contain:
Member Value
ident asynchronous I/O control buffer pointer
filter EVFILT_AIO
flags EV_EOF
udata value stored in aio_sigevent.sigev_value
For SIGEV_SIGNO and SIGEV_THREAD_ID notifications, the information for the queued signal will include
SI_ASYNCIO in the si_code field and the value stored in sigevent.sigev_value in the si_value field.
For SIGEV_THREAD notifications, the value stored in aio_sigevent.sigev_value is passed to the
aio_sigevent.sigev_notify_function as described in sigevent(3).
SEE ALSO
aio_cancel(2), aio_error(2), aio_read(2), aio_return(2), aio_suspend(2), aio_waitcomplete(2),
aio_write(2), lio_listio(2), sigevent(3), sysctl(8)
HISTORY
The aio facility appeared as a kernel option in FreeBSD 3.0. The aio kernel module appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0. The aio facility was integrated into all kernels in FreeBSD 11.0.
Debian June 22, 2017 AIO(4)