非阻塞调用和EINTR

As is known, some blocking calls like read and write would return -1 and set errno to EINTR, and we need handle this. My question is: Does this apply for non-blocking calls, e.g, set socket to O_NONBLOCK?

答案是:对于非阻塞调用,它们不会返回EINTR错误。 If you take a look at the man pages of various systems for the following socket functions bind(), connect(), send(), and receive(), or look those up in the POSIX standard, you’ll notice something interesting: All these functions except one may return -1 and set errno to EINTR. The one function that is not documented to ever fail with EINTR is bind(). And bind() is also the only function of that list that will never block by default. So it seems that only blocking functions may fail because of EINTR, including read() and write(), yet if these functions never block, they also will never fail with EINTR and if you use O_NONBLOCK, those functions will never block.

Of course, even with non-blocking I/O, the read call may have temporarily interrupted by a signal but why would the system have to indicate that? Every function call, whether this is a system function or one written by the user, may be temporarily interrupted by a signal, really every single one, no exception. If the system would have to inform the user whenever that happens, all system functions could possibly fail because of EINTR. However, even if there was a signal interruption, the functions usually perform their task all the way to the end, that’s why this interruption is irrelevant. The error EINTR is used to tell the caller that the action he has requested was not performed because of a signal interruption, but in case of non-blocking I/O, there is no reason why the function should not perform the read or the write request, unless it cannot be performed right now, but then this can be indicated by an appropriate error(EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK ).

To confirm my theory, I took a look at the kernel of MacOS (10.8), which is still largely based on the FreeBSD kernel and it seems to confirm the suspicion. If a read call is currently not possible, as no data are available, the kernel checks for the O_NONBLOCK flag in the file descriptor flags. If this flag is set, it fails immediately with EAGAIN. If it is not set, it puts the current thread to sleep by calling a function named msleep(). This function causes the current thread to sleep until it is explicitly woken up (which is the case if data becomes ready for reading) or a timeout has been hit (e.g. you can set a receive timeout on sockets). Yet the thread is also woken up, if a signal is delivered, in which case msleep() itself returns EINTR and the next higher layer just passes this error through. So it is msleep() that produces the EINTR error, but if the O_NONBLOCK flag is set, msleep() is never called in the first place, hence this error cannot be returned.