Is O_NONBLOCK being set a property of the file descriptor or underlying file?
- by Daniel Trebbien
From what I have been reading on The Open Group website on fcntl, open, read, and write, I get the impression that whether O_NONBLOCK is set on a file descriptor, and hence whether non-blocking I/O is used with the descriptor, should be a property of that file descriptor rather than the underlying file. Being a property of the file descriptor means, for example, that if I duplicate a file descriptor or open another descriptor to the same file, then I can use blocking I/O with one and non-blocking I/O with the other.
Experimenting with a FIFO, however, it appears that it is not possible to have a blocking I/O descriptor and non-blocking I/O descriptor to the FIFO simultaneously (so whether O_NONBLOCK is set is a property of the underlying file [the FIFO]):
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int fds[2];
if (pipe(fds) == -1) {
fprintf(stderr, "`pipe` failed.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
int fd0_dup = dup(fds[0]);
if (fd0_dup <= STDERR_FILENO) {
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to duplicate the read end\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if (fds[0] == fd0_dup) {
fprintf(stderr, "`fds[0]` should not equal `fd0_dup`.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if ((fcntl(fds[0], F_GETFL) & O_NONBLOCK)) {
fprintf(stderr, "`fds[0]` should not have `O_NONBLOCK` set.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if (fcntl(fd0_dup, F_SETFL, fcntl(fd0_dup, F_GETFL) | O_NONBLOCK) == -1) {
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to set `O_NONBLOCK` on `fd0_dup`\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
if ((fcntl(fds[0], F_GETFL) & O_NONBLOCK)) {
fprintf(stderr, "`fds[0]` should still have `O_NONBLOCK` unset.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE; // RETURNS HERE
}
char buf[1];
if (read(fd0_dup, buf, 1) != -1) {
fprintf(stderr, "Expected `read` on `fd0_dup` to fail immediately\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
else if (errno != EAGAIN) {
fprintf(stderr, "Expected `errno` to be `EAGAIN`\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
This leaves me thinking: is it ever possible to have a non-blocking I/O descriptor and blocking I/O descriptor to the same file and if so, does it depend on the type of file (regular file, FIFO, block special file, character special file, socket, etc.)?