table of contents
SPU_CREATE(2) | Linux Programmer's Manual | SPU_CREATE(2) |
NAME¶
spu_create - create a new spu context
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/spu.h> int spu_create(const char *pathname, int flags, mode_t mode); int spu_create(const char *pathname, int flags, mode_t mode, int neighbor_fd);
DESCRIPTION¶
The spu_create() system call is used on PowerPC machines that implement the Cell Broadband Engine Architecture in order to access Synergistic Processor Units (SPUs). It creates a new logical context for an SPU in pathname and returns a file descriptor associated with it. pathname must refer to a non-existing directory in the mount point of the SPU file system (spufs). If spu_create() is successful, a directory is created at pathname and it is populated with the files described in spufs(7).
When a context is created, the returned file descriptor can only be passed to spu_run(2), used as the dirfd argument to the *at family of system calls (e.g., openat(2)), or closed; other operations are not defined. A logical SPU context is destroyed (along with all files created within the context's pathname directory) once the last reference to the context has gone; this usually occurs when the file descriptor returned by spu_create() is closed.
The flags argument can be zero or any bitwise OR-ed combination of the following constants:
- SPU_CREATE_EVENTS_ENABLED
- Rather than using signals for reporting DMA errors, use the event argument to spu_run(2).
- SPU_CREATE_GANG
- Create an SPU gang instead of a context. (A gang is a group of SPU
contexts that are functionally related to each other and which share
common scheduling parameters — priority and policy. In the future,
gang scheduling may be implemented causing the group to be switched in and
out as a single unit.)
A new directory will be created at the location specified by the pathname argument. This gang may be used to hold other SPU contexts, by providing a pathname that is within the gang directory to further calls to spu_create().
- SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED
- Create a context that is not affected by the SPU scheduler. Once the
context is run, it will not be scheduled out until it is destroyed by the
creating process.
Because the context cannot be removed from the SPU, some functionality is disabled for SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED contexts. Only a subset of the files will be available in this context directory in spufs. Additionally, SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED contexts cannot dump a core file when crashing.
Creating SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED contexts requires the CAP_SYS_NICE capability.
- SPU_CREATE_ISOLATE
- Create an isolated SPU context. Isolated contexts are protected from some
PPE (PowerPC Processing Element) operations, such as access to the SPU
local store and the NPC register.
Creating SPU_CREATE_ISOLATE contexts also requires the SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED flag.
- SPU_CREATE_AFFINITY_SPU
- Create a context with affinity to another SPU context. This affinity information is used within the SPU scheduling algorithm. Using this flag requires that a file descriptor referring to the other SPU context be passed in the neighbor_fd argument.
- SPU_CREATE_AFFINITY_MEM
- Create a context with affinity to system memory. This affinity information is used within the SPU scheduling algorithm.
The mode argument (minus any bits set in the process's umask(2)) specifies the permissions used for creating the new directory in spufs. See stat(2) for a full list of the possible mode values.
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, spu_create() returns a new file descriptor. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set to one of the error codes listed below.
ERRORS¶
- EACCES
- The current user does not have write access to the spufs(7) mount point.
- EEXIST
- An SPU context already exists at the given path name.
- EFAULT
- pathname is not a valid string pointer in the calling process's address space.
- EINVAL
- pathname is not a directory in the spufs(7) mount point, or invalid flags have been provided.
- ELOOP
- Too many symbolic links were found while resolving pathname.
- EMFILE
- The process has reached its maximum open files limit.
- ENAMETOOLONG
- pathname is too long.
- ENFILE
- The system has reached the global open files limit.
- ENODEV
- An isolated context was requested, but the hardware does not support SPU isolation.
- ENOENT
- Part of pathname could not be resolved.
- ENOMEM
- The kernel could not allocate all resources required.
- ENOSPC
- There are not enough SPU resources available to create a new context or the user-specific limit for the number of SPU contexts has been reached.
- ENOSYS
- The functionality is not provided by the current system, because either the hardware does not provide SPUs or the spufs module is not loaded.
- ENOTDIR
- A part of pathname is not a directory.
- EPERM
- The SPU_CREATE_NOSCHED flag has been given, but the user does not have the CAP_SYS_NICE capability.
FILES¶
pathname must point to a location beneath the mount point of spufs. By convention, it gets mounted in /spu.
VERSIONS¶
The spu_create() system call was added to Linux in kernel 2.6.16.
CONFORMING TO¶
This call is Linux-specific and only implemented on the PowerPC architecture. Programs using this system call are not portable.
NOTES¶
Glibc does not provide a wrapper for this system call; call it using syscall(2). Note however, that spu_create() is meant to be used from libraries that implement a more abstract interface to SPUs, not to be used from regular applications. See http://www.bsc.es/projects/deepcomputing/linuxoncell/ for the recommended libraries.
EXAMPLE¶
See spu_run(2) for an example of the use of spu_create()
SEE ALSO¶
COLOPHON¶
This page is part of release 3.22 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2007-12-20 | Linux |