ARES_PROCESS(3) | Library Functions Manual | ARES_PROCESS(3) |
NAME¶
ares_process - Process events for name resolution
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <ares.h> void ares_process(ares_channel channel,
fd_set *read_fds,
fd_set *write_fds) void ares_process_fd(ares_channel channel,
ares_socket_t read_fd,
ares_socket_t write_fd)
DESCRIPTION¶
The ares_process(3) function handles input/output events and timeouts associated with queries pending on the name service channel identified by channel. The file descriptor sets pointed to by read_fds and write_fds should have file descriptors set in them according to whether the file descriptors specified by ares_fds(3) are ready for reading and writing. (The easiest way to determine this information is to invoke select(3) with a timeout no greater than the timeout given by ares_timeout(3)).
The ares_process(3) function will invoke callbacks for pending queries if they complete successfully or fail.
ares_process_fd(3) works the same way but acts and operates only on the specific file descriptors (sockets) you pass in to the function. Use ARES_SOCKET_BAD for "no action". This function is provided to allow users of c-ares to avoid select(3) in their applications and within c-ares.
To only process possible timeout conditions without a socket event occurring, one may pass NULL as the values for both read_fds and write_fds for ares_process(3), or ARES_SOCKET_BAD for both read_fd and write_fd for ares_process_fd(3).
EXAMPLE¶
The following code fragment waits for all pending queries on a channel to complete:
int nfds, count; fd_set readers, writers; struct timeval tv, *tvp; while (1) {
FD_ZERO(&readers);
FD_ZERO(&writers);
nfds = ares_fds(channel, &readers, &writers);
if (nfds == 0)
break;
tvp = ares_timeout(channel, NULL, &tv);
count = select(nfds, &readers, &writers, NULL, tvp);
ares_process(channel, &readers, &writers); }
SEE ALSO¶
AUTHOR¶
Greg Hudson, MIT Information Systems
Copyright 1998 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
25 July 1998 |