#include <nng/nng.h>
typedef int nng_duration;
void nng_aio_set_timeout(nng_aio *aio, nng_duration timeout);
typedef uint64_t nng_time;
void nng_aio_set_expire(nng_aio *aio, nng_time expiration);
This documentation is for version v1.7.1 of NNG, but the latest released version is v1.8.0. see the documentation for v1.8.0 for the most up-to-date information. |
nng_aio_set_timeout(3)
NAME
nng_aio_set_timeout - set asynchronous I/O timeout
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The nng_aio_set_timeout()
function sets a timeout
for the asynchronous operation associated with aio.
This causes a timer to be started when the operation is actually started.
If the timer expires before the operation is completed, then it is
aborted with an error of NNG_ETIMEDOUT
.
The timeout is specified as a relative number of milliseconds.
If the timeout is NNG_DURATION_INFINITE
, then no timeout is used.
If the timeout is NNG_DURATION_DEFAULT
, then a "default" or socket-specific
timeout is used.
(This is frequently the same as NNG_DURATION_INFINITE
.)
The nng_aio_set_expire()
function is similar to nng_aio_set_timeout()
, but sets
an absolute expiration time based on the system clock. The expiration
is expressed as a number of milliseconds since some point in the past.
The nng_clock()
function can be used to determine
the current value of the clock.
As most operations involve some context switching, it is usually a good idea to allow at least a few tens of milliseconds before timing them out — a too small timeout might not allow the operation to properly begin before giving up! |
The value of timeout set for the aio is persistent, so that if the handle is reused for multiple operations, they will have the same relative timeout.
RETURN VALUES
None.
ERRORS
None.