/* * Code taken from an example posted to linux-aio at kvack.org * Original Author: Drangon Zhou * Munged by Jeff Moyer to get it to build and to incorporate it into * the autotest framework. * * Description: This source code implements a test to ensure that an AIO * read of the last block in a file opened with O_DIRECT returns the proper * amount of data. In the past, there was a bug that resulted in a return * value of the requested block size, when in fact there was only a fraction * of that data available. Thus, if the last data block contained 300 bytes * worth of data, and the user issued a 4k read, we want to ensure that * the return value is 300, not 4k. */ #define _GNU_SOURCE #include #include #include #include #include #include /* Create a file of a size that is not a multiple of block size */ #define FILE_SIZE 300 #define fail(fmt , args...) \ do { \ printf(fmt , ##args); \ exit(1); \ } while (0) static unsigned char buffer[4096] __attribute((aligned (512))); int main(int argc, char **argv) { int ret; int fd; const char *filename; struct iocb myiocb; struct iocb *cb = &myiocb; io_context_t ioctx; struct io_event ie; if (argc != 2) fail("only arg should be file name"); filename = argv[1]; fd = open(filename, O_CREAT|O_RDWR|O_DIRECT, 0600); if (fd < 0) fail("open returned error %d\n", errno); ret = ftruncate(fd, FILE_SIZE); if (ret < 0) fail("truncate returned error %d\n", errno); /* <1> use normal disk read, this should be ok */ ret = read(fd, buffer, 4096); if (ret != FILE_SIZE) fail("buffered read returned %d, should be 300\n", ret); /* <2> use AIO disk read, it sees error. */ memset(&myiocb, 0, sizeof(myiocb)); cb->data = 0; cb->key = 0; cb->aio_lio_opcode = IO_CMD_PREAD; cb->aio_reqprio = 0; cb->aio_fildes = fd; cb->u.c.buf = buffer; cb->u.c.nbytes = 4096; cb->u.c.offset = 0; ret = io_queue_init(1, &ioctx); if (ret != 0) fail("io_queue_init returned error %d\n", ret); ret = io_submit(ioctx, 1, &cb); if (ret != 1) fail("io_submit returned error %d\n", ret); ret = io_getevents(ioctx, 1, 1, &ie, NULL); if (ret != 1) fail("io_getevents returned %d\n", ret); /* * If all goes well, we should see 300 bytes read. If things * are broken, we may very well see a result of 4k. */ if (ie.res != FILE_SIZE) fail("AIO read of last block in file returned %d bytes, " "expected %d\n", ret, FILE_SIZE); printf("AIO read of last block in file succeeded.\n"); return 0; }