shithub: purgatorio

ref: 02ac617541ca1a7bf82b1615fb5a58235469b5d3
dir: /man/2/sys-pipe/

View raw version
.TH SYS-PIPE 2
.SH NAME
pipe \- create an interprocess channel
.SH SYNOPSIS
.EX
include "sys.m";
sys := load Sys Sys->PATH;

pipe: fn(fds: array of ref FD): int;
.EE
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B Pipe
creates a buffered channel for interprocess I/O via file descriptors.
It allocates a pipe from the pipe device and returns in the array
.B fds
file descriptors for the two pipe ends. Both returned file descriptors are opened for both reading and writing
.RB ( Sys->ORDWR ).
Data written on one file descriptor can be read from the other.
The details of flow control and buffering are given in
.IR pipe (3).
When no references remain to the file descriptor representing
one end of a pipe, and all remaining data has been read at the other end,
subsequent reads at that end will return 0 bytes.
Writes to a pipe with no reader produce an exception.
.PP
The array
.B fds
passed to the system call must have a length of at least 2;
only entries 0 and 1 are updated.
.PP
Limbo applications typically use typed Limbo channels, not pipes, for efficient
communication by cooperating processes.
Pipes are still useful, however,
to connect applications that do not (or cannot) share such channels,
or when a system interface requires a file descriptor.
For instance, a process that serves the 9P protocol can
pass the file descriptor for one end of a pipe to
.B Sys->mount
(see
.IR sys-bind (2)),
and read and write 9P messages on the other end of the pipe.
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
Returns 0 on success; -1 on failure.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.IR pipe (3)