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NAME

       readv, writev - read or write data into multiple buffers

SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/uio.h>

       ssize_t readv(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt);

       ssize_t writev(int fd, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt);

DESCRIPTION

       The readv() function reads iovcnt buffers from the file associated with
       the file descriptor fd into the  buffers  described  by  iov  ("scatter
       input").

       The writev() function writes iovcnt buffers of data described by iov to
       the file associated with the file descriptor fd ("gather output").

       The pointer iov points to an array  of  iovec  structures,  defined  in
       <sys/uio.h> as:

           struct iovec {
               void  *iov_base;    /* Starting address */
               size_t iov_len;     /* Number of bytes to transfer */
           };

       The  readv()  function  works  just  like  read(2) except that multiple
       buffers are filled.

       The writev() function works just like  write(2)  except  that  multiple
       buffers are written out.

       Buffers  are  processed  in  array  order.   This  means  that  readv()
       completely fills iov[0] before proceeding to iov[1], and  so  on.   (If
       there  is insufficient data, then not all buffers pointed to by iov may
       be filled.)  Similarly, writev() writes  out  the  entire  contents  of
       iov[0] before proceeding to iov[1], and so on.

       The  data  transfers  performed by readv() and writev() are atomic: the
       data written by writev() is written as  a  single  block  that  is  not
       intermingled  with  output  from  writes  in  other  processes (but see
       pipe(7) for an exception); analogously, readv() is guaranteed to read a
       contiguous  block  of data from the file, regardless of read operations
       performed in other threads or  processes  that  have  file  descriptors
       referring to the same open file description (see open(2)).

RETURN VALUE

       On  success, the readv() function returns the number of bytes read; the
       writev() function returns the number of bytes written.  On error, -1 is
       returned, and errno is set appropriately.

ERRORS

       The  errors  are  as  given for read(2) and write(2).  Additionally the
       following error is defined:

       EINVAL The sum of the iov_len values overflows an ssize_t  value.   Or,
              the  vector  count  iovcnt is less than zero or greater than the
              permitted maximum.

CONFORMING TO

       4.4BSD (the readv() and writev() functions first appeared  in  4.2BSD),
       POSIX.1-2001.   Linux  libc5  used  size_t  as  the  type of the iovcnt
       argument, and int as return type for these functions.

NOTES

   Linux Notes
       POSIX.1-2001 allows an implementation to place a limit on the number of
       items  that  can be passed in iov.  An implementation can advertise its
       limit by defining IOV_MAX in <limits.h> or at run time via  the  return
       value  from  sysconf(_SC_IOV_MAX).   On  Linux, the limit advertised by
       these mechanisms is 1024, which is the true kernel limit.  However, the
       glibc  wrapper  functions  do  some  extra work if they detect that the
       underlying kernel system call failed because this limit  was  exceeded.
       In  the  case  of  readv()  the  wrapper function allocates a temporary
       buffer large enough for all of the items specified by iov, passes  that
       buffer  in  a  call  to  read(2),  copies  data  from the buffer to the
       locations specified by the iov_base fields of the elements of iov,  and
       then  frees the buffer.  The wrapper function for writev() performs the
       analogous task using a temporary buffer and a call to write(2).

BUGS

       It is not advisable to mix calls to functions like readv() or writev(),
       which  operate  on  file descriptors, with the functions from the stdio
       library; the results will be undefined and probably not what you  want.

EXAMPLE

       The following code sample demonstrates the use of writev():

           char *str0 = "hello ";
           char *str1 = "world\n";
           struct iovec iov[2];
           ssize_t nwritten;

           iov[0].iov_base = str0;
           iov[0].iov_len = strlen(str0);
           iov[1].iov_base = str1;
           iov[1].iov_len = strlen(str1);

           nwritten = writev(STDOUT_FILENO, iov, 2);

SEE ALSO

       read(2), write(2)

COLOPHON

       This  page  is  part of release 3.24 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/.