What is the purpose of epoll's edge triggered option?

Dan picture Dan · Feb 6, 2012 · Viewed 25k times · Source

From epoll's man page:

epoll is a variant of poll(2) that can be used either as an edge-triggered
or a level-triggered interface

When would one use the edge triggered option? The man page gives an example that uses it, but I don't see why it is necessary in the example.

Answer

James McLaughlin picture James McLaughlin · Feb 6, 2012

When an FD becomes read or write ready, you might not necessarily want to read (or write) all the data immediately.

Level-triggered epoll will keep nagging you as long as the FD remains ready, whereas edge-triggered won't bother you again until the next time you get an EAGAIN (so it's more complicated to code around, but can be more efficient depending on what you need to do).

Say you're writing from a resource to an FD. If you register your interest for that FD becoming write ready as level-triggered, you'll get constant notification that the FD is still ready for writing. If the resource isn't yet available, that's a waste of a wake-up, because you can't write any more anyway.

If you were to add it as edge-triggered instead, you'd get notification that the FD was write ready once, then when the other resource becomes ready you write as much as you can. Then if write(2) returns EAGAIN, you stop writing and wait for the next notification.

The same applies for reading, because you might not want to pull all the data into user-space before you're ready to do whatever you want to do with it (thus having to buffer it, etc etc). With edge-triggered epoll you get told when it's ready to read, and then can remember that and do the actual reading "as and when".