Pipe buffer size is 4k or 64k?

坚强是说给别人听的谎言 提交于 2019-11-27 00:13:51

The other answers tell you that the pipe size is 64 KB. The reason why PIPE_BUF is 4KB is that PIPE_BUF is the largest size for which writes are guaranteed to be atomic. See http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/write.html

It's programmable now


As of Linux 2.6.35 you can use fcntl(2) with the F_SETPIPE_SZ operation to set the pipe buffer up to /proc/sys/fs/pipe-max-size. This is by default 1 MB; see proc(5).

In my experience, the single write test produced a total size of 65536, yet when I wrote 2700 at a time, I could only write 16 times, and then the next attempt stalls. I figure that the 'atomic' write needs to be within one 4K block, and that for each of my writes, it goes to the next full block to satisfy the request. So, in effect, the useable pipe size depends on the size of your writes.

Looks like the kernel use up to 16 buffers which adds up to 64k. See this link for an explanation of the ulimit output vs actual buffer size

nos

That's right. Since the 2.6.11 kernel, the pipe size in Linux is 64kB. Why ulimit reports it as 4Kb, I'm not sure, but that's wrong.

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!