There are pages scattered around the web that describe POSIX AIO facilities in varying amounts of detail. None of them are terribly recent. It\'s not clear what, exactly,
Doing socket I/O efficiently has been solved with kqueue, epoll, IO completion ports and the likes. Doing asynchronous file I/O is sort of a late comer (apart from windows' overlapped I/O and solaris early support for posix AIO).
If you're looking for doing socket I/O, you're probably better off using one of the above mechanisms.
The main purpose of AIO is hence to solve the problem of asynchronous disk I/O. This is most likely why Mac OS X only supports AIO for regular files, and not sockets (since kqueue does that so much better anyway).
Write operations are typically cached by the kernel and flushed out at a later time. For instance when the read head of the drive happens to pass by the location where the block is to be written.
However, for read operations, if you want the kernel to prioritize and order your reads, AIO is really the only option. Here's why the kernal can (theoretically) do that better than any user level application:
That said, posix AIO has a quite awkward interface, for instance:
As for real-world application using posix AIO, you could take a look at lighttpd (lighty), which also posted a performance measurement when introducing support.
Most posix platforms supports posix AIO by now (Linux, BSD, Solaris, AIX, tru64). Windows supports it via its overlapped file I/O. My understanding is that only Solaris, Windows and Linux truly supports async. file I/O all the way down to the driver, whereas the other OSes emulate the async. I/O with kernel threads. Linux being the exception, its posix AIO implementation in glibc emulates async operations with user level threads, whereas its native async I/O interface (io_submit() etc.) are truly asynchronous all the way down to the driver, assuming the driver supports it.
I believe it's fairly common among OSes to not support posix AIO for any fd, but restrict it to regular files.