Most of this migration was performed automatically with `zig fmt`. There
were a few exceptions which I had to manually fix:
* `@alignCast` and `@addrSpaceCast` cannot be automatically rewritten
* `@truncate`'s fixup is incorrect for vectors
* Test cases are not formatted, and their error locations change
* io_uring: fix the timeout_remove test
The test does a IORING_OP_TIMEOUT followed with a IORING_OP_TIMEOUT_REMOVE
and assumed we would get the CQEs in the same order.
Linux v5.18 changed how this works and we now get them in the reverse order.
The documentation doesn't explicitly say which CQE we should get first
so just make the test work with both cases.
* io_uring: fix the remove_buffers test
The original test was buggy but accidentally worked with kernels < 5.18
The test assumed that IORING_OP_REMOVE_BUFFERS removed from the start of
but in fact the documentation doesn't specify which buffer is removed,
only that a certain number of buffers are removed.
Starting with the kernel 5.18 the check for the `used_buffer_id` fails.
Turns out that previous kernels removed buffers in such a way that the
remaining buffer for this read would always be 0, however this isn't
true anymore.
Instead of checking a specific value just check that the `used_buffer_id`
corresponds to a valid ID.
alongside the typical msghdr struct, Zig has added a msghdr_const
type that can be used with sendmsg which allows const data to
be provided. I believe that data pointed to by the iov and control
fields in msghdr are also left unmodified, in which case they can
be marked const as well.
readv() is essentially identical to read() except for the buffer type,
this simplifies the API for the caller at the cost of not clearly mapping to the liburing C API.
Reads can be done in two ways with io_uring:
* using a simple buffer
* using a automatic buffer selection which requires the user to have
provided a number of buffers before
ReadBuffer let's the caller choose where the data should be read.
* os/linux/io_uring: add recvmsg and sendmsg
* Use std.os.iovec and std.os.iovec_const
* Remove msg_ prefix in msghdr and msghdr_const in arm64 etc
* Strip msg_ prefix in msghdr and msghdr_const for linux arm-eabi
* Copy msghdr and msghdr_const from i386 to mips
* Add sockaddr to lib/std/os/linux/mips.zig
* Copy msghdr and msghdr_const from x86_64 to riscv64
copy_cqes() is not guaranteed to return as many CQEs as provided in the
`wait_nr` argument, meaning the assert in `copy_cqe` can trigger.
Instead, loop until we do get at least one CQE returned.
This mimics the behaviour of liburing's _io_uring_get_cqe.
For renameat, unlinkat, mkdirat, symlinkat and linkat the error code
differs between kernel 5.4 which returns EBADF and kernel 5.10 which returns EINVAL.
Fixes#10466
The old test "timeout_link_chain1" was ported from liburing test_timeout_link_chain1
509873c445/test/link-timeout.c (L539-L628)
However it turns out that both fails with EBADF (-9) on Linux kernel 5.4.
The this new test skips properly on Linux kernel 5.4
and passes on Linux kernel 5.11.
I incorrectly assumed that __kernel_timespec was used when not linking
libc, however that is not the case. `std.os.timespec` is used both for
libc and non-libc cases. `__kernel_timespec` is a special struct that is
used only for io_uring.