dat_ep_create_with_srq(3DAT) Direct Access Transport Library Functions dat_ep_create_with_srq(3DAT)
NAME
dat_ep_create_with_srq - create an instance of End Point with Shared Receive Queue
SYNOPSIS
cc [ flag... ] file... -ldat [ library... ]
#include <dat/udat.h>
DAT_RETURN
dat_ep_create_with_srq (
IN DAT_IA_HANDLE ia_handle,
IN DAT_PZ_HANDLE pz_handle,
IN DAT_EVD_HANDLE recv_evd_handle,
IN DAT_EVD_HANDLE request_evd_handle,
IN DAT_EVD_HANDLE connect_evd_handle,
IN DAT_SRQ_HANDLE srq_handle,
IN DAT_EP_ATTR *ep_attributes,
OUT DAT_EP_HANDLE *ep_handle
)
PARAMETERS
ia_handle Handle for an open instance of the IA to which the created Endpoint belongs.
pz_handle Handle for an instance of the Protection Zone.
recv_evd_handle Handle for the Event Dispatcher where events for completions of incoming (receive) DTOs are reported. DAT_HAN-
DLE_NULL specifies that the Consumer is not interested in events for completions of receives.
request_evd_handle Handle for the Event Dispatcher where events for completions of outgoing (Send, RDMA Write, RDMA Read, and RMR
Bind) DTOs are reported. DAT_HANDLE_NULL specifies that the Consumer is not interested in events for completions
of requests.
connect_evd_handle Handle for the Event Dispatcher where Connection events are reported. DAT_HANDLE_NULL specifies that the Consumer
is not interested in connection events for now.
srq_handle Handle for an instance of the Shared Receive Queue.
ep_attributes Pointer to a structure that contains Consumer-requested Endpoint attributes. Cannot be NULL.
ep_handle Handle for the created instance of an Endpoint.
DESCRIPTION
The dat_ep_create_with_srq() function creates an instance of an Endpoint that is using SRQ for Recv buffers is provided to the Consumer as
ep_handle. The value of ep_handle is not defined if the DAT_RETURN is not DAT_SUCCESS.
The Endpoint is created in the Unconnected state.
Protection Zone pz_handle allows Consumers to control what local memory the Endpoint can access for DTOs except Recv and what memory remote
RDMA operations can access over the connection of a created Endpoint. Only memory referred to by LMRs and RMRs that match the Endpoint Pro-
tection Zone can be accessed by the Endpoint. The Recv DTO buffers PZ must match the SRQ PZ. The SRQ PZ might or might not be the same as
the EP one. Check Provider attribute for the support of different PZs between SRQ and its EPs.
The recv_evd_handle and request_evd_handle arguments are Event Dispatcher instances where the Consumer collects completion notifications of
DTOs. Completions of Receive DTOs are reported in recv_evd_handle Event Dispatcher, and completions of Send, RDMA Read, and RDMA Write DTOs
are reported in request_evd_handle Event Dispatcher. All completion notifications of RMR bindings are reported to a Consumer in
request_evd_handle Event Dispatcher.
All Connection events for the connected Endpoint are reported to the Consumer through connect_evd_handle Event Dispatcher.
Shared Receive Queue srq_handle specifies where the EP will dequeue Recv DTO buffers.
The created EP can be reset. The relationship between SRQ and EP is not effected by dat_ep_reset(3DAT).
SRQ can not be disassociated or replaced from created EP. The only way to disassociate SRQ from EP is to destroy EP.
Receive buffers cannot be posted to the created Endpoint. Receive buffers must be posted to the SRQ to be used for the created Endpoint.
The ep_attributes parameter specifies the initial attributes of the created Endpoint. Consumer can not specify NULL for ep_attributes but
can specify values only for the parameters needed and default for the rest.
For max_request_dtos and max_request_iov, the created Endpoint will have at least the Consumer requested values but might have larger val-
ues. Consumer can query the created Endpoint to find out the actual values for these attributes. Created Endpoint has the exact Consumer
requested values for max_recv_dtos, max_message_size, max_rdma_size, max_ rdma_read_in, and max_rdma_read_out. For all other attributes,
except max_recv_iov that is ignored, the created Endpoint has the exact values requested by Consumer. If Provider cannot satisfy the Con-
sumer requested attribute values the operation fails.
RETURN VALUES
DAT_SUCCESS The operation was successful.
DAT_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES The operation failed due to resource limitations.
DAT_INVALID_HANDLE Invalid DAT handle.
DAT_INVALID_PARAMETER Invalid parameter. One of the requested EP parameters or attributes was invalid or a combination of
attributes or parameters is invalid. For example, pz_handle specified does not match the one for SRQ or the
requested maximum RDMA Read IOV exceeds IA capabilities..
DAT_MODEL_NOT_SUPPORTED The requested Provider Model was not supported.
USAGE
The Consumer creates an Endpoint prior to the establishment of a connection. The created Endpoint is in DAT_EP_STATE_UNCONNECTED. Consumers
can do the following:
1. Request a connection on the Endpoint through dat_ep_connect(3DAT) or dat_ep_dup_connect(3DAT) for the active side of the connection
model.
2. Associate the Endpoint with the Pending Connection Request that does not have an associated local Endpoint for accepting the Pending
Connection Request for the passive/server side of the con-nection model.
3. Create a Reserved Service Point with the Endpoint for the passive/server side of the connection model. Upon arrival of a Connection
Request on the Service Point, the Consumer accepts the Pending Connection Request that has the Endpoint associated with it.
The Consumer cannot specify a request_evd_handle (recv_evd_handle) with Request Completion Flags (Recv Completion Flags) that do not match
the other Endpoint Completion Flags for the DTO/RMR completion streams that use the same EVD. If request_evd_handle (recv_evd_ handle) is
used for request (recv) completions of an Endpoint whose associated Request (Recv) Completion Flag attribute is DAT_COMPLE-
TION_UNSIGNALLED_FLAG, the Request Completion Flags and Recv Completion Flags for all Endpoint completion streams that use the EVD must
specify the same. By definition, completions of all Recv DTO posted to SRQ complete with Signal. Analogously, if recv_evd_handle is used
for recv completions of an Endpoint whose associated Recv Completion Flag attribute is DAT_COMPLETION_SOLICITED_WAIT, the Recv Completion
Flags for all Endpoint Recv completion streams that use the same EVD must specify the same Recv Completion Flags attribute value and the
EVD cannot be used for any other event stream types. If recv_evd_handle is used for Recv completions of an Endpoint that uses SRQ and whose
Recv Completion Flag attribute is DAT_COMPLETION_EVD_THRESHOLD then all Endpoint DTO completion streams (request and/or recv completion
streams) that use that recv_evd_handle must specify DAT_COMPLETION_EVD_THRESHOLD. Other event stream types can also use the same EVD.
Consumers might want to use DAT_COMPLETION_UNSIGNALLED_FLAG for Request and/or Recv completions when they control locally with posted
DTO/RMR completion flag (not needed for Recv posted to SRQ) whether posted DTO/RMR completes with Signal or not. Consumers might want to
use DAT_COMPLETION_SOLICITED_WAIT for Recv completions when the remote sender side control whether posted Recv competes with Signal or not
or not. uDAPL Consumers might want to use DAT_COMPLETION_EVD_THRESHOLD for Request and/or Recv completions when they control waiter
unblocking with the threshold parameter of the dat_evd_wait(3DAT).
Some Providers might restrict whether multiple EPs that share a SRQ can have different Protection Zones. Check the srq_ep_pz_differ-
ence_support Provider attribute for it.
Consumers might want to have a different PZ between EP and SRQ. This allows incoming RDMA operations to be specific to this EP PZ and not
the same for all EPs that share SRQ. This is critical for servers that supports multiple independent clients.
The Provider is strongly encouraged to create an EP that is ready to be connected. Any effects of previous connections or connection estab-
lishment attempts on the underlying Transport-specific Endpoint to which the DAT Endpoint is mapped to should be hidden from the Consumer.
The methods described below are examples:
o The Provider does not create an underlying Transport Endpoint until the Consumer is connecting the Endpoint or accepting a connection
request on it. This allows the Provider to accumulate Consumer requests for attribute settings even for attributes that the underlying
transport does not allow to change after the Transport Endpoint is created.
o The Provider creates the underlying Transport Endpoint or chooses one from a pool of Provider-controlled Transport Endpoints when the
Consumer creates the Endpoint. The Provider chooses the Transport Endpoint that is free from any underlying internal attributes that
might prevent the Endpoint from being connected. For IB and IP, that means that the Endpoint is not in the TimeWait state. Changing
of some of the Endpoint attributes becomes hard and might potentially require mapping the Endpoint to another underlying Transport
Endpoint that might not be feasible for all transports.
o The Provider allocates a Transport-specific Endpoint without worrying about impact on it from previous connections or connection
establishment attempts. Hide the Transport-specific TimeWait state or CM timeout of the underlying transport Endpoint within
dat_ep_connect(3DAT), dat_ep_dup_connect(3DAT), or dat_cr_accept(3DAT). On the Active side of the connection establishment, if the
remnants of a previous connection for Transport-specific Endpoint can be hidden within the Timeout parameter, do so. If not, generat-
ing DAT_CONNECTION_ EVENT_NON_PEER_REJECTED is an option. For the Passive side, generating a DAT_CONNECTION_COMPLETION_ERROR event
locally, while sending a non-peer-reject message to the active side, is a way of handling it.
Any transitions of an Endpoint into an Unconnected state can be handled similarly. One transition from a Disconnected to an Unconnected
state is a special case.
For dat_ep_reset(3DAT), the Provider can hide any remnants of the previous connection or failed connection establishment in the operation
itself. Because the operation is synchronous, the Provider can block in it until the TimeWait state effect of the previous connection or
connection setup is expired, or until the Connection Manager timeout of an unsuccessful connection establishment attempt is expired. Alter-
natively, the Provider can create a new Endpoint for the Consumer that uses the same handle.
DAT Providers are required not to change any Consumer-specified Endpoint attributes during connection establishment. If the Consumer does
not specify an attribute, the Provider can set it to its own default. Some EP attributes, like outstanding RDMA Read incoming or outgoing,
if not set up by the Consumer, can be changed by Providers to establish connection. It is recommended that the Provider pick the default
for outstanding RDMA Read attributes as 0 if the Consumer has not specified them. This ensures that connection establishment does not fail
due to insufficient outstanding RDMA Read resources, which is a requirement for the Provider.
The Provider is not required to check for a mismatch between the maximum RDMA Read IOV and maximum RDMA Read outgoing attributes, but is
allowed to do so. In the later case it is allowed to return DAT_INVALID_ PARAMETER when a mismatch is detected. Provider must allocate
resources to satisfy the combination of these two EP attributes for local RDMA Read DTOs.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|Interface Stability |Standard: uDAPL, 1.2 |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
|MT-Level |Safe |
+-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
SEE ALSO
dat_ep_create(3DAT), dat_srq_create(3DAT), dat_srq_free(3DAT), dat_srq_query(3DAT), libdat(3LIB), attributes(5)
SunOS 5.10 16 Jul 2004 dat_ep_create_with_srq(3DAT)