• Home
  • Line#
  • Scopes#
  • Navigate#
  • Raw
  • Download
1---
2c: Copyright (C) Daniel Stenberg, <daniel.se>, et al.
3SPDX-License-Identifier: curl
4Title: libcurl-multi
5Section: 3
6Source: libcurl
7See-also:
8  - libcurl (3)
9  - libcurl-easy (3)
10  - libcurl-errors (3)
11---
12
13# NAME
14
15libcurl-multi - how to use the multi interface
16
17# DESCRIPTION
18
19This is an overview on how to use the libcurl multi interface in your C
20programs. There are specific man pages for each function mentioned in
21here. There is also the libcurl-tutorial(3) man page for a complete
22tutorial to programming with libcurl and the libcurl-easy(3) man page
23for an overview of the libcurl easy interface.
24
25All functions in the multi interface are prefixed with curl_multi.
26
27# OBJECTIVES
28
29The multi interface offers several abilities that the easy interface does not.
30They are mainly:
31
321. Enable a "pull" interface. The application that uses libcurl decides where
33and when to ask libcurl to get/send data.
34
352. Enable multiple simultaneous transfers in the same thread without making it
36complicated for the application.
37
383. Enable the application to wait for action on its own file descriptors and
39curl's file descriptors simultaneously.
40
414. Enable event-based handling and scaling transfers up to and beyond
42thousands of parallel connections.
43
44# ONE MULTI HANDLE MANY EASY HANDLES
45
46To use the multi interface, you must first create a 'multi handle' with
47curl_multi_init(3). This handle is then used as input to all further
48curl_multi_* functions.
49
50With a multi handle and the multi interface you can do several simultaneous
51transfers in parallel. Each single transfer is built up around an easy
52handle. You create all the easy handles you need, and setup the appropriate
53options for each easy handle using curl_easy_setopt(3).
54
55There are two flavors of the multi interface, the select() oriented one and
56the event based one we call multi_socket. You benefit from reading through the
57description of both versions to fully understand how they work and
58differentiate. We start out with the select() oriented version.
59
60When an easy handle is setup and ready for transfer, then instead of using
61curl_easy_perform(3) like when using the easy interface for transfers,
62you should add the easy handle to the multi handle with
63curl_multi_add_handle(3). You can add more easy handles to a multi
64handle at any point, even if other transfers are already running.
65
66Should you change your mind, the easy handle is again removed from the multi
67stack using curl_multi_remove_handle(3). Once removed from the multi
68handle, you can again use other easy interface functions like
69curl_easy_perform(3) on the handle or whatever you think is
70necessary. You can remove handles at any point during transfers.
71
72Adding the easy handle to the multi handle does not start the transfer.
73Remember that one of the main ideas with this interface is to let your
74application drive. You drive the transfers by invoking
75curl_multi_perform(3). libcurl then transfers data if there is anything
76available to transfer. It uses the callbacks and everything else you have
77setup in the individual easy handles. It transfers data on all current
78transfers in the multi stack that are ready to transfer anything. It may be
79all, it may be none. When there is nothing more to do for now, it returns back
80to the calling application.
81
82Your application extracts info from libcurl about when it would like to get
83invoked to transfer data or do other work. The most convenient way is to use
84curl_multi_poll(3) that helps you wait until the application should call
85libcurl again. The older API to accomplish the same thing is
86curl_multi_fdset(3) that extracts *fd_sets* from libcurl to use in
87select() or poll() calls in order to get to know when the transfers in the
88multi stack might need attention. Both these APIs allow for your program to
89wait for input on your own private file descriptors at the same time.
90curl_multi_timeout(3) also helps you with providing a suitable timeout
91period for your select() calls.
92
93curl_multi_perform(3) stores the number of still running transfers in
94one of its input arguments, and by reading that you can figure out when all
95the transfers in the multi handles are done. 'done' does not mean
96successful. One or more of the transfers may have failed.
97
98To get information about completed transfers, to figure out success or not and
99similar, curl_multi_info_read(3) should be called. It can return a
100message about a current or previous transfer. Repeated invokes of the function
101get more messages until the message queue is empty. The information you
102receive there includes an easy handle pointer which you may use to identify
103which easy handle the information regards.
104
105When a single transfer is completed, the easy handle is still left added to
106the multi stack. You need to first remove the easy handle with
107curl_multi_remove_handle(3) and then close it with
108curl_easy_cleanup(3), or possibly set new options to it and add it again
109with curl_multi_add_handle(3) to start another transfer.
110
111When all transfers in the multi stack are done, close the multi handle with
112curl_multi_cleanup(3). Be careful and please note that you **MUST**
113invoke separate curl_easy_cleanup(3) calls for every single easy handle
114to clean them up properly.
115
116If you want to reuse an easy handle that was added to the multi handle for
117transfer, you must first remove it from the multi stack and then re-add it
118again (possibly after having altered some options at your own choice).
119
120# MULTI_SOCKET
121
122curl_multi_socket_action(3) function offers a way for applications to
123not only avoid being forced to use select(), but it also offers a much more
124high-performance API that makes a significant difference for applications
125using large numbers of simultaneous connections.
126
127curl_multi_socket_action(3) is then used instead of
128curl_multi_perform(3).
129
130When using this API, you add easy handles to the multi handle just as with the
131normal multi interface. Then you also set two callbacks with the
132CURLMOPT_SOCKETFUNCTION(3) and CURLMOPT_TIMERFUNCTION(3) options
133to curl_multi_setopt(3). They are two callback functions that libcurl
134calls with information about what sockets to wait for, and for what activity,
135and what the current timeout time is - if that expires libcurl should be
136notified.
137
138The multi_socket API is designed to inform your application about which
139sockets libcurl is currently using and for what activities (read and/or write)
140on those sockets your application is expected to wait for.
141
142Your application must make sure to receive all sockets informed about in the
143CURLMOPT_SOCKETFUNCTION(3) callback and make sure it reacts on the given
144activity on them. When a socket has the given activity, you call
145curl_multi_socket_action(3) specifying which socket and action there
146are.
147
148The CURLMOPT_TIMERFUNCTION(3) callback is called to set a timeout. When
149that timeout expires, your application should call the
150curl_multi_socket_action(3) function saying it was due to a timeout.
151
152This API is typically used with an event-driven underlying functionality (like
153libevent, libev, kqueue, epoll or similar) with which the application
154"subscribes" on socket changes. This allows applications and libcurl to much
155better scale upward and beyond thousands of simultaneous transfers without
156losing performance.
157
158When you have added your initial set of handles, you call
159curl_multi_socket_action(3) with CURL_SOCKET_TIMEOUT set in the
160*sockfd* argument, and you get callbacks invoked that set you up and you
161then continue to call curl_multi_socket_action(3) accordingly when you
162get activity on the sockets you have been asked to wait on, or if the timeout
163timer expires.
164
165You can poll curl_multi_info_read(3) to see if any transfer has
166completed, as it then has a message saying so.
167
168# BLOCKING
169
170A few areas in the code are still using blocking code, even when used from the
171multi interface. While we certainly want and intend for these to get fixed in
172the future, you should be aware of the following current restrictions:
173
174~~~c
175 - Name resolves unless the c-ares or threaded-resolver backends are used
176 - file:// transfers
177 - TELNET transfers
178~~~
179