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MQ_OVERVIEW(7) Linux Programmer's Manual MQ_OVERVIEW(7)
mq_overview - overview of POSIX message queues
POSIX message queues allow processes to exchange data in the form of
messages. This API is distinct from that provided by System V
message queues (msgget(2), msgsnd(2), msgrcv(2), etc.), but provides
similar functionality.
Message queues are created and opened using mq_open(3); this function
returns a message queue descriptor (mqd_t), which is used to refer to
the open message queue in later calls. Each message queue is
identified by a name of the form /somename; that is, a null-
terminated string of up to NAME_MAX (i.e., 255) characters consisting
of an initial slash, followed by one or more characters, none of
which are slashes. Two processes can operate on the same queue by
passing the same name to mq_open(3).
Messages are transferred to and from a queue using mq_send(3) and
mq_receive(3). When a process has finished using the queue, it
closes it using mq_close(3), and when the queue is no longer
required, it can be deleted using mq_unlink(3). Queue attributes can
be retrieved and (in some cases) modified using mq_getattr(3) and
mq_setattr(3). A process can request asynchronous notification of
the arrival of a message on a previously empty queue using
mq_notify(3).
A message queue descriptor is a reference to an open message queue
description (see open(2)). After a fork(2), a child inherits copies
of its parent's message queue descriptors, and these descriptors
refer to the same open message queue descriptions as the
corresponding message queue descriptors in the parent. Corresponding
message queue descriptors in the two processes share the flags
(mq_flags) that are associated with the open message queue
description.
Each message has an associated priority, and messages are always
delivered to the receiving process highest priority first. Message
priorities range from 0 (low) to sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX) - 1 (high).
On Linux, sysconf(_SC_MQ_PRIO_MAX) returns 32768, but POSIX.1
requires only that an implementation support at least priorities in
the range 0 to 31; some implementations provide only this range.
The remainder of this section describes some specific details of the
Linux implementation of POSIX message queues.
Library interfaces and system calls
In most cases the mq_*() library interfaces listed above are
implemented on top of underlying system calls of the same name.
Deviations from this scheme are indicated in the following table:
Library interface System call
mq_close(3) close(2)
mq_getattr(3) mq_getsetattr(2)
mq_notify(3) mq_notify(2)
mq_open(3) mq_open(2)
mq_receive(3) mq_timedreceive(2)
mq_send(3) mq_timedsend(2)
mq_setattr(3) mq_getsetattr(2)
mq_timedreceive(3) mq_timedreceive(2)
mq_timedsend(3) mq_timedsend(2)
mq_unlink(3) mq_unlink(2)
Versions
POSIX message queues have been supported on Linux since kernel 2.6.6.
Glibc support has been provided since version 2.3.4.
Kernel configuration
Support for POSIX message queues is configurable via the
CONFIG_POSIX_MQUEUE kernel configuration option. This option is
enabled by default.
Persistence
POSIX message queues have kernel persistence: if not removed by
mq_unlink(3), a message queue will exist until the system is shut
down.
Linking
Programs using the POSIX message queue API must be compiled with cc
-lrt to link against the real-time library, librt.
/proc interfaces
The following interfaces can be used to limit the amount of kernel
memory consumed by POSIX message queues and to set the default
attributes for new message queues:
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msg_default (since Linux 3.5)
This file defines the value used for a new queue's mq_maxmsg
setting when the queue is created with a call to mq_open(3)
where attr is specified as NULL. The default value for this
file is 10. The minimum and maximum are as for
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msg_max. A new queue's default mq_maxmsg
value will be the smaller of msg_default and msg_max. Up
until Linux 2.6.28, the default mq_maxmsg was 10; from Linux
2.6.28 to Linux 3.4, the default was the value defined for the
msg_max limit.
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msg_max
This file can be used to view and change the ceiling value for
the maximum number of messages in a queue. This value acts as
a ceiling on the attr->mq_maxmsg argument given to mq_open(3).
The default value for msg_max is 10. The minimum value is 1
(10 in kernels before 2.6.28). The upper limit is
HARD_MSGMAX. The msg_max limit is ignored for privileged
processes (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE), but the HARD_MSGMAX ceiling is
nevertheless imposed.
The definition of HARD_MSGMAX has changed across kernel
versions:
* Up to Linux 2.6.32: 131072 / sizeof(void *)
* Linux 2.6.33 to 3.4: (32768 * sizeof(void *) / 4)
* Since Linux 3.5: 65,536
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msgsize_default (since Linux 3.5)
This file defines the value used for a new queue's mq_msgsize
setting when the queue is created with a call to mq_open(3)
where attr is specified as NULL. The default value for this
file is 8192 (bytes). The minimum and maximum are as for
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msgsize_max. If msgsize_default exceeds
msgsize_max, a new queue's default mq_msgsize value is capped
to the msgsize_max limit. Up until Linux 2.6.28, the default
mq_msgsize was 8192; from Linux 2.6.28 to Linux 3.4, the
default was the value defined for the msgsize_max limit.
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/msgsize_max
This file can be used to view and change the ceiling on the
maximum message size. This value acts as a ceiling on the
attr->mq_msgsize argument given to mq_open(3). The default
value for msgsize_max is 8192 bytes. The minimum value is 128
(8192 in kernels before 2.6.28). The upper limit for
msgsize_max has varied across kernel versions:
* Before Linux 2.6.28, the upper limit is INT_MAX.
* From Linux 2.6.28 to 3.4, the limit is 1,048,576.
* Since Linux 3.5, the limit is 16,777,216 (HARD_MSGSIZEMAX).
The msgsize_max limit is ignored for privileged process
(CAP_SYS_RESOURCE), but, since Linux 3.5, the HARD_MSGSIZEMAX
ceiling is enforced for privileged processes.
/proc/sys/fs/mqueue/queues_max
This file can be used to view and change the system-wide limit
on the number of message queues that can be created. The
default value for queues_max is 256. No ceiling is imposed on
the queues_max limit; privileged processes (CAP_SYS_RESOURCE)
can exceed the limit (but see BUGS).
Resource limit
The RLIMIT_MSGQUEUE resource limit, which places a limit on the
amount of space that can be consumed by all of the message queues
belonging to a process's real user ID, is described in getrlimit(2).
Mounting the message queue filesystem
On Linux, message queues are created in a virtual filesystem. (Other
implementations may also provide such a feature, but the details are
likely to differ.) This filesystem can be mounted (by the superuser)
using the following commands:
# mkdir /dev/mqueue
# mount -t mqueue none /dev/mqueue
The sticky bit is automatically enabled on the mount directory.
After the filesystem has been mounted, the message queues on the sys‐
tem can be viewed and manipulated using the commands usually used for
files (e.g., ls(1) and rm(1)).
The contents of each file in the directory consist of a single line
containing information about the queue:
$ cat /dev/mqueue/mymq
QSIZE:129 NOTIFY:2 SIGNO:0 NOTIFY_PID:8260
These fields are as follows:
QSIZE Number of bytes of data in all messages in the queue (but see
BUGS).
NOTIFY_PID
If this is nonzero, then the process with this PID has used
mq_notify(3) to register for asynchronous message notifica‐
tion, and the remaining fields describe how notification
occurs.
NOTIFY Notification method: 0 is SIGEV_SIGNAL; 1 is SIGEV_NONE; and 2
is SIGEV_THREAD.
SIGNO Signal number to be used for SIGEV_SIGNAL.
Linux implementation of message queue descriptors
On Linux, a message queue descriptor is actually a file descriptor.
(POSIX does not require such an implementation.) This means that a
message queue descriptor can be monitored using select(2), poll(2),
or epoll(7). This is not portable.
The close-on-exec flag (see open(2)) is automatically set on the file
descriptor returned by mq_open(2).
IPC namespaces
For a discussion of the interaction of System V IPC objects and IPC
namespaces, see namespaces(7).
System V message queues (msgget(2), msgsnd(2), msgrcv(2), etc.) are
an older API for exchanging messages between processes. POSIX
message queues provide a better designed interface than System V
message queues; on the other hand POSIX message queues are less
widely available (especially on older systems) than System V message
queues.
Linux does not currently (2.6.26) support the use of access control
lists (ACLs) for POSIX message queues.
In Linux versions 3.5 to 3.14, the kernel imposed a ceiling of 1024
(HARD_QUEUESMAX) on the value to which the queues_max limit could be
raised, and the ceiling was enforced even for privileged processes.
This ceiling value was removed in Linux 3.14, and patches to stable
kernels 3.5.x to 3.13.x also removed the ceiling.
As originally implemented (and documented), the QSIZE field displayed
the total number of (user-supplied) bytes in all messages in the
message queue. Some changes in Linux 3.5 inadvertently changed the
behavior, so that this field also included a count of kernel overhead
bytes used to store the messages in the queue. This behavioral
regression was rectified in Linux 4.2 (and earlier stable kernel
series), so that the count once more included just the bytes of user
data in messages in the queue.
An example of the use of various message queue functions is shown in
mq_notify(3).
getrlimit(2), mq_getsetattr(2), poll(2), select(2), mq_close(3),
mq_getattr(3), mq_notify(3), mq_open(3), mq_receive(3), mq_send(3),
mq_unlink(3), epoll(7), namespaces(7)
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A
description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the
latest version of this page, can be found at
https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Linux 2017-09-15 MQ_OVERVIEW(7)
Pages that refer to this page: clone(2), execve(2), fork(2), intro(2), mq_getsetattr(2), msgctl(2), msgget(2), msgop(2), mq_close(3), mq_getattr(3), mq_notify(3), mq_open(3), mq_receive(3), mq_send(3), mq_unlink(3), sd_is_fifo(3), proc(5), systemd.exec(5), capabilities(7), namespaces(7)
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