The prototype is:
int select (int nfds,
fd_set *read-fds,
fd_set *write-fds,
fd_set *except-fds,
struct timeval *timeout);
I’ve been struggling to understand this function for quite some time. My question is, if it checks all the file descriptors from 0 to nfds-1, and will modify the read-fds, write-fds and except-fds when return, why do I need to use FD_SET to add file descriptors to the set at the begining, it will check all the file descriptors anyway, or not?
It won’t check from 0 to
nfds-1. The first argument just provides an upper bound on how large, numerically, the file descriptors used are. This is because the set itself might be represented as a bitvector, without a way to know how many bits are actually used. Specifying this as a separate argument helpsselect()avoid checking file descriptors that are not in use.Also, a descriptor that is not in e.g. the read set when you call
select()is not being checked at all, so it cannot appear in the set when the call returns, either.