We're using POSIX message queues to pass messages between processes.
For this we've build a library layer to be able to use message queues on 
different platforms. Basically linux (debian, Ubuntu, archlinux, rasbian) is 
the development platform, but also vxworks platforms are supported.

Several message queues are opened through mq_open calls and the returned 
handles are organized in file descriptor sets (fd_set). The set is then passed 
over to a select(2) call, which blocks processing and returns as soon as any 
message in any of the queues arrives.

This works under linux, since the handles returned are valid file descriptors 
and the macros FD_ZERO / FD_SET are able to handle that handles.

However, under Cygwin, mq_open does not directly return file handles, but 
pointers to (unknown) data structures in memory (ref. 
http://sourceware.org/ml/cygwin/2013-07/msg00179.html), which cannot be used 
with FD_ZERO, FD_SET, so not with select(2). I know from the man pages 
(mq_open):
"Polling message queue descriptors
On Linux, a message queue descriptor is actually a file descriptor, and can be 
monitored using select(2), poll(2), or epoll(7).  This is not portable."

mq_open() and select() conform to POSIX.1-2001, at least under linux, but also 
under Cygwin ?
How can this be modified, so that it works under Cygwin as well ?

Here's a small code example, showing a segmentation fault in macros 
FD_ZERO/FD_SET:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <mqueue.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>

int main(void)
{
  int res;
  int i = 0;
  char msgQueueTestName[] = "/testQueue";
  mqd_t testQueue;
  struct mq_attr  attrQueue;
  fd_set readfds;
  int highest_fd;
  int numMessages;

  memset(&attrQueue,0x00,sizeof(attrQueue));
  attrQueue.mq_maxmsg  = 10;  /* room for X messages in the queue */
  attrQueue.mq_msgsize = 20;  /* maximum size of a message */

  /* this example has only one message queue; usually several message queues 
are opened by different processes */
  testQueue = mq_open(msgQueueTestName, O_RDWR | O_CREAT, S_IRWXU | S_IRWXG, 
&attrQueue);
  if( testQueue == (mqd_t)-1 )
  {
      printf("Failed to open msg queue %s: %s %d\n", msgQueueTestName, 
sys_errlist[errno],errno);
  }
  else
  {
      printf("msg queue descriptor %d (0x%x)\n", testQueue, testQueue);
  }

  highest_fd = 0;

  /* here, usually we scan all opened message queues for highest fd */
  if (testQueue > highest_fd)
        highest_fd = testQueue;
  highest_fd++;
  printf("highest fd %d (0x%x)\n", highest_fd, highest_fd);

  /* add all file descriptors to be checked */
  FD_ZERO(&readfds);
  FD_SET(testQueue, &readfds);
  printf("readfds entries %d\n", sizeof(readfds.fds_bits) / sizeof(fd_mask));

  numMessages = select(highest_fd, &readfds, NULL, NULL, (struct timeval *) 
NULL);
  printf("messages pending %d\n", numMessages);


  return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

Any help will be appreciated.
Mladen


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