curl_multi_info_read - read multi stack information
#include <curl/curl.h>
CURLMsg *curl_multi_info_read(CURLM *multi_handle, int *msgs_in_queue);
Ask the multi handle if there are any messages from the individual transfers.
Messages may include information such as an error code from the transfer or
just the fact that a transfer is completed. More details on these should be
written down as well.
Repeated calls to this function will return a new struct each time, until a NULL
is returned as a signal that there is no more to get at this point. The
integer pointed to with
msgs_in_queue will contain the number of
remaining messages after this function was called.
When you fetch a message using this function, it is removed from the internal
queue so calling this function again will not return the same message again.
It will instead return new messages at each new invoke until the queue is
emptied.
WARNING: The data the returned pointer points to will not survive calling
curl_multi_cleanup(3),
curl_multi_remove_handle(3) or
curl_easy_cleanup(3).
The
CURLMsg struct is simple and only contains basic information. If more
involved information is wanted, the particular "easy handle" is
present in that struct and can be used in subsequent regular
curl_easy_getinfo(3) calls (or similar):
struct CURLMsg {
CURLMSG msg; /* what this message means */
CURL *easy_handle; /* the handle it concerns */
union {
void *whatever; /* message-specific data */
CURLcode result; /* return code for transfer */
} data;
};
When
msg is
CURLMSG_DONE, the message identifies a transfer that
is done, and then
result contains the return code for the easy handle
that just completed.
At this point, there are no other
msg types defined.
struct CURLMsg *m;
/* call curl_multi_perform or curl_multi_socket_action first, then loop
through and check if there are any transfers that have completed */
do {
int msgq = 0;
m = curl_multi_info_read(multi_handle, &msgq);
if(m && (m->msg == CURLMSG_DONE)) {
CURL *e = m->easy_handle;
transfers--;
curl_multi_remove_handle(multi_handle, e);
curl_easy_cleanup(e);
}
} while(m);
Added in 7.9.6
A pointer to a filled-in struct, or NULL if it failed or ran out of structs. It
also writes the number of messages left in the queue (after this read) in the
integer the second argument points to.
curl_multi_cleanup(3),
curl_multi_init(3),
curl_multi_perform(3)