CreateIoCompletionPort function (ioapiset.h)

Creates an input/output (I/O) completion port and associates it with a specified file handle, or creates an I/O completion port that is not yet associated with a file handle, allowing association at a later time.

Associating an instance of an opened file handle with an I/O completion port allows a process to receive notification of the completion of asynchronous I/O operations involving that file handle.

Note  

The term file handle as used here refers to a system abstraction that represents an overlapped I/O endpoint, not only a file on disk. Any system objects that support overlapped I/O—such as network endpoints, TCP sockets, named pipes, and mail slots—can be used as file handles. For additional information, see the Remarks section.

 

Syntax

HANDLE CreateIoCompletionPort(
  [in]           HANDLE    FileHandle,
  [in, optional] HANDLE    ExistingCompletionPort,
  [in]           ULONG_PTR CompletionKey,
  [in]           DWORD     NumberOfConcurrentThreads
);

Parameters

[in] FileHandle

An open file handle or INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE.

The handle must be to an object that supports overlapped I/O.

If a handle is provided, it has to have been opened for overlapped I/O completion. For example, you must specify the FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED flag when using the CreateFile function to obtain the handle.

If INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE is specified, the function creates an I/O completion port without associating it with a file handle. In this case, the ExistingCompletionPort parameter must be NULL and the CompletionKey parameter is ignored.

[in, optional] ExistingCompletionPort

A handle to an existing I/O completion port or NULL.

If this parameter specifies an existing I/O completion port, the function associates it with the handle specified by the FileHandle parameter. The function returns the handle of the existing I/O completion port if successful; it does not create a new I/O completion port.

If this parameter is NULL, the function creates a new I/O completion port and, if the FileHandle parameter is valid, associates it with the new I/O completion port. Otherwise no file handle association occurs. The function returns the handle to the new I/O completion port if successful.

[in] CompletionKey

The per-handle user-defined completion key that is included in every I/O completion packet for the specified file handle. For more information, see the Remarks section.

[in] NumberOfConcurrentThreads

The maximum number of threads that the operating system can allow to concurrently process I/O completion packets for the I/O completion port. This parameter is ignored if the ExistingCompletionPort parameter is not NULL.

If this parameter is zero, the system allows as many concurrently running threads as there are processors in the system.

Return value

If the function succeeds, the return value is the handle to an I/O completion port:

  • If the ExistingCompletionPort parameter was NULL, the return value is a new handle.
  • If the ExistingCompletionPort parameter was a valid I/O completion port handle, the return value is that same handle.
  • If the FileHandle parameter was a valid handle, that file handle is now associated with the returned I/O completion port.
If the function fails, the return value is NULL. To get extended error information, call the GetLastError function.

Remarks

The I/O system can be instructed to send I/O completion notification packets to I/O completion ports, where they are queued. The CreateIoCompletionPort function provides this functionality.

An I/O completion port and its handle are associated with the process that created it and is not sharable between processes. However, a single handle is sharable between threads in the same process.

CreateIoCompletionPort can be used in three distinct modes:

  • Create only an I/O completion port without associating it with a file handle.
  • Associate an existing I/O completion port with a file handle.
  • Perform both creation and association in a single call.
To create an I/O completion port without associating it, set the FileHandle parameter to INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE, the ExistingCompletionPort parameter to NULL, and the CompletionKey parameter to zero (which is ignored in this case). Set the NumberOfConcurrentThreads parameter to the desired concurrency value for the new I/O completion port, or zero for the default (the number of processors in the system).

The handle passed in the FileHandle parameter can be any handle that supports overlapped I/O. Most commonly, this is a handle opened by the CreateFile function using the FILE_FLAG_OVERLAPPED flag (for example, files, mail slots, and pipes). Objects created by other functions such as socket can also be associated with an I/O completion port. For an example using sockets, see AcceptEx. A handle can be associated with only one I/O completion port, and after the association is made, the handle remains associated with that I/O completion port until it is closed.

For more information on I/O completion port theory, usage, and associated functions, see I/O Completion Ports.

Multiple file handles can be associated with a single I/O completion port by calling CreateIoCompletionPort multiple times with the same I/O completion port handle in the ExistingCompletionPort parameter and a different file handle in the FileHandle parameter each time.

Use the CompletionKey parameter to help your application track which I/O operations have completed. This value is not used by CreateIoCompletionPort for functional control; rather, it is attached to the file handle specified in the FileHandle parameter at the time of association with an I/O completion port. This completion key should be unique for each file handle, and it accompanies the file handle throughout the internal completion queuing process. It is returned in the GetQueuedCompletionStatus function call when a completion packet arrives. The CompletionKey parameter is also used by the PostQueuedCompletionStatus function to queue your own special-purpose completion packets.

After an instance of an open handle is associated with an I/O completion port, it cannot be used in the ReadFileEx or WriteFileEx function because these functions have their own asynchronous I/O mechanisms.

It is best not to share a file handle associated with an I/O completion port by using either handle inheritance or a call to the DuplicateHandle function. Operations performed with such duplicate handles generate completion notifications. Careful consideration is advised.

The I/O completion port handle and every file handle associated with that particular I/O completion port are known as references to the I/O completion port. The I/O completion port is released when there are no more references to it. Therefore, all of these handles must be properly closed to release the I/O completion port and its associated system resources. After these conditions are satisfied, close the I/O completion port handle by calling the CloseHandle function.

In Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012, this function is supported by the following technologies.

Technology Supported
Server Message Block (SMB) 3.0 protocol Yes
SMB 3.0 Transparent Failover (TFO) Yes
SMB 3.0 with Scale-out File Shares (SO) Yes
Cluster Shared Volume File System (CsvFS) Yes
Resilient File System (ReFS) Yes

Requirements

Requirement Value
Minimum supported client Windows XP [desktop apps | UWP apps]
Minimum supported server Windows Server 2003 [desktop apps | UWP apps]
Target Platform Windows
Header ioapiset.h (include Windows.h)
Library Kernel32.lib
DLL Kernel32.dll

See also

AcceptEx

CreateFile

DuplicateHandle

File Management Functions

Functions

GetQueuedCompletionStatus

GetQueuedCompletionStatusEx

I/O Completion Ports

Overview Topics

PostQueuedCompletionStatus

ReadFileEx

Using the Windows Headers

Windows Sockets 2

WriteFileEx