LOCKF(3) manual page
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lockf - apply, test or remove a POSIX lock
on an open file
#include <unistd.h>
int lockf(int fd, int cmd, off_t
len);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)
):
lockf():
_BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE || _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500 || _XOPEN_SOURCE && _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED
Apply, test or remove a POSIX lock on a section of an open
file. The file is specified by fd, a file descriptor open for writing, the
action by cmd, and the section consists of byte positions pos..pos+len-1 if
len is positive, and pos-len..pos-1 if len is negative, where pos is the current
file position, and if len is zero, the section extends from the current
file position to infinity, encompassing the present and future end-of-file
positions. In all cases, the section may extend past current end-of-file.
On
Linux, lockf() is just an interface on top of fcntl(2)
locking. Many other
systems implement lockf() in this way, but note that POSIX.1-2001 leaves
the relationship between lockf() and fcntl(2)
locks unspecified. A portable
application should probably avoid mixing calls to these interfaces.
Valid
operations are given below:
- F_LOCK
- Set an exclusive lock on the specified
section of the file. If (part of) this section is already locked, the call
blocks until the previous lock is released. If this section overlaps an
earlier locked section, both are merged. File locks are released as soon
as the process holding the locks closes some file descriptor for the file.
A child process does not inherit these locks.
- F_TLOCK
- Same as F_LOCK but
the call never blocks and returns an error instead if the file is already
locked.
- F_ULOCK
- Unlock the indicated section of the file. This may cause
a locked section to be split into two locked sections.
- F_TEST
- Test the lock:
return 0 if the specified section is unlocked or locked by this process;
return -1, set errno to EAGAIN (EACCES on some other systems), if another
process holds a lock.
On success, zero is returned. On error,
-1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.
- EACCES or EAGAIN
- The
file is locked and F_TLOCK or F_TEST was specified, or the operation is
prohibited because the file has been memory-mapped by another process.
- EBADF
- fd is not an open file descriptor; or cmd is F_LOCK or F_TLOCK and fd is
not a writable file descriptor.
- EDEADLK
- The command was F_LOCK and this
lock operation would cause a deadlock.
- EINVAL
- An invalid operation was specified
in cmd.
- ENOLCK
- Too many segment locks open, lock table is full.
The lockf() function is thread-safe.
SVr4,
POSIX.1-2001.
fcntl(2)
, flock(2)
locks.txt and mandatory-locking.txt
in the Linux kernel source directory Documentation/filesystems (on older
kernels, these files are directly under the Documentation directory, and
mandatory-locking.txt is called mandatory.txt)
This page is part of
release 3.78 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 http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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