MMAP(2) manual page
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mmap, munmap - map or unmap files
or devices into memory
#include <sys/mman.h>
void *mmap(void *addr, size_t lengthint " prot ", int " flags ,
int fd, off_t offset);int munmap(void *addr, size_t length);
See NOTES for information on feature test macro requirements.
mmap()
creates a new mapping in the virtual address space of the calling process.
The starting address for the new mapping is specified in addr. The length
argument specifies the length of the mapping.
If addr is NULL, then the
kernel chooses the address at which to create the mapping; this is the
most portable method of creating a new mapping. If addr is not NULL, then
the kernel takes it as a hint about where to place the mapping; on Linux,
the mapping will be created at a nearby page boundary. The address of
the new mapping is returned as the result of the call.
The contents of
a file mapping (as opposed to an anonymous mapping; see MAP_ANONYMOUS below),
are initialized using length bytes starting at offset offset in the file
(or other object) referred to by the file descriptor fd. offset must be
a multiple of the page size as returned by sysconf(_SC_PAGE_SIZE).
The prot
argument describes the desired memory protection of the mapping (and must
not conflict with the open mode of the file). It is either PROT_NONE or
the bitwise OR of one or more of the following flags:
- PROT_EXEC
- Pages may
be executed.
- PROT_READ
- Pages may be read.
- PROT_WRITE
- Pages may be written.
- PROT_NONE
- Pages may not be accessed.
The flags argument determines whether
updates to the mapping are visible to other processes mapping the same
region, and whether updates are carried through to the underlying file.
This behavior is determined by including exactly one of the following values
in flags:
- MAP_SHARED
- Share this mapping. Updates to the mapping are visible
to other processes that map this file, and are carried through to the underlying
file. The file may not actually be updated until msync(2)
or munmap() is
called.
- MAP_PRIVATE
- Create a private copy-on-write mapping. Updates to the
mapping are not visible to other processes mapping the same file, and are
not carried through to the underlying file. It is unspecified whether changes
made to the file after the mmap() call are visible in the mapped region.
Both of these flags are described in POSIX.1-2001.
In addition, zero or more
of the following values can be ORed in flags:
- MAP_32BIT (since Linux 2.4.20,
2.6)
- Put the mapping into the first 2 Gigabytes of the process address space.
This flag is supported only on x86-64, for 64-bit programs. It was added to
allow thread stacks to be allocated somewhere in the first 2GB of memory,
so as to improve context-switch performance on some early 64-bit processors.
Modern x86-64 processors no longer have this performance problem, so use
of this flag is not required on those systems. The MAP_32BIT flag is ignored
when MAP_FIXED is set.
- MAP_ANON
- Synonym for MAP_ANONYMOUS. Deprecated.
- MAP_ANONYMOUS
- The mapping is not backed by any file; its contents are initialized to
zero. The fd and offset arguments are ignored; however, some implementations
require fd to be -1 if MAP_ANONYMOUS (or MAP_ANON) is specified, and portable
applications should ensure this. The use of MAP_ANONYMOUS in conjunction
with MAP_SHARED is supported on Linux only since kernel 2.4.
- MAP_DENYWRITE
- This flag is ignored. (Long ago, it signaled that attempts to write to
the underlying file should fail with ETXTBUSY. But this was a source of
denial-of-service attacks.)
- MAP_EXECUTABLE
- This flag is ignored.
- MAP_FILE
- Compatibility flag. Ignored.
- MAP_FIXED
- Don’t interpret addr as a hint: place
the mapping at exactly that address. addr must be a multiple of the page
size. If the memory region specified by addr and len overlaps pages of any
existing mapping(s), then the overlapped part of the existing mapping(s)
will be discarded. If the specified address cannot be used, mmap() will
fail. Because requiring a fixed address for a mapping is less portable,
the use of this option is discouraged.
- MAP_GROWSDOWN
- Used for stacks. Indicates
to the kernel virtual memory system that the mapping should extend downward
in memory.
- MAP_HUGETLB (since Linux 2.6.32)
- Allocate the mapping using "huge
pages." See the Linux kernel source file Documentation/vm/hugetlbpage.txt
for further information.
- MAP_LOCKED (since Linux 2.5.37)
- Lock the pages of
the mapped region into memory in the manner of mlock(2)
. This flag is ignored
in older kernels.
- MAP_NONBLOCK (since Linux 2.5.46)
- Only meaningful in conjunction
with MAP_POPULATE. Don’t perform read-ahead: create page tables entries only
for pages that are already present in RAM. Since Linux 2.6.23, this flag causes
MAP_POPULATE to do nothing. One day the combination of MAP_POPULATE and
MAP_NONBLOCK may be reimplemented.
- MAP_NORESERVE
- Do not reserve swap space
for this mapping. When swap space is reserved, one has the guarantee that
it is possible to modify the mapping. When swap space is not reserved one
might get SIGSEGV upon a write if no physical memory is available. See also
the discussion of the file /proc/sys/vm/overcommit_memory in proc(5)
. In
kernels before 2.6, this flag had effect only for private writable mappings.
- MAP_POPULATE (since Linux 2.5.46)
- Populate (prefault) page tables for a mapping.
For a file mapping, this causes read-ahead on the file. Later accesses to
the mapping will not be blocked by page faults. MAP_POPULATE is supported
for private mappings only since Linux 2.6.23.
- MAP_STACK (since Linux 2.6.27)
- Allocate the mapping at an address suitable for a process or thread stack.
This flag is currently a no-op, but is used in the glibc threading implementation
so that if some architectures require special treatment for stack allocations,
support can later be transparently implemented for glibc.
- MAP_UNINITIALIZED
(since Linux 2.6.33)
- Don’t clear anonymous pages. This flag is intended to
improve performance on embedded devices. This flag is honored only if the
kernel was configured with the CONFIG_MMAP_ALLOW_UNINITIALIZED option. Because
of the security implications, that option is normally enabled only on embedded
devices (i.e., devices where one has complete control of the contents of
user memory).
Of the above flags, only MAP_FIXED is specified in POSIX.1-2001.
However, most systems also support MAP_ANONYMOUS (or its synonym MAP_ANON).
Some systems document the additional flags MAP_AUTOGROW, MAP_AUTORESRV,
MAP_COPY, and MAP_LOCAL.
Memory mapped by mmap() is preserved across fork(2)
,
with the same attributes.
A file is mapped in multiples of the page size.
For a file that is not a multiple of the page size, the remaining memory
is zeroed when mapped, and writes to that region are not written out to
the file. The effect of changing the size of the underlying file of a mapping
on the pages that correspond to added or removed regions of the file is
unspecified.
The munmap() system call deletes the mappings for the
specified address range, and causes further references to addresses within
the range to generate invalid memory references. The region is also automatically
unmapped when the process is terminated. On the other hand, closing the
file descriptor does not unmap the region.
The address addr must be a multiple
of the page size. All pages containing a part of the indicated range are
unmapped, and subsequent references to these pages will generate SIGSEGV.
It is not an error if the indicated range does not contain any mapped pages.
For file-backed mappings, the
st_atime field for the mapped file may be updated at any time between the
mmap() and the corresponding unmapping; the first reference to a mapped
page will update the field if it has not been already.
The st_ctime and
st_mtime field for a file mapped with PROT_WRITE and MAP_SHARED will be
updated after a write to the mapped region, and before a subsequent msync(2)
with the MS_SYNC or MS_ASYNC flag, if one occurs.
On success,
mmap() returns a pointer to the mapped area. On error, the value MAP_FAILED
(that is, (void *) -1) is returned, and errno is set appropriately. On success,
munmap() returns 0, on failure -1, and errno is set (probably to EINVAL).
- EACCES
- A file descriptor refers to a non-regular file. Or a file mapping
was requested, but fd is not open for reading. Or MAP_SHARED was requested
and PROT_WRITE is set, but fd is not open in read/write (O_RDWR) mode. Or
PROT_WRITE is set, but the file is append-only.
- EAGAIN
- The file has been
locked, or too much memory has been locked (see setrlimit(2)
).
- EBADF
- fd
is not a valid file descriptor (and MAP_ANONYMOUS was not set).
- EINVAL
- We
don’t like addr, length, or offset (e.g., they are too large, or not aligned
on a page boundary).
- EINVAL
- (since Linux 2.6.12) length was 0.
- EINVAL
- flags
contained neither MAP_PRIVATE or MAP_SHARED, or contained both of these
values.
- ENFILE
- The system limit on the total number of open files has
been reached.
- ENODEV
- The underlying filesystem of the specified file
does not support memory mapping.
- ENOMEM
- No memory is available, or the process’s
maximum number of mappings would have been exceeded.
- EPERM
- The prot argument
asks for PROT_EXEC but the mapped area belongs to a file on a filesystem
that was mounted no-exec.
- EPERM
- The operation was prevented by a file seal;
see fcntl(2)
.
- ETXTBSY
- MAP_DENYWRITE was set but the object specified by
fd is open for writing.
- EOVERFLOW
- On 32-bit architecture together with the
large file extension (i.e., using 64-bit off_t): the number of pages used
for length plus number of pages used for offset would overflow unsigned
long (32 bits).
Use of a mapped region can result in these signals:
- SIGSEGV
- Attempted write into a region mapped as read-only.
- SIGBUS
- Attempted access
to a portion of the buffer that does not correspond to the file (for example,
beyond the end of the file, including the case where another process has
truncated the file).
SVr4, 4.4BSD, POSIX.1-2001.
On
POSIX systems on which mmap(), msync(2)
, and munmap() are available, _POSIX_MAPPED_FILES
is defined in <unistd.h> to a value greater than 0. (See also sysconf(3)
.)
On some hardware architectures (e.g., i386), PROT_WRITE implies PROT_READ.
It is architecture dependent whether PROT_READ implies PROT_EXEC or not.
Portable programs should always set PROT_EXEC if they intend to execute
code in the new mapping.
The portable way to create a mapping is to specify
addr as 0 (NULL), and omit MAP_FIXED from flags. In this case, the system
chooses the address for the mapping; the address is chosen so as not to
conflict with any existing mapping, and will not be 0. If the MAP_FIXED
flag is specified, and addr is 0 (NULL), then the mapped address will be
0 (NULL).
Certain flags constants are defined only if either _BSD_SOURCE
or _SVID_SOURCE is defined. (Requiring _GNU_SOURCE also suffices, and requiring
that macro specifically would have been more logical, since these flags
are all Linux-specific.) The relevant flags are: MAP_32BIT, MAP_ANONYMOUS
(and the synonym MAP_ANON), MAP_DENYWRITE, MAP_EXECUTABLE, MAP_FILE, MAP_GROWSDOWN,
MAP_HUGETLB, MAP_LOCKED, MAP_NONBLOCK, MAP_NORESERVE, MAP_POPULATE, and
MAP_STACK.
This page describes the interface
provided by the glibc mmap() wrapper function. Originally, this function
invoked a system call of the same name. Since kernel 2.4, that system call
has been superseded by mmap2(2)
, and nowadays the glibc mmap() wrapper
function invokes mmap2(2)
with a suitably adjusted value for offset.
On
Linux there are no guarantees like those suggested above under MAP_NORESERVE.
By default, any process can be killed at any moment when the system runs
out of memory.
In kernels before 2.6.7, the MAP_POPULATE flag has effect
only if prot is specified as PROT_NONE.
SUSv3 specifies that mmap() should
fail if length is 0. However, in kernels before 2.6.12, mmap() succeeded in
this case: no mapping was created and the call returned addr. Since kernel
2.6.12, mmap() fails with the error EINVAL for this case.
POSIX specifies
that the system shall always zero fill any partial page at the end of the
object and that system will never write any modification of the object
beyond its end. On Linux, when you write data to such partial page after
the end of the object, the data stays in the page cache even after the
file is closed and unmapped and even though the data is never written to
the file itself, subsequent mappings may see the modified content. In some
cases, this could be fixed by calling msync(2)
before the unmap takes place;
however, this doesn’t work on tmpfs (for example, when using POSIX shared
memory interface documented in shm_overview(7)
).
The following
program prints part of the file specified in its first command-line argument
to standard output. The range of bytes to be printed is specified via offset
and length values in the second and third command-line arguments. The program
creates a memory mapping of the required pages of the file and then uses
write(2)
to output the desired bytes.
#include <sys/mman.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#define handle_error(msg) \
do { perror(msg); exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } while (0)
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
char *addr;
int fd;
struct stat sb;
off_t offset, pa_offset;
size_t length;
ssize_t s;
if (argc < 3 || argc > 4) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s file offset [length]\n", argv[0]);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
fd = open(argv[1], O_RDONLY);
if (fd == -1)
handle_error("open");
if (fstat(fd, &sb) == -1) /* To obtain file size */
handle_error("fstat");
offset = atoi(argv[2]);
pa_offset = offset & ~(sysconf(_SC_PAGE_SIZE) - 1);
/* offset for mmap() must be page aligned */
if (offset >= sb.st_size) {
fprintf(stderr, "offset is past end of file\n");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (argc == 4) {
length = atoi(argv[3]);
if (offset + length > sb.st_size)
length = sb.st_size - offset;
/* Canaqt display bytes past end of file */
} else { /* No length arg ==> display to end of file */
length = sb.st_size - offset;
}
addr = mmap(NULL, length + offset - pa_offset, PROT_READ,
MAP_PRIVATE, fd, pa_offset);
if (addr == MAP_FAILED)
handle_error("mmap");
s = write(STDOUT_FILENO, addr + offset - pa_offset, length);
if (s != length) {
if (s == -1)
handle_error("write");
fprintf(stderr, "partial write");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
getpagesize(2)
, memfd_create(2)
, mincore(2)
, mlock(2)
, mmap2(2)
,
mprotect(2)
, mremap(2)
, msync(2)
, remap_file_pages(2)
, setrlimit(2)
, shmat(2)
,
shm_open(3)
, shm_overview(7)
The descriptions of the following files in
proc(5)
: /proc/[pid]/maps, /proc/[pid]/map_files, and /proc/[pid]/smaps.
B.O. Gallmeister, POSIX.4, O’Reilly, pp. 128-129 and 389-391.
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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