NAME
flock
—
apply or remove an advisory lock on an
open file
LIBRARY
library “libc”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<sys/file.h>
#define LOCK_SH 0x01 /* shared file lock
*/
#define LOCK_EX 0x02 /* exclusive file lock */
#define LOCK_NB 0x04 /* do not block when locking */
#define LOCK_UN 0x08 /* unlock file */
int
flock
(int
fd, int
operation);
DESCRIPTION
Theflock
()
system call applies or removes an
advisory
lock on the file associated with the file descriptor fd.
A lock is applied by specifying an operation argument
that is one of LOCK_SH
or
LOCK_EX
with the optional addition of
LOCK_NB
. To unlock an existing lock
operation
should be LOCK_UN
.
Advisory locks allow cooperating processes to perform consistent operations on files, but do not guarantee consistency (i.e., processes may still access files without using advisory locks possibly resulting in inconsistencies).
A shared lock may be upgraded to an exclusive lock, and vice versa, simply by specifying the appropriate lock type; this results in the previous lock being released and the new lock applied (possibly after other processes have gained and released the lock).
Requesting a lock on an object that is already locked normally
causes the caller to be blocked until the lock may be acquired. If
LOCK_NB
is included in
operation, then this will not happen; instead the call
will fail and the error EWOULDBLOCK
will be
returned.
NOTES
Locks are on files, not file descriptors. That is, file descriptors duplicated through dup(2) or fork(2) do not result in multiple instances of a lock, but rather multiple references to a single lock. If a process holding a lock on a file forks and the child explicitly unlocks the file, the parent will lose its lock.
The
flock
(),
fcntl(2), and
lockf(3) locks are compatible. Processes using different locking
interfaces can cooperate over the same file safely. However, only one of
such interfaces should be used within the same process. If a file is locked
by a process through flock
(), any record within the
file will be seen as locked from the viewpoint of another process using
fcntl(2) or
lockf(3), and vice versa.
Processes blocked awaiting a lock may be awakened by signals.
RETURN VALUES
The flock
() function returns the
value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
ERRORS
The flock
() system call fails if:
- [
EWOULDBLOCK
] - The file is locked and the
LOCK_NB
option was specified. - [
EBADF
] - The argument fd is an invalid descriptor.
- [
EINVAL
] - The argument fd refers to an object other than a file.
- [
EOPNOTSUPP
] - The argument fd refers to an object that does not support file locking.
- [
ENOLCK
] - A lock was requested, but no locks are available.
SEE ALSO
close(2), dup(2), execve(2), fcntl(2), fork(2), open(2), flopen(3), lockf(3)
HISTORY
The flock
() system call appeared in
4.2BSD.