flock man page on HP-UX

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flock(2)							      flock(2)

NAME
       flock() - apply or remove an advisory or enforced lock on an open file

SYNOPSIS

   Parameters
       filedes	   Specifies  a	 file  descriptor  returned by a successful or
		   function, identifying the file on which the locking	opera‐
		   tion is to be performed.

       operation   Specifies one of the following constants for defined in the
		   file:

		   Apply a shared lock.

		   Apply an exclusive lock.

		   Remove a lock.

		   In addition to the preceding constants, the following  con‐
		   stant can be bitwise ORed with either or

		   LOCK_NB	 Do not block when locking.

DESCRIPTION
       The  function  applies  or  removes an advisory or enforced lock on the
       whole file associated with the filedes file descriptor.	Advisory locks
       allow  cooperating processes to perform consistent operations on files,
       but do not guarantee consistency (that is, processes may	 still	access
       files  without using advisory locks, possibly resulting in inconsisten‐
       cies).Enforced locks are in effect if the enforcement bit in  the  file
       mode  is	 set (see chmod(2)).  This might affect and other system calls
       performing file operations.

       You can use the function to coordinate a file's lock  status  on	 local
       and NFS file systems.

       The locking mechanism allows two types of locks: and At any time multi‐
       ple shared locks may be applied to a file, but at no time are  multiple
       exclusive  locks	 or both shared and exclusive locks allowed simultane‐
       ously on a file.

       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  is
       included	 in  operation,	 this  will not happen; instead, the call will
       fail and will be set to

APPLICATION USAGE
       Locks are on files, not file descriptors.  This means that:

       ·  Locks are not inherited by a child process resulting from a call.

       ·  All locks associated with a file for a  given	 process  are  removed
	  when	any  thread in the process closes any file descriptor for that
	  file.

       Processes that are blocked awaiting a lock may be awakened by  signals.
       An  application	needs  to check the return value to make sure that the
       lock is really acquired.

       The interface is not part of any UNIX standard.	Therefore, if you  are
       designing and writing applications to be portable across platforms, you
       should use the file locking interface instead of

NETWORKING FEATURES
   NFS
       The advisory file locking capabilities of  are  implemented  throughout
       the  network  by the network lock daemon If the file server crashes and
       is rebooted, the lock daemon attempts to recover all  locks  associated
       with  the  crashed  server.  If a lock cannot be reclaimed, the process
       that held the lock is issued a signal.  See lockd(1M).

       File locking as implemented for NFS files is only advisory.

RETURN VALUES
       flock() returns:

       for successful completion

       for unsuccessful completion;
	    is set to indicate the error

ERRORS
       If the function fails, may be set to one of the following values:
       The filedes parameter is not a valid open file descriptor.

	      A shared lock was requested and filedes was not opened for read‐
	      ing,  or	an  exclusive  lock  was requested and filedes was not
	      opened for writing.

       The lock is blocked by some lock from another process.
	      Putting the calling process to sleep while waiting for that lock
	      to become free would cause a deadlock.

       A signal interrupted the
	      call.

       The    filedes  parameter  refers to a file that does not support lock‐
	      ing.

	      The operation parameter is not valid.

       The lock table is full.
	      Too many files are already locked.

	      The filedes parameter refers to an NFS file with the access bits
	      set for enforcement mode.

	      The  filedes parameter refers to an NFS file, and a system error
	      occurred on the remote node.

       The file is locked and the
	      option was specified.

	      The file is mapped into virtual memory via the system call  (see
	      mmap(2)).

SEE ALSO
       lockd(1M)  chmod(2),  close(2),	creat(2),  dup(2),  dup2(2),  exec(2),
       fcntl(2), fork(2), lockf(2), open(2), read(2), truncate(2), write(2).

STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
								      flock(2)
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