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57 .\" @(#)fcntl.2 8.2 (Berkeley) 1/12/94
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59 .Dd August 24, 2017
60 .Dt FCNTL 2
61 .Os BSD 4.2
62 .Sh NAME
63 .Nm fcntl
64 .Nd file control
65 .Sh SYNOPSIS
66 .Fd #include <fcntl.h>
67 .Ft int
68 .Fo fcntl
69 .Fa "int fildes"
70 .Fa "int cmd"
71 .Fa "..."
72 .Fc
73 .Sh DESCRIPTION
74 .Fn fcntl
75 provides for control over descriptors.
76 The argument
77 .Fa fildes
78 is a descriptor to be operated on by
79 .Fa cmd
80 as follows:
81 .Bl -tag -width F_WRITEBOOTSTRAPX
82 .It Dv F_DUPFD
83 Return a new descriptor as follows:
84 .Pp
85 .Bl -bullet -compact -offset 4n
86 .It
87 Lowest numbered available descriptor greater than or equal to
88 .Fa arg .
89 .It
90 Same object references as the original descriptor.
91 .It
92 New descriptor shares the same file offset if the object
93 was a file.
94 .It
95 Same access mode (read, write or read/write).
96 .It
97 Same file status flags (i.e., both file descriptors
98 share the same file status flags).
99 .It
100 The close-on-exec flag associated with the new file descriptor
101 is cleared so that the descriptor remains open across an
102 .Xr execv 2
103 system call.
104 .El
105 .It Dv F_DUPFD_CLOEXEC
106 Like
107 .Dv F_DUPFD ,
108 except that the close-on-exec flag associated with the new file descriptor
109 is set.
110 .It Dv F_GETFD
111 Get the flags associated with the file descriptor
112 .Fa fildes ,
113 as described below
114 .Fa ( arg
115 is ignored).
116 .It Dv F_SETFD
117 Set the file descriptor flags to
118 .Fa arg .
119 .It Dv F_GETFL
120 Get descriptor status flags, as described below
121 .Fa ( arg
122 is ignored).
123 .It Dv F_SETFL
124 Set descriptor status flags to
125 .Fa arg .
126 .It Dv F_GETOWN
127 Get the process ID or process group
128 currently receiving
129 .Dv SIGIO
130 and
131 .Dv SIGURG
132 signals; process groups are returned
133 as negative values
134 .Fa ( arg
135 is ignored).
136 .It Dv F_SETOWN
137 Set the process or process group
138 to receive
139 .Dv SIGIO
140 and
141 .Dv SIGURG
142 signals;
143 process groups are specified by supplying
144 .Fa arg
145 as negative, otherwise
146 .Fa arg
147 is interpreted as a process ID.
148 .It Dv F_GETPATH
149 Get the path of the file descriptor
150 .Fa Fildes .
151 The argument must be a buffer of size
152 .Sy MAXPATHLEN
153 or greater.
154 .It Dv F_PREALLOCATE
155 Preallocate file storage space. Note: upon success,
156 the space that is allocated can be the size requested,
157 larger than the size requested, or (if the
158 .Dv F_ALLOCATEALL
159 flag is not provided) smaller than the space requested.
160 .It Dv F_PUNCHHOLE
161 Deallocate a region and replace it with a hole. Subsequent reads of the
162 affected region will return bytes of zeros that are usually not backed by
163 physical blocks. This will not change the actual file size. Holes must be
164 aligned to file system block boundaries. This will fail on
165 file systems that do not support this interface.
166 .It Dv F_SETSIZE
167 Truncate a file without zeroing space.
168 The calling process must have root privileges.
169 .It Dv F_RDADVISE
170 Issue an advisory read async with no copy to user.
171 .It Dv F_RDAHEAD
172 Turn read ahead off/on.
173 A zero value in
174 .Fa arg
175 disables read ahead.
176 A non-zero value in
177 .Fa arg
178 turns read ahead on.
179 .It Dv F_READBOOTSTRAP
180 Read bootstrap from disk.
181 .It Dv F_WRITEBOOTSTRAP
182 Write bootstrap on disk.
183 The calling process must have root privileges.
184 .It Dv F_NOCACHE
185 Turns data caching off/on. A non-zero value in
186 .Fa arg
187 turns data caching off.
188 A value of zero in
189 .Fa arg
190 turns data caching on.
191 .It Dv F_LOG2PHYS
192 Get disk device information.
193 Currently this only returns the
194 disk device address that corresponds
195 to the current file offset. Note that the system
196 may return -1 as the disk device address if the file is not
197 backed by physical blocks. This is subject
198 to change.
199 .It Dv F_LOG2PHYS_EXT
200 Variant of F_LOG2PHYS that uses the passed in
201 file offset and length.
202 .It Dv F_FULLFSYNC
203 Does the same thing as
204 .Xr fsync 2
205 then asks the drive to
206 flush all buffered data to
207 the permanent storage device
208 .Fa ( arg
209 is ignored).
210 This is currently implemented on HFS, MS-DOS (FAT),
211 and Universal Disk Format (UDF) file systems.
212 The operation may take quite a while to complete.
213 Certain FireWire drives have also been known
214 to ignore the request to flush their buffered data.
215 .It Dv F_SETNOSIGPIPE
216 Determines whether a
217 .Dv SIGPIPE
218 signal will be generated when a write fails on a pipe or socket for
219 which there is no reader. If
220 .Fa arg
221 is non-zero,
222 .Dv SIGPIPE
223 generation is disabled for descriptor
224 .Fa fildes ,
225 while an
226 .Fa arg
227 of zero enables it (the default).
228 .It Dv F_GETNOSIGPIPE
229 Returns whether a
230 .Dv SIGPIPE
231 signal will be generated when a write fails on a pipe or socket
232 for which there is no reader. The semantics of the return value
233 match those of the
234 .Fa arg
235 of
236 .Dv F_SETNOSIGPIPE .
237 .El
238 .Pp
239 The flags for the
240 .Dv F_GETFD
241 and
242 .Dv F_SETFD
243 commands are as follows:
244 .Bl -tag -width FD_CLOEXECX -offset indent
245 .It Dv FD_CLOEXEC
246 Close-on-exec; the given file descriptor will be automatically
247 closed in the successor process image when one of the
248 .Xr execv 2
249 or
250 .Xr posix_spawn 2
251 family of system calls is invoked.
252 .El
253 .Pp
254 The flags for the
255 .Dv F_GETFL
256 and
257 .Dv F_SETFL
258 commands are as follows:
259 .Bl -tag -width O_NONBLOCKX -offset indent
260 .It Dv O_NONBLOCK
261 Non-blocking I/O; if no data is available to a
262 .Xr read
263 call, or if a
264 .Xr write
265 operation would block,
266 the read or write call returns -1 with the error
267 .Er EAGAIN .
268 .It Dv O_APPEND
269 Force each write to append at the end of file;
270 corresponds to the
271 .Dv O_APPEND
272 flag of
273 .Xr open 2 .
274 .It Dv O_ASYNC
275 Enable the
276 .Dv SIGIO
277 signal to be sent to the process group
278 when I/O is possible, e.g.,
279 upon availability of data to be read.
280 .El
281 .Pp
282 Several commands are available for doing advisory file locking;
283 they all operate on the following structure:
284 .ne 7v
285 .Bd -literal
286 struct flock {
287 off_t l_start; /* starting offset */
288 off_t l_len; /* len = 0 means until end of file */
289 pid_t l_pid; /* lock owner */
290 short l_type; /* lock type: read/write, etc. */
291 short l_whence; /* type of l_start */
292 };
293 .Ed
294 .Pp
295 The commands available for advisory record locking are as follows:
296 .Bl -tag -width F_SETLKWX
297 .It Dv F_GETLK
298 Get the first lock that blocks the lock description pointed to by the
299 third argument,
300 .Fa arg ,
301 taken as a pointer to a
302 .Fa "struct flock"
303 (see above).
304 The information retrieved overwrites the information passed to
305 .Nm fcntl
306 in the
307 .Fa flock
308 structure.
309 If no lock is found that would prevent this lock from being created,
310 the structure is left unchanged by this function call except for the
311 lock type which is set to
312 .Dv F_UNLCK .
313 .It Dv F_SETLK
314 Set or clear a file segment lock according to the lock description
315 pointed to by the third argument,
316 .Fa arg ,
317 taken as a pointer to a
318 .Fa "struct flock"
319 (see above).
320 .Dv F_SETLK
321 is used to establish shared (or read) locks
322 .Dv (F_RDLCK)
323 or exclusive (or write) locks,
324 .Dv (F_WRLCK) ,
325 as well as remove either type of lock
326 .Dv (F_UNLCK) .
327 If a shared or exclusive lock cannot be set,
328 .Nm fcntl
329 returns immediately with
330 .Er EAGAIN .
331 .It Dv F_SETLKW
332 This command is the same as
333 .Dv F_SETLK
334 except that if a shared or exclusive lock is blocked by other locks,
335 the process waits until the request can be satisfied.
336 If a signal that is to be caught is received while
337 .Nm fcntl
338 is waiting for a region, the
339 .Nm fcntl
340 will be interrupted if the signal handler has not specified the
341 .Dv SA_RESTART
342 (see
343 .Xr sigaction 2 ) .
344 .El
345 .Pp
346 When a shared lock has been set on a segment of a file,
347 other processes can set shared locks on that segment
348 or a portion of it.
349 A shared lock prevents any other process from setting an exclusive
350 lock on any portion of the protected area.
351 A request for a shared lock fails if the file descriptor was not
352 opened with read access.
353 .Pp
354 An exclusive lock prevents any other process from setting a shared lock or
355 an exclusive lock on any portion of the protected area.
356 A request for an exclusive lock fails if the file was not
357 opened with write access.
358 .Pp
359 The value of
360 .Fa l_whence
361 is
362 .Dv SEEK_SET ,
363 .Dv SEEK_CUR ,
364 or
365 .Dv SEEK_END
366 to indicate that the relative offset,
367 .Fa l_start
368 bytes, will be measured from the start of the file,
369 current position, or end of the file, respectively.
370 The value of
371 .Fa l_len
372 is the number of consecutive bytes to be locked.
373 If
374 .Fa l_len
375 is negative, the result is undefined.
376 The
377 .Fa l_pid
378 field is only used with
379 .Dv F_GETLK
380 to return the process ID of the process holding a blocking lock.
381 After a successful
382 .Dv F_GETLK
383 request, the value of
384 .Fa l_whence
385 is
386 .Dv SEEK_SET .
387 .Pp
388 Locks may start and extend beyond the current end of a file,
389 but may not start or extend before the beginning of the file.
390 A lock is set to extend to the largest possible value of the
391 file offset for that file if
392 .Fa l_len
393 is set to zero. If
394 .Fa l_whence
395 and
396 .Fa l_start
397 point to the beginning of the file, and
398 .Fa l_len
399 is zero, the entire file is locked.
400 If an application wishes only to do entire file locking, the
401 .Xr flock 2
402 system call is much more efficient.
403 .Pp
404 There is at most one type of lock set for each byte in the file.
405 Before a successful return from an
406 .Dv F_SETLK
407 or an
408 .Dv F_SETLKW
409 request when the calling process has previously existing locks
410 on bytes in the region specified by the request,
411 the previous lock type for each byte in the specified
412 region is replaced by the new lock type.
413 As specified above under the descriptions
414 of shared locks and exclusive locks, an
415 .Dv F_SETLK
416 or an
417 .Dv F_SETLKW
418 request fails or blocks respectively when another process has existing
419 locks on bytes in the specified region and the type of any of those
420 locks conflicts with the type specified in the request.
421 .Pp
422 This interface follows the completely stupid semantics of System V and
423 .St -p1003.1-88
424 that require that all locks associated with a file for a given process are
425 removed when \fIany\fP file descriptor for that file is closed by that process.
426 This semantic means that applications must be aware of any files that
427 a subroutine library may access.
428 For example if an application for updating the password file locks the
429 password file database while making the update, and then calls
430 .Xr getpwname 3
431 to retrieve a record,
432 the lock will be lost because
433 .Xr getpwname 3
434 opens, reads, and closes the password database.
435 The database close will release all locks that the process has
436 associated with the database, even if the library routine never
437 requested a lock on the database.
438 Another minor semantic problem with this interface is that
439 locks are not inherited by a child process created using the
440 .Xr fork 2
441 function.
442 The
443 .Xr flock 2
444 interface has much more rational last close semantics and
445 allows locks to be inherited by child processes.
446 .Xr Flock 2
447 is recommended for applications that want to ensure the integrity
448 of their locks when using library routines or wish to pass locks
449 to their children.
450 Note that
451 .Xr flock 2
452 and
453 .Xr fcntl 2
454 locks may be safely used concurrently.
455 .Pp
456 All locks associated with a file for a given process are
457 removed when the process terminates.
458 .Pp
459 A potential for deadlock occurs if a process controlling a locked region
460 is put to sleep by attempting to lock the locked region of another process.
461 This implementation detects that sleeping until a locked region is unlocked
462 would cause a deadlock and fails with an
463 .Er EDEADLK
464 error.
465 .Pp
466 The
467 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
468 command operates on the following structure:
469 .ne 7v
470 .Bd -literal
471 typedef struct fstore {
472 u_int32_t fst_flags; /* IN: flags word */
473 int fst_posmode; /* IN: indicates offset field */
474 off_t fst_offset; /* IN: start of the region */
475 off_t fst_length; /* IN: size of the region */
476 off_t fst_bytesalloc; /* OUT: number of bytes allocated */
477 } fstore_t;
478 .Ed
479 .Pp
480 The flags (fst_flags) for the
481 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
482 command are as follows:
483 .Bl -tag -width F_ALLOCATECONTIGX -offset indent
484 .It Dv F_ALLOCATECONTIG
485 Allocate contiguous space.
486 .It Dv F_ALLOCATEALL
487 Allocate all requested space or no space at all.
488 .El
489 .Pp
490 The position modes (fst_posmode) for the
491 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
492 command indicate how to use the offset field.
493 The modes are as follows:
494 .Bl -tag -width F_PEOFPOSMODEX -offset indent
495 .It Dv F_PEOFPOSMODE
496 Allocate from the physical end of file.
497 .It Dv F_VOLPOSMODE
498 Allocate from the volume offset.
499 .El
500 .Pp
501 The
502 .Dv F_PUNCHHOLE
503 command operates on the following structure:
504 .ne 7v
505 .Bd -literal
506 typedef struct fpunchhole {
507 u_int32_t fp_flags; /* unused */
508 u_int32_t reserved; /* (to maintain 8-byte alignment) */
509 off_t fp_offset; /* IN: start of the region */
510 off_t fp_length; /* IN: size of the region */
511 } fpunchhole_t;
512 .Ed
513 .Pp
514 The
515 .Dv F_RDADVISE
516 command operates on the following structure
517 which holds information passed from the
518 user to the system:
519 .ne 7v
520 .Bd -literal
521 struct radvisory {
522 off_t ra_offset; /* offset into the file */
523 int ra_count; /* size of the read */
524 };
525 .Ed
526 .Pp
527 The
528 .Dv F_READBOOTSTRAP and F_WRITEBOOTSTRAP
529 commands operate on the following structure.
530 .ne 7v
531 .Bd -literal
532 typedef struct fbootstraptransfer {
533 off_t fbt_offset; /* IN: offset to start read/write */
534 size_t fbt_length; /* IN: number of bytes to transfer */
535 void *fbt_buffer; /* IN: buffer to be read/written */
536 } fbootstraptransfer_t;
537 .Ed
538 .Pp
539 The
540 .Dv F_LOG2PHYS
541 command operates on the following structure:
542 .ne 7v
543 .Bd -literal
544 struct log2phys {
545 u_int32_t l2p_flags; /* unused so far */
546 off_t l2p_contigbytes; /* unused so far */
547 off_t l2p_devoffset; /* bytes into device */
548 };
549 .Ed
550 .Pp
551 The
552 .Dv F_LOG2PHYS_EXT
553 command operates on the same structure as F_LOG2PHYS but treats it as an in/out:
554 .ne 7v
555 .Bd -literal
556 struct log2phys {
557 u_int32_t l2p_flags; /* unused so far */
558 off_t l2p_contigbytes; /* IN: number of bytes to be queried;
559 OUT: number of contiguous bytes allocated at this position */
560 off_t l2p_devoffset; /* IN: bytes into file;
561 OUT: bytes into device */
562 };
563 .Ed
564 .Pp
565 If
566 .Fa fildes
567 is a socket, then the
568 .Dv F_SETNOSIGPIPE
569 and
570 .Dv F_GETNOSIGPIPE
571 commands are directly analogous, and fully interoperate with the
572 .Dv SO_NOSIGPIPE
573 option of
574 .Xr setsockopt 2
575 and
576 .Xr getsockopt 2
577 respectively.
578 .Sh RETURN VALUES
579 Upon successful completion, the value returned depends on
580 .Fa cmd
581 as follows:
582 .Bl -tag -width F_GETOWNX -offset indent
583 .It Dv F_DUPFD
584 A new file descriptor.
585 .It Dv F_GETFD
586 Value of flag (only the low-order bit is defined).
587 .It Dv F_GETFL
588 Value of flags.
589 .It Dv F_GETOWN
590 Value of file descriptor owner.
591 .It other
592 Value other than -1.
593 .El
594 .Pp
595 Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and
596 .Va errno
597 is set to indicate the error.
598 .Sh ERRORS
599 The
600 .Fn fcntl
601 system call will fail if:
602 .Bl -tag -width Er
603 .\" ==========
604 .It Bq Er EAGAIN
605 The argument
606 .Fa cmd
607 is
608 .Dv F_SETLK ,
609 the type of lock
610 .Fa (l_type)
611 is a shared lock
612 .Dv (F_RDLCK)
613 or exclusive lock
614 .Dv (F_WRLCK) ,
615 and the segment of a file to be locked is already
616 exclusive-locked by another process;
617 or the type is an exclusive lock and some portion of the
618 segment of a file to be locked is already shared-locked or
619 exclusive-locked by another process.
620 .It Bq Er EACCESS
621 The argument
622 .Fa cmd
623 is either
624 .Dv F_SETSIZE
625 or
626 .Dv F_WRITEBOOTSTRAP
627 and the calling process does not have root privileges.
628 .\" ==========
629 .It Bq Er EBADF
630 .Fa Fildes
631 is not a valid open file descriptor.
632 .Pp
633 The argument
634 .Fa cmd
635 is
636 .Dv F_SETLK
637 or
638 .Dv F_SETLKW ,
639 the type of lock
640 .Fa (l_type)
641 is a shared lock
642 .Dv (F_RDLCK) ,
643 and
644 .Fa fildes
645 is not a valid file descriptor open for reading.
646 .Pp
647 The argument
648 .Fa cmd
649 is
650 .Dv F_SETLK
651 or
652 .Dv F_SETLKW ,
653 the type of lock
654 .Fa (l_type)
655 is an exclusive lock
656 .Dv (F_WRLCK) ,
657 and
658 .Fa fildes
659 is not a valid file descriptor open for writing.
660 .Pp
661 The argument
662 .Fa cmd
663 is
664 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
665 and the calling process does not have
666 file write permission.
667 .Pp
668 The argument
669 .Fa cmd
670 is
671 .Dv F_LOG2PHYS
672 or
673 .Dv F_LOG2PHYS_EXT
674 and
675 .Fa fildes
676 is not a valid file descriptor open for reading.
677 .\" ==========
678 .It Bq Er EDEADLK
679 The argument
680 .Fa cmd
681 is
682 .Dv F_SETLKW ,
683 and a deadlock condition was detected.
684 .\" ==========
685 .It Bq Er EINTR
686 The argument
687 .Fa cmd
688 is
689 .Dv F_SETLKW ,
690 and the function was interrupted by a signal.
691 .\" ==========
692 .It Bq Er EINVAL
693 .Fa Cmd
694 is
695 .Dv F_DUPFD
696 and
697 .Fa arg
698 is negative or greater than the maximum allowable number
699 (see
700 .Xr getdtablesize 2 ) .
701 .Pp
702 The argument
703 .Fa cmd
704 is
705 .Dv F_GETLK ,
706 .Dv F_SETLK ,
707 or
708 .Dv F_SETLKW
709 and the data to which
710 .Fa arg
711 points is not valid, or
712 .Fa fildes
713 refers to a file that does not support locking.
714 .Pp
715 The argument
716 .Fa cmd
717 is
718 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
719 and the
720 .Fa fst_posmode
721 is not a valid mode,
722 or when
723 .Dv F_PEOFPOSMODE
724 is set and
725 .Fa fst_offset
726 is a non-zero value,
727 or when
728 .Dv F_VOLPOSMODE
729 is set and
730 .Fa fst_offset
731 is a negative or zero value.
732 .Pp
733 The argument
734 .Fa cmd
735 is
736 .Dv F_PUNCHHOLE
737 and
738 either
739 .Fa fp_offset
740 or
741 .Fa fp_length
742 are negative, or both
743 .Fa fp_offset
744 and
745 .Fa fp_length
746 are not multiples of the file system block size.
747 .Pp
748 The argument
749 .Fa cmd
750 is either
751 .Dv F_READBOOTSTRAP
752 or
753 .Dv F_WRITEBOOTSTRAP
754 and the operation was attempted on a non-HFS disk type.
755 .\" ==========
756 .It Bq Er EMFILE
757 .Fa Cmd
758 is
759 .Dv F_DUPFD
760 and the maximum allowed number of file descriptors are currently
761 open.
762 .\" ==========
763 .It Bq Er EMFILE
764 The argument
765 .Fa cmd
766 is
767 .Dv F_DUPED
768 and the maximum number of file descriptors permitted for the
769 process are already in use,
770 or no file descriptors greater than or equal to
771 .Fa arg
772 are available.
773 .\" ==========
774 .It Bq Er ENOLCK
775 The argument
776 .Fa cmd
777 is
778 .Dv F_SETLK
779 or
780 .Dv F_SETLKW ,
781 and satisfying the lock or unlock request would result in the
782 number of locked regions in the system exceeding a system-imposed limit.
783 .\" ==========
784 .It Bq Er ENOSPC
785 The argument
786 .Fa cmd
787 is
788 .Dv F_PREALLOCATE
789 and either there is no space available on the volume containing
790 .Fa fildes
791 or
792 .Fa fst_flags
793 contains
794 .Dv F_ALLOCATEALL
795 and there is not enough space available on the volume containing
796 .Fa fildes
797 to satisfy the entire request.
798 .Pp
799 The argument
800 .Fa cmd
801 is
802 .Dv F_PUNCHHOLE
803 and there is not enough space available on the volume containing
804 .Fa fildes
805 to satisfy the request. As an example, a filesystem that supports
806 cloned files may return this error if punching a hole requires the
807 creation of a clone and there is not enough space available to do so.
808 .\" ==========
809 .It Bq Er EOVERFLOW
810 A return value would overflow its representation.
811 For example,
812 .Fa cmd
813 is F_GETLK, F_SETLK, or F_SETLKW
814 and the smallest (or, if l_len is non-zero, the largest) offset
815 of a byte in the requested segment
816 will not fit in an object of type off_t.
817 .\" ==========
818 .It Bq Er EPERM
819 The argument cmd is
820 .Dv F_PUNCHHOLE
821 and the calling process does not have file write permission.
822 .\" ==========
823 .It Bq Er ESRCH
824 .Fa Cmd
825 is
826 .Dv F_SETOWN
827 and
828 the process ID given as argument is not in use.
829 .El
830 .Sh SEE ALSO
831 .Xr close 2 ,
832 .Xr execve 2 ,
833 .Xr flock 2 ,
834 .Xr getdtablesize 2 ,
835 .Xr open 2 ,
836 .Xr pipe 2 ,
837 .Xr socket 2 ,
838 .Xr setsockopt 2 ,
839 .Xr sigaction 3
840 .Sh HISTORY
841 The
842 .Fn fcntl
843 function call appeared in
844 .Bx 4.2 .