![]() |
James Thornton |
| Internet Business Consultant |
| Home | Blog | Bio | Projects | Contact | Latest Blog (new site): How to Get to Genius |
|---|
|
Nameflockfile, ftrylockfile, funlockfile - lock FILE for stdioSynopsis#include <stdio.h> void flockfile(FILE *filehandle); int ftrylockfile(FILE *filehandle); void funlockfile(FILE *filehandle); DescriptionThe stdio functions are thread-safe. This is achieved by assigning to each FILE object a lockcount and (if the lockcount is nonzero) an owning thread. For each library call, these functions wait until the FILE object is no longer locked by a different thread, then lock it, do the requested I/O, and unlock the object again.(Note: this locking has nothing to do with the file locking done by functions like flock(2) and lockf(3) .) All this is invisible to the C-programmer, but there may be two reasons to wish for more detailed control. On the one hand, maybe a series of I/O actions by one thread belongs together, and should not be interrupted by the I/O of some other thread. On the other hand, maybe the locking overhead should be avoided for greater efficiency. To this end, a thread can explicitly lock the FILE object, then do its series of I/O actions, then unlock. This prevents other threads from coming in between. If the reason for doing this was to achieve greater efficiency, one does the I/O with the non-locking versions of the stdio functions: with getc_unlocked() and putc_unlocked() instead of getc() and putc(). The flockfile() function waits for *filehandle to be no longer locked by a different thread, then makes the current thread owner of *filehandle, and increments the lockcount. The funlockfile() function decrements the lock count. The ftrylockfile() function is a non-blocking version of flockfile(). It does nothing in case some other thread owns *filehandle, and it obtains ownership and increments the lockcount otherwise. Return ValueThe ftrylockfile() function returns zero for success (the lock was obtained), and nonzero for failure.ErrorsNone.AvailabilityThese functions are available when _POSIX_THREAD_SAFE_FUNCTIONS is defined. They are in libc since libc 5.1.1 and in glibc since glibc 2.0.Conforming toPOSIX.1See Alsounlocked_stdio(3)
|
|
James Thornton, jamesthornton.com>Services: Internet Marketing Services |
Electric Speed: Search Engine Optimization Google |