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_locking

Locks or unlocks bytes of a file.

Syntax

int _locking(
   int fd,
   int mode,
   long nbytes
);

Parameters

fd
File descriptor.

mode
Locking action to perform.

nbytes
Number of bytes to lock.

Return value

_locking returns 0 if successful. A return value of -1 indicates failure, in which case errno is set to one of the following values.

errno value Condition
EACCES Locking violation (file already locked or unlocked).
EBADF Invalid file descriptor.
EDEADLOCK Locking violation. Returned when the _LK_LOCK or _LK_RLCK flag is specified and the file can't be locked after 10 attempts.
EINVAL An invalid argument was given to _locking.

If the failure is due to a bad parameter, such as an invalid file descriptor, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter validation.

Remarks

The _locking function locks or unlocks nbytes bytes of the file specified by fd. Locking bytes in a file prevents access to those bytes by other processes. All locking or unlocking begins at the current position of the file pointer and proceeds for the next nbytes bytes. It's possible to lock bytes past end of file.

mode must be one of the following manifest constants, which are defined in Locking.h.

mode value Effect
_LK_LOCK Locks the specified bytes. If the bytes can't be locked, the program immediately tries again after 1 second. If the bytes can't be locked after 10 attempts, the constant returns an error.
_LK_NBLCK Locks the specified bytes. If the bytes can't be locked, the constant returns an error.
_LK_NBRLCK Same as _LK_NBLCK.
_LK_RLCK Same as _LK_LOCK.
_LK_UNLCK Unlocks the specified bytes, which must have been previously locked.

Multiple regions of a file that don't overlap can be locked. A region being unlocked must have been previously locked. _locking doesn't merge adjacent regions; if two locked regions are adjacent, each region must be unlocked separately. Regions should be locked only briefly and should be unlocked before closing a file or exiting the program.

By default, this function's global state is scoped to the application. To change this behavior, see Global state in the CRT.

Requirements

Routine Required header Optional header
_locking <io.h> and <sys/locking.h> <errno.h>

For more compatibility information, see Compatibility.

Libraries

All versions of the C run-time libraries.

Example

// crt_locking.c
/* This program opens a file with sharing. It locks
* some bytes before reading them, then unlocks them. Note that the
* program works correctly only if the file exists.
*/

#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/locking.h>
#include <share.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <io.h>

int main( void )
{
   int  fh, numread;
   char buffer[40];

   /* Quit if can't open file or system doesn't
    * support sharing.
    */
   errno_t err = _sopen_s( &fh, "crt_locking.txt", _O_RDONLY, _SH_DENYNO,
                          _S_IREAD | _S_IWRITE );
   printf( "%d %d\n", err, fh );
   if( err != 0 )
      exit( 1 );

   /* Lock some bytes and read them. Then unlock. */
   if( _locking( fh, LK_NBLCK, 30L ) != -1 )
   {
      long lseek_ret;
      printf( "No one can change these bytes while I'm reading them\n" );
      numread = _read( fh, buffer, 30 );
      buffer[30] = '\0';
      printf( "%d bytes read: %.30s\n", numread, buffer );
      lseek_ret = _lseek( fh, 0L, SEEK_SET );
      _locking( fh, LK_UNLCK, 30L );
      printf( "Now I'm done. Do what you will with them\n" );
   }
   else
      perror( "Locking failed\n" );

   _close( fh );
}

Input: crt_locking.txt

The first thirty bytes of this file will be locked.

Sample output

No one can change these bytes while I'm reading them
30 bytes read: The first thirty bytes of this
Now I'm done. Do what you will with them

See also

File handling
_creat, _wcreat
_open, _wopen