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vfs_lock_file
Langue: en
Version: June 2009 (debian - 07/07/09)
Section: 9 (Appels noyau Linux)
NAME
vfs_lock_file - file byte range lockSYNOPSIS
- int vfs_lock_file(struct file * filp, unsigned int cmd, struct file_lock * fl, struct file_lock * conf);
ARGUMENTS
filp
- The file to apply the lock to
cmd
- type of locking operation (F_SETLK, F_GETLK, etc.)
fl
- The lock to be applied
conf
- Place to return a copy of the conflicting lock, if found.
DESCRIPTION
A caller that doesn't care about the conflicting lock may pass NULL as the final argument.
If the filesystem defines a private ->lock method, then conf will be left unchanged; so a caller that cares should initialize it to some acceptable default.
To avoid blocking kernel daemons, such as lockd, that need to acquire POSIX locks, the ->lock interface may return asynchronously, before the lock has been granted or denied by the underlying filesystem, if (and only if) fl_grant is set. Callers expecting ->lock to return asynchronously will only use F_SETLK, not F_SETLKW; they will set FL_SLEEP if (and only if) the request is for a blocking lock. When ->lock does return asynchronously, it must return -EINPROGRESS, and call ->fl_grant when the lock request completes. If the request is for non-blocking lock the file system should return -EINPROGRESS then try to get the lock and call the callback routine with the result. If the request timed out the callback routine will return a nonzero return code and the file system should release the lock. The file system is also responsible to keep a corresponding posix lock when it grants a lock so the VFS can find out which locks are locally held and do the correct lock cleanup when required. The underlying filesystem must not drop the kernel lock or call ->fl_grant before returning to the caller with a -EINPROGRESS return code.
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