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FLOCK(1) |
User Commands |
FLOCK(1) |
flock - manage locks from shell scripts
flock [options] <file|directory> <command> [command args]
flock [options] <file|directory> -c <command>
flock [options] <file descriptor number>
This utility manages flock(2) locks from within shell scripts or the
command line.
The first and second forms wrap the lock around the executing a
command, in a manner similar to su(1) or newgrp(1). It locks a
specified file or directory, which is created (assuming appropriate
permissions), if it does not already exist. By default, if the lock cannot
be immediately acquired, flock waits until the lock is available.
The third form uses open file by file descriptor number. See
examples how that can be used.
- -s, --shared
- Obtain a shared lock, sometimes called a read lock.
- -x, -e, --exclusive
- Obtain an exclusive lock, sometimes called a write lock. This is the
default.
- -u, --unlock
- Drop a lock. This is usually not required, since a lock is automatically
dropped when the file is closed. However, it may be required in special
cases, for example if the enclosed command group may have forked a
background process which should not be holding the lock.
- -n, --nb, --nonblock
- Fail rather than wait if the lock cannot be immediately acquired. See the
-E option for the exit code used.
- -w, --wait, --timeout seconds
- Fail if the lock cannot be acquired within seconds. Decimal
fractional values are allowed. See the -E option for the exit code
used. The zero number of seconds is interpreted as
--nonblock.
- -o, --close
- Close the file descriptor on which the lock is held before executing
command . This is useful if command spawns a child
process which should not be holding the lock.
- -E, --conflict-exit-code number
- The exit code used when the -n option is in use, and the
conflicting lock exists, or the -w option is in use, and the
timeout is reached. The default value is 1.
- -c, --command command
- Pass a single command, without arguments, to the shell with
-c.
- -h, --help
- Print a help message.
- -V, --version
- Show version number and exit.
- shell1> flock /tmp -c cat
- shell2> flock -w .007 /tmp -c echo; /bin/echo $?
- Set exclusive lock to directory /tmp and the second command will
fail.
- shell1> flock -s /tmp -c cat
- shell2> flock -s -w .007 /tmp -c echo; /bin/echo $?
- Set shared lock to directory /tmp and the second command will not fail.
Notice that attempting to get exclusive lock with second command would
fail.
- shell> flock -x local-lock-file echo 'a b c'
- Grab the exclusive lock "local-lock-file" before running echo
with 'a b c'.
- (
-
flock -n 9 || exit 1
-
# ... commands executed under lock ...
- ) 9>/var/lock/mylockfile
- The form is convenient inside shell scripts. The mode used to open the
file doesn't matter to flock; using > or >>
allows the lockfile to be created if it does not already exist, however,
write permission is required. Using < requires that the file
already exists but only read permission is required.
- [ "${FLOCKER}" != "$0" ] && exec env
FLOCKER="$0" flock -en "$0" "$0"
"$@" || :
- This is useful boilerplate code for shell scripts. Put it at the top of
the shell script you want to lock and it'll automatically lock itself on
the first run. If the env var $FLOCKER is not set to the shell script that
is being run, then execute flock and grab an exclusive non-blocking lock
(using the script itself as the lock file) before re-execing itself with
the right arguments. It also sets the FLOCKER env var to the right value
so it doesn't run again.
The command uses sysexits.h return values for everything else but an
options -n or -w failures which return either the value given by
the -E option, or 1 by default.
Copyright © 2003-2006 H. Peter Anvin.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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