Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 4.8

i386

ftok(3)


FTOK

FTOK

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUE
CONFORMING TO
NOTES
SEE ALSO

NAME

ftok − convert a pathname and a project identifier to a System V IPC key

SYNOPSIS

# include <sys/types.h>
# include <sys/ipc.h>

key_t ftok(const char *pathname, int proj_id);

DESCRIPTION

The ftok function uses the identity of the file named by the given pathname (which must refer to an existing, accessible file) and the least significant 8 bits of proj_id (which must be nonzero) to generate a key_t type System V IPC key, suitable for use with msgget(2), semget(2), or shmget(2).

The resulting value is the same for all pathnames that name the same file, when the same value of proj_id is used. The value returned should be different when the (simultaneously existing) files or the project IDs differ.

RETURN VALUE

On success the generated key_t value is returned. On failure −1 is returned, with errno indicating the error as for the stat(2) system call.

CONFORMING TO

XPG4

NOTES

Under libc4 and libc5 (and under SunOS 4.x) the prototype was

key_t ftok(char *pathname, char proj_id);

Today proj_id is an int, but still only 8 bits are used. Typical usage has an ASCII character proj_id, that is why the behaviour is said to be undefined when proj_id is zero.

Of course no guarantee can be given that the resulting key_t is unique. Typically, a best effort attempt combines the given proj_id byte, the lower 16 bits of the i−node number, and the lower 8 bits of the device number into a 32−bit result. Collisions may easily happen, for example between files on /dev/hda1 and files on /dev/sda1.

SEE ALSO

ipc(5), msgget(2), semget(2), shmget(2), stat(2)



ftok(3)