MMAP(2) | System Calls Manual | MMAP(2) |
mmap
— allocate
memory, or map files or devices into memory
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<sys/mman.h>
void *
mmap
(void
*addr, size_t len,
int prot,
int flags,
int fd,
off_t offset);
The
mmap
()
system call causes the pages starting at addr and
continuing for at most len bytes to be mapped from the
object described by fd, starting at byte offset
offset. If len is not a multiple
of the page size, the mapped region may extend past the specified range. Any
such extension beyond the end of the mapped object will be zero-filled.
If fd references a regular file or a shared
memory object, the range of bytes starting at offset
and continuing for len bytes must be legitimate for
the possible (not necessarily current) offsets in the object. In particular,
the offset value cannot be negative. If the object is
truncated and the process later accesses a page that is wholly within the
truncated region, the access is aborted and a SIGBUS
signal is delivered to the process.
If fd references a device file, the interpretation of the offset value is device specific and defined by the device driver. The virtual memory subsystem does not impose any restrictitions on the offset value in this case, passing it unchanged to the driver.
If addr is non-zero, it is used as a hint to the system. (As a convenience to the system, the actual address of the region may differ from the address supplied.) If addr is zero, an address will be selected by the system. The actual starting address of the region is returned. A successful mmap deletes any previous mapping in the allocated address range.
The protections (region accessibility) are specified in the prot argument by or'ing the following values:
PROT_NONE
PROT_READ
PROT_WRITE
PROT_EXEC
The flags argument specifies the type of the mapped object, mapping options and whether modifications made to the mapped copy of the page are private to the process or are to be shared with other references. Sharing, mapping type and options are specified in the flags argument by or'ing the following values:
MAP_32BIT
mmap
()
will fail. This flag is only available on 64-bit platforms.MAP_ALIGNED
(n)mmap
() will fail. The
n argument specifies the binary logarithm of the
desired alignment.MAP_ALIGNED_SUPER
mmap
() will fail. The system will choose a
suitable page size based on the size of mapping. The page size used as
well as the alignment of the region may both be affected by properties of
the file being mapped. In particular, the physical address of existing
pages of a file may require a specific alignment. The region is not
guaranteed to be aligned on any specific boundary.MAP_ANON
MAP_ANON
must be -1.
The offset argument must be 0.MAP_ANONYMOUS
MAP_ANON
and is provided
for compatibility.MAP_EXCL
MAP_FIXED
. Please see the definition of
MAP_FIXED
for the description of its effect.MAP_FIXED
mmap
() will fail. If
MAP_FIXED
is specified, addr
must be a multiple of the page size. If MAP_EXCL
is not specified, a successful MAP_FIXED
request
replaces any previous mappings for the process' pages in the range from
addr to addr +
len. In contrast, if
MAP_EXCL
is specified, the request will fail if a
mapping already exists within the range.MAP_GUARD
mmap will not create mappings in the
address range of a guard unless the request specifies
MAP_FIXED
. Guards can be destroyed with
munmap(2). Any memory access by a thread to the
guarded range results in the delivery of a
SIGSEGV
signal to that thread.
MAP_NOCORE
MAP_NOSYNC
MAP_NOSYNC
or not. This option is
not portable across UNIX platforms (yet), though
some may implement the same behavior by default.
WARNING!
Extending a file with ftruncate(2), thus creating a
big hole, and then filling the hole by modifying a shared
mmap
()
can lead to severe file fragmentation. In order to avoid such
fragmentation you should always pre-allocate the file's backing store by
write
()ing zero's into the newly extended area
prior to modifying the area via your mmap
(). The
fragmentation problem is especially sensitive to
MAP_NOSYNC
pages, because pages may be flushed
to disk in a totally random order.
The same applies when using
MAP_NOSYNC
to implement a file-based shared
memory store. It is recommended that you create the backing store by
write
()ing
zero's to the backing file rather than
ftruncate
()ing
it. You can test file fragmentation by observing the KB/t (kilobytes per
transfer) results from an “iostat
1
” while reading a large file sequentially, e.g., using
“dd if=filename of=/dev/null
bs=32k
”.
The fsync(2) system call will flush all dirty data and metadata associated with a file, including dirty NOSYNC VM data, to physical media. The sync(8) command and sync(2) system call generally do not flush dirty NOSYNC VM data. The msync(2) system call is usually not needed since BSD implements a coherent file system buffer cache. However, it may be used to associate dirty VM pages with file system buffers and thus cause them to be flushed to physical media sooner rather than later.
MAP_PREFAULT_READ
PROT_WRITE
, it does not eliminate soft faults on
the initial write accesses to the region.MAP_PRIVATE
MAP_SHARED
MAP_STACK
MAP_STACK
implies MAP_ANON
, and offset
of 0. The fd argument must be -1 and
prot must include at least
PROT_READ
and PROT_WRITE
.
This option creates a memory region that grows to at most len bytes in size, starting from the stack top and growing down. The stack top is the starting address returned by the call, plus len bytes. The bottom of the stack at maximum growth is the starting address returned by the call.
Stacks created with MAP_STACK
automatically grow. Guards prevent inadvertent use of the regions into
which those stacks can grow without requiring mapping the whole stack in
advance.
The close(2) system call does not unmap pages, see munmap(2) for further information.
Although this implementation does not impose any alignment restrictions on the offset argument, a portable program must only use page-aligned values.
Large page mappings require that the pages backing an object be
aligned in matching blocks in both the virtual address space and RAM. The
system will automatically attempt to use large page mappings when mapping an
object that is already backed by large pages in RAM by aligning the mapping
request in the virtual address space to match the alignment of the large
physical pages. The system may also use large page mappings when mapping
portions of an object that are not yet backed by pages in RAM. The
MAP_ALIGNED_SUPER
flag is an optimization that will
align the mapping request to the size of a large page similar to
MAP_ALIGNED
, except that the system will override
this alignment if an object already uses large pages so that the mapping
will be consistent with the existing large pages. This flag is mostly useful
for maximizing the use of large pages on the first mapping of objects that
do not yet have pages present in RAM.
Upon successful completion, mmap
() returns
a pointer to the mapped region. Otherwise, a value of
MAP_FAILED
is returned and
errno is set to indicate the error.
The mmap
() system call will fail if:
EACCES
]PROT_READ
was specified as part of the
prot argument and fd was not
open for reading. The flags MAP_SHARED
and
PROT_WRITE
were specified as part of the
flags and prot argument and
fd was not open for writing.EBADF
]EINVAL
]EINVAL
]EINVAL
]EINVAL
]MAP_PRIVATE
and
MAP_SHARED
were specified.EINVAL
]MAP_ANON
,
MAP_GUARD
, MAP_PRIVATE
,
MAP_SHARED
, or MAP_STACK
was specified. At least one of these flags must be included.EINVAL
]MAP_FIXED
was specified and the addr argument was not page
aligned, or part of the desired address space resides out of the valid
address space for a user process.EINVAL
]MAP_FIXED
and
MAP_32BIT
were specified and part of the desired
address space resides outside of the first 2GB of user address space.EINVAL
]EINVAL
]MAP_ALIGNED
was specified and the desired alignment was either larger than the virtual
address size of the machine or smaller than a page.EINVAL
]MAP_ANON
was specified and the fd argument was not -1.EINVAL
]MAP_ANON
was specified and the offset argument was not
0.EINVAL
]MAP_FIXED
and
MAP_EXCL
were specified, but the requested region
is already used by a mapping.EINVAL
]MAP_EXCL
was specified, but MAP_FIXED
was not.EINVAL
]MAP_GUARD
was specified, but the offset argument was not zero,
the fd argument was not -1, or the
prot argument was not
PROT_NONE
.EINVAL
]MAP_GUARD
was specified together with one of the flags
MAP_ANON
, MAP_PREFAULT
,
MAP_PREFAULT_READ
,
MAP_PRIVATE
, MAP_SHARED
,
MAP_STACK
.ENODEV
]MAP_ANON
has not been specified and fd did not reference a
regular or character special file.ENOMEM
]MAP_FIXED
was specified and the addr argument was not
available. MAP_ANON
was specified and insufficient
memory was available.madvise(2), mincore(2), minherit(2), mlock(2), mprotect(2), msync(2), munlock(2), munmap(2), getpagesize(3), getpagesizes(3)
June 22, 2017 | Debian |