SYNC_FILE_RANGE(2) | Linux Programmer's Manual | SYNC_FILE_RANGE(2) |
sync_file_range - sync a file segment with disk
#define _GNU_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */ #include <fcntl.h>
int sync_file_range(int fd, off64_t offset, off64_t nbytes, unsigned int flags);
sync_file_range() permits fine control when synchronizing the open file referred to by the file descriptor fd with disk.
offset is the starting byte of the file range to be synchronized. nbytes specifies the length of the range to be synchronized, in bytes; if nbytes is zero, then all bytes from offset through to the end of file are synchronized. Synchronization is in units of the system page size: offset is rounded down to a page boundary; (offset+nbytes-1) is rounded up to a page boundary.
The flags bit-mask argument can include any of the following values:
Specifying flags as 0 is permitted, as a no-op.
This system call is extremely dangerous and should not be used in portable programs. None of these operations writes out the file's metadata. Therefore, unless the application is strictly performing overwrites of already-instantiated disk blocks, there are no guarantees that the data will be available after a crash. There is no user interface to know if a write is purely an overwrite. On filesystems using copy-on-write semantics (e.g., btrfs) an overwrite of existing allocated blocks is impossible. When writing into preallocated space, many filesystems also require calls into the block allocator, which this system call does not sync out to disk. This system call does not flush disk write caches and thus does not provide any data integrity on systems with volatile disk write caches.
SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_BEFORE and SYNC_FILE_RANGE_WAIT_AFTER will detect any I/O errors or ENOSPC conditions and will return these to the caller.
Useful combinations of the flags bits are:
On success, sync_file_range() returns 0; on failure -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
sync_file_range() appeared on Linux in kernel 2.6.17.
This system call is Linux-specific, and should be avoided in portable programs.
Some architectures (e.g., PowerPC, ARM) need 64-bit arguments to be aligned in a suitable pair of registers. On such architectures, the call signature of sync_file_range() shown in the SYNOPSIS would force a register to be wasted as padding between the fd and offset arguments. (See syscall(2) for details.) Therefore, these architectures define a different system call that orders the arguments suitably:
int sync_file_range2(int fd, unsigned int flags, off64_t offset, off64_t nbytes);
The behavior of this system call is otherwise exactly the same as sync_file_range().
A system call with this signature first appeared on the ARM architecture in Linux 2.6.20, with the name arm_sync_file_range(). It was renamed in Linux 2.6.22, when the analogous system call was added for PowerPC. On architectures where glibc support is provided, glibc transparently wraps sync_file_range2() under the name sync_file_range().
This page is part of release 4.16 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2017-09-15 | Linux |