📄 flocksun.c
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/* * Program: BSD file lock emulation jacket -- SUN version * * Author: Mark Crispin * Networks and Distributed Computing * Computing & Communications * University of Washington * Administration Building, AG-44 * Seattle, WA 98195 * Internet: MRC@CAC.Washington.EDU * * Date: 1 August 1988 * Last Edited: 24 June 1998 * * Copyright 1998 by the University of Washington * * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its * documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted, provided * that the above copyright notice appears in all copies and that both the * above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in supporting * documentation, and that the name of the University of Washington not be * used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software * without specific, written prior permission. This software is made available * "as is", and * THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, * WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION ALL IMPLIED * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND IN * NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, * INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM * LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT * (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE) OR STRICT LIABILITY, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION * WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. * */#include <sys/statvfs.h>/* Emulator for BSD flock() call * Accepts: file descriptor * operation bitmask * Returns: 0 if successful, -1 if failure */int bsd_flock (int fd,int op){ struct stat sbuf; struct ustat usbuf; struct statvfs vsbuf; /* Make locking NFS files on SVR4 be a no-op the way it is on BSD. This is * because the rpc.statd/rpc.lockd daemons don't work very well and cause * cluster-wide hangs if you exercise them at all. The result of this is * that you lose the ability to detect shared mail_open() on NFS-mounted * files. If you are wise, you'll use IMAP instead of NFS for mail files. * Traditionally, you could detect NFS by testing if ftinode is 0 or -1. * Unfortunately, Sun seems to think that "number of inodes" is a reasonable * concept in a supposedly OS-independent network filesystem and broke this * test in recent versions of Solaris. This disease has spread to AIX. * Sun alleges that it doesn't matter, because they say they have fixed all * the rpc.statd/rpc.lockd bugs. This is absolutely not true; huge amounts * of user and support time have been wasted in cluster-wide hangs. * This is the latest incarnation. It uses fstatvfs(), which isn't on older * older SVR4 systems, so it isn't portable. Any base type that begins with * "nfs" is considered to be NFS. * It used to do the same thing for AFS as well, but Randall S. Winchester * <rsw@Glue.umd.edu> says that locking works without problems on AFS. */ if (mail_parameters (NIL,GET_DISABLEFCNTLLOCK,NIL) || (!fstat (fd,&sbuf) && !ustat (sbuf.st_dev,&usbuf) && !++usbuf.f_tinode)|| (!fstatvfs (fd,&vsbuf) && (vsbuf.f_basetype[0] == 'n') && (vsbuf.f_basetype[1] == 'f') && (vsbuf.f_basetype[2] == 's'))) return 0; /* locking disabled */ return safe_flock (fd,op); /* do safe locking */}
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