msync(2) — Linux manual page

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ERRORS | VERSIONS | STANDARDS | HISTORY | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

msync(2) System Calls Manual msync(2)

NAME top

 msync - synchronize a file with a memory map

LIBRARY top

 Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS top

 #include <sys/mman.h>
 int msync(void addr[.length], size_t length, int flags);

DESCRIPTION top

 msync() flushes changes made to the in-core copy of a file that
 was mapped into memory using mmap(2) back to the filesystem.
 Without use of this call, there is no guarantee that changes are
 written back before munmap(2) is called. To be more precise, the
 part of the file that corresponds to the memory area starting at
 addr and having length length is updated.
 The flags argument should specify exactly one of MS_ASYNC and
 MS_SYNC, and may additionally include the MS_INVALIDATE bit.
 These bits have the following meanings:
 MS_ASYNC
 Specifies that an update be scheduled, but the call returns
 immediately.
 MS_SYNC
 Requests an update and waits for it to complete.
 MS_INVALIDATE
 Asks to invalidate other mappings of the same file (so that
 they can be updated with the fresh values just written).

RETURN VALUE top

 On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno 
 is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS top

 EBUSY MS_INVALIDATE was specified in flags, and a memory lock
 exists for the specified address range.
 EINVAL addr is not a multiple of PAGESIZE; or any bit other than
 MS_ASYNC | MS_INVALIDATE | MS_SYNC is set in flags; or both
 MS_SYNC and MS_ASYNC are set in flags.
 ENOMEM The indicated memory (or part of it) was not mapped.

VERSIONS top

 According to POSIX, either MS_SYNC or MS_ASYNC must be specified
 in flags, and indeed failure to include one of these flags will
 cause msync() to fail on some systems. However, Linux permits a
 call to msync() that specifies neither of these flags, with
 semantics that are (currently) equivalent to specifying MS_ASYNC.
 (Since Linux 2.6.19, MS_ASYNC is in fact a no-op, since the kernel
 properly tracks dirty pages and flushes them to storage as
 necessary.) Notwithstanding the Linux behavior, portable, future-
 proof applications should ensure that they specify either MS_SYNC
 or MS_ASYNC in flags.

STANDARDS top

 POSIX.1-2008.

HISTORY top

 POSIX.1-2001.
 This call was introduced in Linux 1.3.21, and then used EFAULT
 instead of ENOMEM. In Linux 2.4.19, this was changed to the POSIX
 value ENOMEM.
 On POSIX systems on which msync() is available, both
 _POSIX_MAPPED_FILES and _POSIX_SYNCHRONIZED_IO are defined in
 <unistd.h> to a value greater than 0. (See also sysconf(3).)

SEE ALSO top

 mmap(2)
 B.O. Gallmeister, POSIX.4, O'Reilly, pp. 128–129 and 389–391.

COLOPHON top

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 user-space interface documentation) project. Information about
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 This page was obtained from the tarball man-pages-6.10.tar.gz
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Linux man-pages 6.10 2024年07月23日 msync(2)

Pages that refer to this page: madvise(2), mmap2(2), mmap(2), remap_file_pages(2), sync_file_range(2), syscalls(2), nfs(5), systemd.exec(5), fanotify(7), inotify(7), xfs_io(8)



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