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man:shmctl

SHMCTL(2) Linux Programmer's Manual SHMCTL(2)

NAME

     shmctl - System V shared memory control

SYNOPSIS

     #include <sys/ipc.h>
     #include <sys/shm.h>
     int shmctl(int shmid, int cmd, struct shmid_ds *buf);

DESCRIPTION

     shmctl()  performs  the  control operation specified by cmd on the Sys-
     tem V shared memory segment whose identifier is given in shmid.
     The buf argument is a pointer  to  a  shmid_ds  structure,  defined  in
     <sys/shm.h> as follows:
         struct shmid_ds {
             struct ipc_perm shm_perm;    /* Ownership and permissions */
             size_t          shm_segsz;   /* Size of segment (bytes) */
             time_t          shm_atime;   /* Last attach time */
             time_t          shm_dtime;   /* Last detach time */
             time_t          shm_ctime;   /* Last change time */
             pid_t           shm_cpid;    /* PID of creator */
             pid_t            shm_lpid;     /* PID of last shmat(2)/shmdt(2)
         */
             shmatt_t        shm_nattch;  /* No. of current attaches */
             ...  };
     The ipc_perm structure is defined as follows  (the  highlighted  fields
     are settable using IPC_SET):
         struct ipc_perm {
             key_t          __key;    /* Key supplied to shmget(2) */
             uid_t          uid;      /* Effective UID of owner */
             gid_t          gid;      /* Effective GID of owner */
             uid_t          cuid;     /* Effective UID of creator */
             gid_t          cgid;     /* Effective GID of creator */
             unsigned short mode;     /* Permissions + SHM_DEST and
                                         SHM_LOCKED flags */
             unsigned short __seq;    /* Sequence number */ };
     Valid values for cmd are:
     IPC_STAT  Copy  information  from  the kernel data structure associated
               with shmid into the shmid_ds structure  pointed  to  by  buf.
               The  caller  must  have  read permission on the shared memory
               segment.
     IPC_SET   Write the values of some members of  the  shmid_ds  structure
               pointed  to  by  buf  to the kernel data structure associated
               with this shared memory segment, updating also its  shm_ctime
               member.   The  following fields can be changed: shm_perm.uid,
               shm_perm.gid,  and  (the  least  significant   9   bits   of)
               shm_perm.mode.  The effective UID of the calling process must
               match the owner (shm_perm.uid) or creator (shm_perm.cuid)  of
               the  shared memory segment, or the caller must be privileged.
     IPC_RMID  Mark the segment to be destroyed.  The segment will  actually
               be  destroyed  only after the last process detaches it (i.e.,
               when  the  shm_nattch  member  of  the  associated  structure
               shmid_ds  is  zero).  The caller must be the owner or creator
               of the segment,  or  be  privileged.   The  buf  argument  is
               ignored.
               If  a segment has been marked for destruction, then the (non-
               standard) SHM_DEST flag of the  shm_perm.mode  field  in  the
               associated  data structure retrieved by IPC_STAT will be set.
               The  caller  must  ensure  that  a  segment   is   eventually
               destroyed;  otherwise  its  pages  that  were faulted in will
               remain in memory or swap.
               See also the description of  /proc/sys/kernel/shm_rmid_forced
               in proc(5).
     IPC_INFO (Linux-specific)
               Return information about system-wide shared memory limits and
               parameters in the structure pointed to by buf.   This  struc-
               ture  is  of type shminfo (thus, a cast is required), defined
               in <sys/shm.h> if  the  _GNU_SOURCE  feature  test  macro  is
               defined:
                   struct shminfo {
                       unsigned long shmmax; /* Maximum segment size */
                       unsigned long shmmin; /* Minimum segment size;
                                                always 1 */
                       unsigned  long  shmmni; /* Maximum number of segments
                   */
                       unsigned long shmseg; /* Maximum number of segments
                                                that a process can attach;
                                                unused within kernel */
                       unsigned long shmall; /* Maximum number of pages of
                                                shared  memory,  system-wide
                   */ };
               The  shmmni,  shmmax,  and shmall settings can be changed via
               /proc files of the same name; see proc(5) for details.
     SHM_INFO (Linux-specific)
               Return a shm_info structure whose fields contain  information
               about  system  resources  consumed  by  shared  memory.  This
               structure is defined in <sys/shm.h> if the  _GNU_SOURCE  fea-
               ture test macro is defined:
                   struct shm_info {
                       int           used_ids; /* # of currently existing
                                                  segments */
                       unsigned long shm_tot;  /* Total number of shared
                                                  memory pages */
                       unsigned long shm_rss;  /* # of resident shared
                                                  memory pages */
                       unsigned long shm_swp;  /* # of swapped shared
                                                  memory pages */
                       unsigned long swap_attempts;
                                               /* Unused since Linux 2.4 */
                       unsigned long swap_successes;
                                               /*  Unused since Linux 2.4 */
                   };
     SHM_STAT (Linux-specific)
               Return a shmid_ds structure as for  IPC_STAT.   However,  the
               shmid  argument  is  not a segment identifier, but instead an
               index into the kernel's internal array that maintains  infor-
               mation about all shared memory segments on the system.
     The  caller  can  prevent  or allow swapping of a shared memory segment
     with the following cmd values:
     SHM_LOCK (Linux-specific)
               Prevent swapping of the shared memory  segment.   The  caller
               must fault in any pages that are required to be present after
               locking is enabled.  If a segment has been locked,  then  the
               (nonstandard)  SHM_LOCKED  flag of the shm_perm.mode field in
               the associated data structure retrieved by IPC_STAT  will  be
               set.
     SHM_UNLOCK (Linux-specific)
               Unlock the segment, allowing it to be swapped out.
     In  kernels  before  2.6.10,  only  a  privileged  process could employ
     SHM_LOCK and SHM_UNLOCK.  Since kernel 2.6.10, an unprivileged  process
     can  employ  these operations if its effective UID matches the owner or
     creator UID of the segment, and (for SHM_LOCK) the amount of memory  to
     be  locked  falls  within  the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK resource limit (see setr-
     limit(2)).

RETURN VALUE

     A successful IPC_INFO or SHM_INFO operation returns the  index  of  the
     highest used entry in the kernel's internal array recording information
     about all shared memory segments.  (This information can be  used  with
     repeated  SHM_STAT  operations  to  obtain information about all shared
     memory segments  on  the  system.)   A  successful  SHM_STAT  operation
     returns  the  identifier  of  the shared memory segment whose index was
     given in shmid.  Other operations return 0 on success.
     On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.

ERRORS

     EACCES IPC_STAT or SHM_STAT is requested  and  shm_perm.mode  does  not
            allow  read  access  for shmid, and the calling process does not
            have the CAP_IPC_OWNER capability in  the  user  namespace  that
            governs its IPC namespace.
     EFAULT The  argument  cmd has value IPC_SET or IPC_STAT but the address
            pointed to by buf isn't accessible.
     EIDRM  shmid points to a removed identifier.
     EINVAL shmid is not a valid identifier, or cmd is not a valid  command.
            Or: for a SHM_STAT operation, the index value specified in shmid
            referred to an array slot that is currently unused.
     ENOMEM (In kernels since 2.6.9), SHM_LOCK was specified and the size of
            the  to-be-locked  segment  would  mean  that the total bytes in
            locked shared memory segments would exceed  the  limit  for  the
            real  user  ID of the calling process.  This limit is defined by
            the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK soft resource limit (see setrlimit(2)).
     EOVERFLOW
            IPC_STAT is attempted, and the GID or UID value is too large  to
            be stored in the structure pointed to by buf.
     EPERM  IPC_SET  or  IPC_RMID is attempted, and the effective user ID of
            the calling process  is  not  that  of  the  creator  (found  in
            shm_perm.cuid),  or  the  owner (found in shm_perm.uid), and the
            process  was  not  privileged   (Linux:   did   not   have   the
            CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability).
            Or  (in kernels before 2.6.9), SHM_LOCK or SHM_UNLOCK was speci-
            fied, but the process was not privileged (Linux:  did  not  have
            the  CAP_IPC_LOCK  capability).   (Since Linux 2.6.9, this error
            can also occur if the RLIMIT_MEMLOCK is 0 and the caller is  not
            privileged.)

CONFORMING TO

     POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, SVr4.

NOTES

     The  inclusion of <sys/types.h> and <sys/ipc.h> isn't required on Linux
     or by any version of POSIX.  However, some old implementations required
     the inclusion of these header files, and the SVID also documented their
     inclusion.  Applications intended to be portable to  such  old  systems
     may need to include these header files.
     The  IPC_INFO, SHM_STAT and SHM_INFO operations are used by the ipcs(1)
     program to provide information on allocated resources.  In the  future,
     these may modified or moved to a /proc filesystem interface.
     Linux  permits  a  process to attach (shmat(2)) a shared memory segment
     that has already been marked for deletion using shmctl(IPC_RMID).  This
     feature is not available on other UNIX implementations; portable appli-
     cations should avoid relying on it.
     Various fields in a struct shmid_ds were typed as short under Linux 2.2
     and  have  become  long  under Linux 2.4.  To take advantage of this, a
     recompilation under glibc-2.1.91 or later should suffice.  (The  kernel
     distinguishes old and new calls by an IPC_64 flag in cmd.)

SEE ALSO

     mlock(2), setrlimit(2), shmget(2), shmop(2), capabilities(7), svipc(7)

COLOPHON

     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/.

Linux 2017-09-15 SHMCTL(2)

/home/gen.uk/domains/wiki.gen.uk/public_html/data/pages/man/shmctl.txt · Last modified: 2019/05/17 09:32 by 127.0.0.1

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