table of contents
| MSYNC(2) | System Calls Manual | MSYNC(2) | 
NAME¶
msync —
    synchronize a mapped region
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/mman.h>
int
  
  msync(void
    *addr, size_t len,
    int flags);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    msync()
    system call writes any modified pages back to the file system and updates
    the file modification time. If len is 0, all modified
    pages within the region containing addr will be
    flushed; if len is non-zero, only those pages
    containing addr and len-1
    succeeding locations will be examined. The flags
    argument may be specified as follows:
MS_ASYNC- Return immediately
 MS_SYNC- Perform synchronous writes
 MS_INVALIDATE- Invalidate all cached data
 
RETURN VALUES¶
The msync() function returns the
    value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and
    the global variable errno is set to indicate the
    error.
ERRORS¶
The msync() system call will fail if:
- [
EBUSY] - Some or all of the pages in the specified region are locked and
      
MS_INVALIDATEis specified. - [
EINVAL] - The addr argument is not a multiple of the hardware page size.
 - [
ENOMEM] - The addresses in the range starting at addr and continuing for len bytes are outside the range allowed for the address space of a process or specify one or more pages that are not mapped.
 - [
EINVAL] - The flags argument was both MS_ASYNC and MS_INVALIDATE. Only one of these flags is allowed.
 - [
EIO] - An error occurred while writing at least one of the pages in the specified region.
 
SEE ALSO¶
HISTORY¶
The msync() system call first appeared in
    4.4BSD.
BUGS¶
The msync() 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.
| March 18, 2012 | Debian |