table of contents
| SHM_OPEN(2) | System Calls Manual | SHM_OPEN(2) | 
NAME¶
shm_open,
    shm_unlink — shared memory
    object operations
LIBRARY¶
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS¶
#include
    <sys/types.h>
  
  #include <sys/mman.h>
  
  #include <fcntl.h>
int
  
  shm_open(const
    char *path, int
    flags, mode_t
    mode);
int
  
  shm_unlink(const
    char *path);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
    shm_open()
    system call opens (or optionally creates) a POSIX shared memory object named
    path. The flags argument
    contains a subset of the flags used by open(2). An access
    mode of either O_RDONLY or
    O_RDWR must be included in
    flags. The optional flags
    O_CREAT, O_EXCL, and
    O_TRUNC may also be specified.
If O_CREAT is specified,
    then a new shared memory object named path will be
    created if it does not exist. In this case, the shared memory object is
    created with mode mode subject to the process' umask
    value. If both the O_CREAT and
    O_EXCL flags are specified and a shared memory
    object named path already exists, then
    shm_open()
    will fail with EEXIST.
Newly created objects start off with a size of zero. If an
    existing shared memory object is opened with O_RDWR
    and the O_TRUNC flag is specified, then the shared
    memory object will be truncated to a size of zero. The size of the object
    can be adjusted via ftruncate(2) and queried via
    fstat(2).
The new descriptor is set to close during execve(2) system calls; see close(2) and fcntl(2).
As a FreeBSD extension, the constant
    SHM_ANON may be used for the
    path argument to
    shm_open().
    In this case, an anonymous, unnamed shared memory object is created. Since
    the object has no name, it cannot be removed via a subsequent call to
    shm_unlink(). Instead, the shared memory object will
    be garbage collected when the last reference to the shared memory object is
    removed. The shared memory object may be shared with other processes by
    sharing the file descriptor via fork(2) or
    sendmsg(2). Attempting to open an anonymous shared memory
    object with O_RDONLY will fail with
    EINVAL. All other flags are ignored.
The
    shm_unlink()
    system call removes a shared memory object named
  path.
RETURN VALUES¶
If successful, shm_open() returns a
    non-negative integer, and shm_unlink() returns zero.
    Both functions return -1 on failure, and set errno to
    indicate the error.
COMPATIBILITY¶
The path argument does not necessarily
    represent a pathname (although it does in most other implementations). Two
    processes opening the same path are guaranteed to
    access the same shared memory object if and only if
    path begins with a slash
    (‘/’) character.
Only the O_RDONLY,
    O_RDWR, O_CREAT,
    O_EXCL, and O_TRUNC flags
    may be used in portable programs.
POSIX specifications state that the result of using
    open(2), read(2), or
    write(2) on a shared memory object, or on the descriptor
    returned by shm_open(), is undefined. However, the
    FreeBSD kernel implementation explicitly includes
    support for read(2) and write(2).
FreeBSD also supports zero-copy transmission of data from shared memory objects with sendfile(2).
Neither shared memory objects nor their contents persist across reboots.
Writes do not extend shared memory objects, so ftruncate(2) must be called before any data can be written. See EXAMPLES.
EXAMPLES¶
This example fails without the call to ftruncate(2):
        uint8_t buffer[getpagesize()];
        ssize_t len;
        int fd;
        fd = shm_open(SHM_ANON, O_RDWR | O_CREAT, 0600);
        if (fd < 0)
                err(EX_OSERR, "%s: shm_open", __func__);
        if (ftruncate(fd, getpagesize()) < 0)
                err(EX_IOERR, "%s: ftruncate", __func__);
        len = pwrite(fd, buffer, getpagesize(), 0);
        if (len < 0)
                err(EX_IOERR, "%s: pwrite", __func__);
        if (len != getpagesize())
                errx(EX_IOERR, "%s: pwrite length mismatch", __func__);
ERRORS¶
shm_open() fails with these error codes
    for these conditions:
- [EINVAL]
- A flag other than O_RDONLY,O_RDWR,O_CREAT,O_EXCL, orO_TRUNCwas included in flags.
- [EMFILE]
- The process has already reached its limit for open file descriptors.
- [ENFILE]
- The system file table is full.
- [EINVAL]
- O_RDONLYwas specified while creating an anonymous shared memory object via- SHM_ANON.
- [EFAULT]
- The path argument points outside the process' allocated address space.
- [ENAMETOOLONG]
- The entire pathname exceeded 1023 characters.
- [EINVAL]
- The path does not begin with a slash
      (‘/’) character.
- [ENOENT]
- O_CREATis specified and the named shared memory object does not exist.
- [EEXIST]
- O_CREATand- O_EXCLare specified and the named shared memory object does exist.
- [EACCES]
- The required permissions (for reading or reading and writing) are denied.
shm_unlink() fails with these error codes
    for these conditions:
- [EFAULT]
- The path argument points outside the process' allocated address space.
- [ENAMETOOLONG]
- The entire pathname exceeded 1023 characters.
- [ENOENT]
- The named shared memory object does not exist.
- [EACCES]
- The required permissions are denied. shm_unlink() requires write permission to the shared memory object.
SEE ALSO¶
close(2), fstat(2), ftruncate(2), mmap(2), munmap(2), sendfile(2)
STANDARDS¶
The shm_open() and
    shm_unlink() functions are believed to conform to
    IEEE Std 1003.1b-1993
  (“POSIX.1b”).
HISTORY¶
The shm_open() and
    shm_unlink() functions first appeared in
    FreeBSD 4.3. The functions were reimplemented as
    system calls using shared memory objects directly rather than files in
    FreeBSD 8.0.
AUTHORS¶
Garrett A. Wollman <wollman@FreeBSD.org> (C library support and this manual page)
  
  Matthew Dillon
    <dillon@FreeBSD.org>
    (MAP_NOSYNC)
| January 20, 2017 | Debian |