uu_lock, uu_unlock, uu_lockerr - acquire and release control
of a serial
device
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <util.h>
int
uu_lock(const char *ttyname);
int
uu_lock_txfr(const char *ttyname, pid_t pid);
int
uu_unlock(const char *ttyname);
const char *
uu_lockerr(int uu_lockresult);
The uu_lock() function attempts to create a lock file called
/var/spool/lock/LCK.. with a suffix given by the passed
ttyname. If the
file already exists, it is expected to contain the process
ID of the
locking program.
If the file does not already exist, or the owning process
given by the
process ID found in the lock file is no longer running,
uu_lock() will
write its own process ID into the file and return success.
uu_lock_txfr() transfers lock ownership to another process.
uu_lock()
must have previously been successful.
uu_unlock() removes the lockfile created by uu_lock() for
the given
ttyname. Care should be taken that uu_lock() was successful
before calling
uu_unlock().
uu_lockerr() returns an error string representing the error
uu_lockresult, as returned from uu_lock().
uu_unlock() returns 0 on success and -1 on failure.
uu_lock() may return any of the following values:
UU_LOCK_INUSE: The lock is in use by another process.
UU_LOCK_OK: The lock was successfully created.
UU_LOCK_OPEN_ERR: The lock file could not be opened via
open(2).
UU_LOCK_READ_ERR: The lock file could not be read via
read(2).
UU_LOCK_CREAT_ERR: Can't create temporary lock file via creat(3).
UU_LOCK_WRITE_ERR: The current process ID could not be written to the
lock file via a call to write(2).
UU_LOCK_LINK_ERR: Can't link temporary lock file via
link(2).
UU_LOCK_TRY_ERR: Locking attempts are failed after 5 tries.
If a value of UU_LOCK_OK is passed to uu_lockerr(), an empty
string is
returned. Otherwise, a string specifying the reason for
failure is returned.
uu_lockerr() uses the current value of errno to determine the
exact error. Care should be made not to allow errno to be
changed between
calls to uu_lock() and uu_lockerr().
uu_lock_txfr() may return any of the following values:
UU_LOCK_OK: The transfer was successful. The specified process now holds
the device lock.
UU_LOCK_OWNER_ERR: The current process does not already own
a lock on the
specified device.
UU_LOCK_WRITE_ERR: The new process ID could not be written
to the lock
file via a call to write(2).
If uu_lock() returns one of the error values above, the
global value
errno can be used to determine the cause. Refer to the respective manual
pages for further details.
uu_unlock() will set the global variable errno to reflect
the reason that
the lock file could not be removed. Refer to the description of
unlink(2) for further details.
lseek(2), open(2), read(2), write(2)
It is possible that a stale lock is not recognised as such
if a new process
is assigned the same process ID as the program that
left the stale
lock.
The calling process must have write permissions to the
/var/spool/lock
directory. There is no mechanism in place to ensure that
the permissions
of this directory are the same as those of the serial devices that might
be locked.
OpenBSD 3.6 March 30, 1997
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