Expand description
A cross-platform library for simple advisory file locking.
The lock supports both exclusive and shared locking modes for a byte range
of an opened File object. Exclusively locking a portion of a file denies
all other processes both shared and exclusive access to the specified
region of the file. Shared locking a portion of a file denies all processes
exclusive access to the specified region of the file. The locked range does
not need to exist within the file, and the ranges may be used for any
arbitrary advisory locking protocol between processes.
The result of a lock(), try_lock(), or lock_any() is a
FileGuard. When dropped, this FileGuard will unlock the region of
the file currently held. Exclusive locks may be .downgrade()’ed to
either a shared lock cross platform.
On Unix systems fcntl is used to perform the locking, and on Windows, LockFileEx.
All generally available behavior is consistent across platforms. For platform-
specific behavior, traits may be used for the respective platform. For example,
on Windows, locks cannot be safely upgraded, whereas on Unix systems, this can
be done safely and atomically. To use this feature, the
file_guard::os::unix::FileGuardExt may useed, enabling the .upgrade()
and .try_upgrade() methods.
Note that on Windows, the file must be open with write permissions to lock it.
§Examples
use file_guard::Lock;
use std::fs::OpenOptions;
let mut file = OpenOptions::new()
.read(true)
.write(true)
.create(true)
.open("example-lock")?;
let mut lock = file_guard::lock(&mut file, Lock::Exclusive, 0, 1)?;
write_to_file(&mut lock)?;
// the lock will be unlocked when it goes out of scopeYou can store one or more locks in a struct:
use file_guard::{FileGuard, Lock};
use std::fs::{File, OpenOptions};
let file = OpenOptions::new()
.read(true)
.write(true)
.create(true)
.open("example-lock")?;
struct Thing<'file> {
a: FileGuard<&'file File>,
b: FileGuard<&'file File>,
}
let t = Thing {
a: file_guard::lock(&file, Lock::Exclusive, 0, 1)?,
b: file_guard::lock(&file, Lock::Shared, 1, 2)?,
};
// both locks will be unlocked when t goes out of scopeAnything that can Deref or DerefMut to a File can be used with the FileGuard
(i.e. Rc<File>):
use file_guard::{FileGuard, Lock};
use std::fs::{File, OpenOptions};
use std::rc::Rc;
let file = Rc::new(
OpenOptions::new()
.read(true)
.write(true)
.create(true)
.open("example-lock")?
);
struct Thing {
a: FileGuard<Rc<File>>,
b: FileGuard<Rc<File>>,
}
let t = Thing {
a: file_guard::lock(file.clone(), Lock::Exclusive, 0, 1)?,
b: file_guard::lock(file, Lock::Shared, 1, 2)?,
};
// both locks will be unlocked and the file will be closed when t goes out of scopeModules§
- os
- Provides low-level support operations for file locking.
Structs§
- File
Guard - An RAII implementation of a “scoped lock” of a file. When this structure is dropped (falls out of scope), the lock will be unlocked.
Enums§
- Lock
- The type of a lock operation.
Functions§
- lock
- Wait and claim the desired
Locktype using a byte range of a file. - lock_
any - First attempt to claim an
Exclusivelock and then fallback to aSharedlock for a byte range of a file. This is not currently an atomic operation. - try_
lock - Attempt to claim the desired
Locktype using a byte range of a file.