Availability: Unix.
This module performs file control and I/O control on file descriptors. It is an interface to the fcntl() and ioctl() Unix routines. File descriptors can be obtained with the fileno() method of a file or socket object.
The module defines the following functions:
0
. When
present, it can either be an integer value, or a string. With
the argument missing or an integer value, the return value of this
function is the integer return value of the C fcntl()
call. When the argument is a string it represents a binary
structure, e.g. created by struct.pack(). The binary
data is copied to a buffer whose address is passed to the C
fcntl() call. The return value after a successful call
is the contents of the buffer, converted to a string object. The length
of the returned string will be the same as the length of the arg
argument. This is limited to 1024 bytes. If the information returned
in the buffer by the operating system is larger than 1024 bytes,
this is most likely to result in a segmentation violation or a more
subtle data corruption.
If the fcntl() fails, an IOError is raised.
If the library modules FCNTL or
IOCTL are missing, you can find the
opcodes in the C include files <sys/fcntl.h>
and
<sys/ioctl.h>
. You can create the modules yourself with the
h2py script, found in the Tools/scripts/ directory.
Examples (all on a SVR4 compliant system):
import struct, fcntl, FCNTL file = open(...) rv = fcntl(file.fileno(), FCNTL.O_NDELAY, 1) lockdata = struct.pack('hhllhh', FCNTL.F_WRLCK, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0) rv = fcntl.fcntl(file.fileno(), FCNTL.F_SETLKW, lockdata)
Note that in the first example the return value variable rv
will
hold an integer value; in the second example it will hold a string
value. The structure lay-out for the lockdata variable is
system dependent -- therefore using the flock() call may be
better.