Memory-mapped file objects behave like both mutable strings and like
file objects. You can use mmap objects in most places where strings
are expected; for example, you can use the re module to
search through a memory-mapped file. Since they're mutable, you can
change a single character by doing obj[index] = 'a'
, or
change a substring by assigning to a slice:
obj[i1:i2] = '...'
. You can also read and write
data starting at the current file position, and seek()
through the file to different positions.
A memory-mapped file is created by the following function, which is different on Unix and on Windows.
0
, the maximum length of the map will be the
current size of the file when mmap() is called.
If you wish to map an existing Python file object, use its
fileno() method to obtain the correct value for the
fileno parameter. The file must be opened for update.
tagname, if specified and not None
, is a string giving a
tag name for the mapping. Windows allows you to have many different
mappings against the same file. If you specify the name of an
existing tag, that tag is opened, otherwise a new tag of this name is
created. If this parameter is omitted or None
, the mapping is
created without a name. Avoiding the use of the tag parameter will
assist in keeping your code portable between Unix and Windows.
flags specifies the nature of the mapping. MAP_PRIVATE creates a private copy-on-write mapping, so changes to the contents of the mmap object will be private to this process, and MAP_SHARED creates a mapping that's shared with all other processes mapping the same areas of the file. The default value is MAP_SHARED.
prot, if specified, gives the desired memory protection; the two most useful values are PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE, to specify that the pages may be read or written. prot defaults to PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE.
Memory-mapped file objects support the following methods:
-1
on failure. start is
the index at which the search begins, and defaults to zero.
0
(absolute
file positioning); other values are 1
(seek relative to the
current position) and 2
(seek relative to the file's end).
1
.