fcntl
The module defines the following functions:
fd
.
The operation is defined by op
and is operating system
dependent. Typically these codes can be retrieved from the library
module FCNTL
. The argument arg
is optional, and
defaults to the integer value 0
. When
it is 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 real 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 real fcntl()
call. The return value after a successful call is the contents of
the buffer, converted to a string object. In case the
fcntl()
fails, an IOError
will be raised.
fcntl()
function, except
that the operations are typically defined in the library module
IOCTL
.
FCNTL
or IOCTL
are missing, you
can find the opcodes in the C include files sys/fcntl
and
sys/ioctl
. 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
file = open(...)
rv = fcntl(file.fileno(), FCNTL.O_NDELAY, 1)
lockdata = struct.pack('hhllhh', FCNTL.F_WRLCK, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0)
rv = 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.