Bash-Linux.com : Le SHELL pour les nuls

  Actuellement 50 lignes de commande et 1472 man disponibles
login as: root
root@213.186.33.18's password:
Last login: Thu Feb 9 5:24:03 2012 from 38.107.179.230
[root@bash-linux ~] # echo "Bienvenue sur Bash-Linux.com"_
 Manuel des commandes UNIX (man) Version anglaise

Indiquez la fonction :

Man Shmdt en anglais

SHMOP(2) Linux Programmer's Manual SHMOP(2)
 
NAME


shmat, shmdt - shared memory operations
 
SYNOPSIS


#include #include void *shmat(int shmid, const void *shmaddr, int shmflg); int shmdt(const void *shmaddr);
 
DESCRIPTION


shmat() attaches the shared memory segment identified by shmid to the address space of the calling process. The attaching address is speci- fied by shmaddr with one of the following criteria: If shmaddr is NULL, the system chooses a suitable (unused) address at which to attach the segment. If shmaddr isn't NULL and SHM_RND is specified in shmflg, the attach occurs at the address equal to shmaddr rounded down to the nearest mul- tiple of SHMLBA. Otherwise shmaddr must be a page-aligned address at which the attach occurs. If SHM_RDONLY is specified in shmflg, the segment is attached for read- ing and the process must have read permission for the segment. Other- wise the segment is attached for read and write and the process must have read and write permission for the segment. There is no notion of a write-only shared memory segment. The (Linux-specific) SHM_REMAP flag may be specified in shmflg to indi- cate that the mapping of the segment should replace any existing map- ping in the range starting at shmaddr and continuing for the size of the segment. (Normally an EINVAL error would result if a mapping already exists in this address range.) In this case, shmaddr must not be NULL. The brk(2) value of the calling process is not altered by the attach. The segment will automatically be detached at process exit. The same segment may be attached as a read and as a read-write one, and more than once, in the process's address space. A successful shmat() call updates the members of the shmid_ds structure (see shmctl(2)) associated with the shared memory segment as follows: shm_atime is set to the current time. shm_lpid is set to the process-ID of the calling process. shm_nattch is incremented by one. shmdt() detaches the shared memory segment located at the address spec- ified by shmaddr from the address space of the calling process. The to-be-detached segment must be currently attached with shmaddr equal to the value returned by the attaching shmat() call. On a successful shmdt() call the system updates the members of the shmid_ds structure associated with the shared memory segment as fol- lows: shm_dtime is set to the current time. shm_lpid is set to the process-ID of the calling process. shm_nattch is decremented by one. If it becomes 0 and the seg- ment is marked for deletion, the segment is deleted. After a fork(2) the child inherits the attached shared memory segments. After an execve(2) all attached shared memory segments are detached from the process. Upon _exit(2) all attached shared memory segments are detached from the process.
 
RETURN VALUE


On success shmat() returns the address of the attached shared memory segment; on error (void *) -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the cause of the error. On success shmdt() returns 0; on error -1 is returned, and errno is set to indicate the cause of the error.
 
ERRORS


When shmat() fails, errno is set to one of the following: EACCES The calling process does not have the required permissions for the requested attach type, and does not have the CAP_IPC_OWNER capability. EINVAL Invalid shmid value, unaligned (i.e., not page-aligned and SHM_RND was not specified) or invalid shmaddr value, or can't attach segment at shmaddr, or SHM_REMAP was specified and shmaddr was NULL. ENOMEM Could not allocate memory for the descriptor or for the page tables. When shmdt() fails, errno is set as follows: EINVAL There is no shared memory segment attached at shmaddr; or, shmaddr is not aligned on a page boundary.
 
CONFORMING TO


SVr4, POSIX.1-2001. In SVID 3 (or perhaps earlier) the type of the shmaddr argument was changed from char * into const void *, and the returned type of shmat() from char * into void *. (Linux libc4 and libc5 have the char * proto- types; glibc2 has void *.)
 
NOTES


Using shmat() with shmaddr equal to NULL is the preferred, portable way of attaching a shared memory segment. Be aware that the shared memory segment attached in this way may be attached at different addresses in different processes. Therefore, any pointers maintained within the shared memory must be made relative (typically to the starting address of the segment), rather than absolute. On Linux, it is possible to attach a shared memory segment even if it is already marked to be deleted. However, POSIX.1-2001 does not spec- ify this behavior and many other implementations do not support it. The following system parameter affects shmat(): SHMLBA Segment low boundary address multiple. Must be page aligned. For the current implementation the SHMLBA value is PAGE_SIZE. The implementation places no intrinsic limit on the per-process maximum number of shared memory segments (SHMSEG).
 
SEE ALSO


brk(2), mmap(2), shmctl(2), shmget(2), capabilities(7), shm_overview(7), svipc(7)
 
COLOPHON


This page is part of release 3.05 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2008-06-03 SHMOP(2)


 Dernières recherches
Man  en anglais Man shmdt en anglaisMan  en français Man shmdt en français
Man  en anglais Man fread en anglaisMan  en français Man fread en français
Man  en anglais Man ioctl en anglaisMan  en français Man ioctl en français
Man  en anglais Man msgop en anglaisMan  en français Man msgop en français
Man  en anglais Man split en anglaisMan  en français Man split en français
Man  en anglais Man fnmatch en anglaisMan  en français Man fnmatch en français
Man  en anglais Man abort en anglaisMan  en français Man abort en français
Man  en anglais Man tbf en anglaisMan  en français Man tbf en français
Man  en anglais Man qsort en anglaisMan  en français Man qsort en français
Man  en anglais Man diff en anglaisMan  en français Man diff en français
Man  en anglais Man troff en anglaisMan  en français Man troff en français
Man  en anglais Man ftime en anglaisMan  en français Man ftime en français
Man  en anglais Man futex en anglaisMan  en français Man futex en français
Man  en anglais Man chdir en anglaisMan  en français Man chdir en français
Man  en anglais Man find en anglaisMan  en français Man find en français

 Recherche

Dans ce moteur de recherche, vous pouvez taper directement votre besoin, en une phrase normale, humaine.
Exemple : vous cherchez comment remplacer un mot par un autre dans tous les fichiers d'un certain dossier. Vous pouvez écrire "Comment remplacer un mot par un autre dans tous les fichiers d'un dossier". Le moteur vous ramenera les résultats en fonction de leur pertinence.
Vous pouvez bien sûr ne chercher qu'un seul mot-clé, par exemple "find".
 Toutes les lignes de code
Par popularité
Par fonction
Recherche avancée
 Les logiciels SHELL/SSH
Putty
Astuces Bash
Faire du SHELL avec PHP!
 La doc officielle
Les man Linux en français
Les man Linux en anglais
 Proposer vos bash
Partagez vos lignes!
 Les requêtes
Déposer une requête
Voir/répondre à une requête
 Quelques sites interessants
Bons sites pour apprendre
 Rechercher