/sys$common/syshlp/HELPLIB.HLB  —  CRTL  fcntl  Description
    The fcntl function performs controlling operations on the open
    file specified by the file_desc argument.

    The values for the request argument are defined in the header
    file <fcntl.h>, and include the following:

    F_DUPFD      Returns a new file descriptor that is the lowest
                 numbered available (that is, not already open)
                 file descriptor greater than or equal to the third
                 argument (arg) taken as an integer of type int.

                 The new file descriptor refers to the same file as
                 the original file descriptor (file_desc). The FD_
                 CLOEXEC flag associated with the new file descriptor
                 is cleared to keep the file open across calls to one
                 of the exec functions.

                 The following two calls are equivalent:

                 fid = dup(file_desc);

                 fid = fcntl(file_desc, F_DUPFD, 0);

                 Consider the following call:

                 fid = dup2(file_desc, arg);

                 It is similar (but not equivalent) to:

                 close(arg);
                 fid = fcntl(file_desc, F_DUPFD, arg);
    F_GETFD      Gets the value of the close-on-exec flag associated
                 with the file descriptor file_desc. File descriptor
                 flags are associated with a single file descriptor
                 and do not affect other file descriptors that refer
                 to the same file. The arg argument should not be
                 specified.
    F_SETFD      Sets the close-on-exec flag associated with file_
                 desc to the value of the third argument, taken as
                 type int.

                 If the third argument is 0, the file remains open
                 across the exec functions, which means that a child
                 process spawned by the exec function inherits this
                 file descriptor from the parent.

                 If the third argument is FD_CLOEXEC, the file is
                 closed on successful execution of the next exec
                 function, which means that the child process spawned
                 by the exec function will not inherit this file
                 descriptor from the parent.
    F_GETFL      Gets the file status flags and file access modes,
                 defined in <fcntl.h>, for the file description
                 associated with file_desc. The file access modes
                 can be extracted from the return value using the
                 mask O_ACCMODE, which is defined in <fcntl.h>. File
                 status flags and file access modes are associated
                 with the file description and do not affect other
                 file descriptors that refer to the same file with
                 different open file descriptions.
    F_SETFL      Sets the file status flags, defined in <fcntl.h>,
                 for the file description associated with file_desc
                 from the corresponding bits in the third argument,
                 arg, taken as type int. Bits corresponding to the
                 file access mode and the file creation flags,
                 as defined in <fcntl.h>, that are set in arg
                 are ignored. If any bits in arg other than those
                 mentioned here are changed by the application, the
                 result is unspecified.

                 Note: The only status bit recognized is O_APPEND.
                 Support for O_APPEND is not standard-compliant.
                 The X/Open standard states that "File status flags
                 and file access modes are associated with the file
                 description and do not affect other file descriptors
                 that refer to the same file with different open
                 file descriptions." However, because the append bit
                 is stored in the FCB, all file descriptors using
                 the same FCB are using the same append flag, so
                 that setting this flag with fcntl(F_SETFL) will
                 affect all files sharing the FCB; that is, all files
                 duplicated from the same file descriptor.

    Record Locking Requests

    F_GETLK      Gets the first lock that blocks the lock description
                 pointed to by the arg parameter, taken as a pointer
                 to type struct flock. The information retrieved
                 overwrites the information passed to the fcntl
                 function in the flock structure. If no lock is found
                 that would prevent this lock from being created,
                 then the structure is left unchanged except for the
                 lock type, which is set to F_UNLCK.
    F_SETLK      Sets or clears a file segment lock according to
                 the lock description pointed to by arg, taken as
                 a pointer to type struct flock. F_SETLK is used to
                 establish shared locks (F_RDLCK), or exclusive locks
                 (F_WRLCK), as well as remove either type of lock (F_
                 UNLCK). If a shared (read) or exclusive (write)
                 lock cannot be set, the fcntl function returns
                 immediately with a value of -1.

                 An unlock (F_UNLCK) request in which the l_len of
                 the flock structure is nonzero and the offset of the
                 last byte of the requested segment is the maximum
                 value for an object of type off_t, when the process
                 has an existing lock in which l_len is 0 and which
                 includes the last byte of the requested segment,
                 is treated as a request to unlock from the start
                 of the requested segment with an l_len equal to 0.
                 Otherwise, an unlock (F_UNLCK) request attempts to
                 unlock only the requested file.
    F_SETLKW     Same as F_SETLK except that if a shared or exclusive
                 lock is blocked by other locks, the process will
                 wait until it is unblocked. If a signal is received
                 while fcntl is waiting for a region, the function
                 is interrupted, -1 is returned, and errno is set to
                 EINTR.

    File Locking

    The C RTL supports byte-range file locking using the F_GETLK,
    F_SETLK, and F_SETLKW commands of the fcntl function, as defined
    in the X/Open specification. Byte-range file locking is supported
    across OpenVMS clusters. You can only use offsets that fit into
    32-bit unsigned integers.

    When a shared lock is set on a segment of a file, other processes
    on the cluster are able to set shared locks on that segment or
    a portion of it. A shared lock prevents any other process from
    setting an exclusive lock on any portion of the protected area.
    A request for a shared lock fails if the file descriptor was not
    opened with read access.

    An exclusive lock prevents any other process on the cluster from
    setting a shared lock or an exclusive lock on any portion of the
    protected area. A request for an exclusive lock fails if the file
    descriptor was not opened with write access.

    The flock structure describes the type (l_type), starting offset
    (l_whence), relative offset (l_start), size (l_len) and process
    ID (l_pid) of the segment of the file to be affected.

    The value of l_whence is set to SEEK_SET, SEEK_CUR or SEEK_END,
    to indicate that the relative offset l_start bytes is measured
    from the start of the file, from the current position, or from
    the end of the file, respectively. The value of l_len is the
    number of consecutive bytes to be locked. The l_len value may be
    negative (where the definition of off_t permits negative values
    of l_len). The l_pid field is only used with F_GETLK to return
    the process ID of the process holding a blocking lock. After a
    successful F_GETLK request, the value of l_whence becomes SEEK_
    SET.

    If l_len is positive, the area affected starts at l_start and
    ends at l_start + l_len - 1. If l_len is negative, the area
    affected starts at l_start + l_len and ends at l_start - 1. Locks
    may start and extend beyond the current end of a file, but may
    not be negative relative to the beginning of the file. If l_len
    is set to 0 (zero), a lock may be set to always extend to the
    largest possible value of the file offset for that file. If such
    a lock also has l_start set to 0 (zero) and l_whence is set to
    SEEK_SET, the whole file is locked.

    Changing or unlocking a portion from the middle of a larger
    locked segment leaves a smaller segment at either end. Locking
    a segment that is already locked by the calling process causes
    the old lock type to be removed and the new lock type to take
    effect.

    All locks associated with a file for a given process are removed
    when a file descriptor for that file is closed by that process
    or the process holding that file descriptor terminates. Locks are
    not inherited by a child process.

    If the request argument is F_SETLKW, the lock is blocked by
    some lock from another process, and putting the calling process
    to sleep to wait for that lock to become free would cause a
    deadlock, then the application will hang.
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