shmctl (2)





NAME

       shmctl - shared memory control


SYNOPSIS

       #include <sys/ipc.h>

       #include <sys/shm.h>

       int shmctl(int shmid, int cmd, struct shmid_ds *buf);


DESCRIPTION

       shmctl() allows the user to receive information on a shared memory seg-
       ment, set the owner, group, and permissions of a shared memory segment,
       or  destroy  a segment. The information about the segment identified by
       shmid is returned in a shmid_ds structure:

           struct shmid_ds {
               struct ipc_perm shm_perm;  /* operation perms */
               int shm_segsz;             /* size of segment (bytes) */
               time_t shm_atime;          /* last attach time */
               time_t shm_dtime;          /* last detach time */
               time_t shm_ctime;          /* last change time */
               unsigned short shm_cpid;   /* pid of creator */
               unsigned short shm_lpid;   /* pid of last operator */
               short shm_nattch;          /* no. of current attaches */
               ...
           };

       The highlighted fields in the member shm_perm can be set:

           struct ipc_perm {
               key_t  key;
               ushort uid;   /* owner euid and egid */
               ushort gid;
               ushort cuid;  /* creator euid and egid */
               ushort cgid;
               ushort mode;  /* lower 9 bits of access modes */
               ushort seq;   /* sequence number */
           };

       The following cmds are available:

       IPC_STAT    is used to copy the information  about  the  shared  memory
                   segment into the buffer buf. The user must have read access
                   to the shared memory segment.

       IPC_SET     is used to apply the changes the user has made to the  uid,
                   gid, or mode members of the shm_perms field.  Only the low-
                   est 9 bits of mode are used.  The shm_ctime member is  also
                   updated.   The  user  must  be  the  owner, creator, or the
                   super-user.

       IPC_RMID    is used to mark the segment as destroyed. It will  actually
                   be  destroyed  after  the  last  detach.   (I.e.,  when the
                   shm_nattch member of the associated structure  shmid_ds  is

       SHM_LOCK    prevents swapping of a shared memory segment. The user must
                   fault  in  any  pages that are required to be present after
                   locking is enabled.

       SHM_UNLOCK  allows the shared memory segment to be swapped out.

       The IPC_INFO, SHM_STAT and SHM_INFO  control  calls  are  used  by  the
       ipcs(8)  program to provide information on allocated resources.  In the
       future, these may be modified as needed or moved to a proc file  system
       interface.


RETURN VALUE

       0 is returned on success, -1 on error.


ERRORS

       On error, errno will be set to one of the following:

       EACCES      is  returned  if  IPC_STAT  is requested and shm_perm.modes
                   does not allow read access for shmid.

       EFAULT      The argument cmd has value  IPC_SET  or  IPC_STAT  but  the
                   address pointed to by buf isn't accessible.

       EINVAL      is  returned  if shmid is not a valid identifier, or cmd is
                   not a valid command.

       EIDRM       is returned if shmid points to a removed identifier.

       EPERM       is returned if IPC_SET or IPC_RMID is  attempted,  and  the
                   effective user ID of the calling process is not the creator
                   (as  found  in  shm_perm.cuid),  the  owner  (as  found  in
                   shm_perm.uid), or the super-user.

       EOVERFLOW   is  returned  if  IPC_STAT is attempted, and the gid or uid
                   value is too large to be stored in the structure pointed to
                   by buf.


NOTE

       Various  fields  in  a  struct shmid_ds were shorts under Linux 2.2 and
       have become longs under Linux 2.4. To take advantage of this, a  recom-
       pilation  under glibc-2.1.91 or later should suffice.  (The kernel dis-
       tinguishes old and new calls by a IPC_64 flag in cmd.)


CONFORMING TO

       SVr4, SVID.  SVr4 documents additional error conditions EINVAL, ENOENT,
       ENOSPC, ENOMEM, EEXIST.  Neither SVr4 nor SVID documents an EIDRM error
       condition.


SEE ALSO

       shmget(2), shmop(2)

Linux 2.4.1                       2002-01-05                         shmctl(2)