Deprecated since release 1.5.
The locking operation that this module provides is
done better and more portably by the
fcntl.lockf() call.
This module implements some additional functionality over the built-in
file objects. In particular, it implements file locking, control over
the file flags, and an easy interface to duplicate the file object.
The module defines a new file object, the posixfile object. It
has all the standard file object methods and adds the methods
described below. This module only works for certain flavors of
Unix, since it uses fcntl.fcntl() for file locking.
To instantiate a posixfile object, use the open() function
in the posixfile module. The resulting object looks and
feels roughly the same as a standard file object.
The posixfile module defines the following constants:
Create a new posixfile object with the given filename and mode. The
filename, mode and bufsize arguments are
interpreted the same way as by the built-in open()
function.
Lock the specified section of the file that the file object is
referring to. The format is explained
below in a table. The len argument specifies the length of the
section that should be locked. The default is 0. start
specifies the starting offset of the section, where the default is
0. The whence argument specifies where the offset is
relative to. It accepts one of the constants SEEK_SET,
SEEK_CUR or SEEK_END. The default is
SEEK_SET. For more information about the arguments refer
to the fcntl(2) manual page on your system.
Set the specified flags for the file that the file object is referring
to. The new flags are ORed with the old flags, unless specified
otherwise. The format is explained below in a table. Without
the flags argument
a string indicating the current flags is returned (this is
the same as the "?" modifier). For more information about the
flags refer to the fcntl(2) manual page on your system.
Duplicate the file object and the underlying file pointer and file
descriptor. The new object will have the given file descriptor.
Otherwise the resulting object behaves as if it were newly opened.
Return the standard file object that the posixfile object is based
on. This is sometimes necessary for functions that insist on a
standard file object.
All methods raise IOError when the request fails.
Format characters for the lock() method have the following
meaning:
Format
Meaning
u
unlock the specified region
r
request a read lock for the specified section
w
request a write lock for the specified section
In addition the following modifiers can be added to the format:
Modifier
Meaning
Notes
|
wait until the lock has been granted
?
return the first lock conflicting with the requested lock, or
None if there is no conflict.
(1)
Note:
(1)
The lock returned is in the format (mode, len,
start, whence, pid) where mode is a character
representing the type of lock ('r' or 'w'). This modifier prevents a
request from being granted; it is for query purposes only.
Format characters for the flags() method have the following
meanings:
Format
Meaning
a
append only flag
c
close on exec flag
n
no delay flag (also called non-blocking flag)
s
synchronization flag
In addition the following modifiers can be added to the format:
Modifier
Meaning
Notes
!
turn the specified flags 'off', instead of the default 'on'
(1)
=
replace the flags, instead of the default 'OR' operation
(1)
?
return a string in which the characters represent the flags that
are set.
(2)
Notes:
(1)
The "!" and "=" modifiers are mutually exclusive.
(2)
This string represents the flags after they may have been altered
by the same call.