fsync, fdatasync - 同步檔案在核心態與儲存裝置
#include <unistd.h> int fsync(int fd); int fdatasync(int fd);
fsync() transfers ("flushes") all modified in-core data of (i.e., modified buffer cache pages for) the file referred to by the file descriptor fd to the disk device (or other permanent storage device) where that file resides. The call blocks until the device reports that the transfer has completed. It also flushes metadata information associated with the file (see stat(2)).
Calling fsync() does not necessarily ensure that the entry in the directory containing the file has also reached disk. For that an explicit fsync() on a file descriptor for the directory is also needed.
fdatasync() is similar to fsync(), but does not flush modified metadata unless that metadata is needed in order to allow a subsequent data retrieval to be correctly handled. For example, changes to st_atime or st_mtime (respectively, time of last access and time of last modification; see stat(2)) do not not require flushing because they are not necessary for a subsequent data read to be handled correctly. On the other hand, a change to the file size (st_size, as made by say ftruncate(2)), would require a metadata flush.
The aim of fdatasync(2) is to reduce disk activity for applications that do not require all metadata to be synchronised with the disk.
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.
標籤 | 描述 |
---|---|
EBADF | fd is not a valid file descriptor open for writing. |
EIO | An error occurred during synchronization. |
EROFS, EINVAL | fd is bound to a special file which does not support synchronization. |
If the underlying hard disk has write caching enabled, then the data may not really be on permanent storage when fsync() / fdatasync() return.
When an ext2 file system is mounted with the sync option, directory entries are also implicitly synced by fsync().
On kernels before 2.4, fsync() on big files can be inefficient. An alternative might be to use the O_SYNC flag to open(2).
POSIX.1-2001