Truncating an existing file (and lockf question)
Joe English
jeenglis at alcor.usc.edu
Thu Apr 25 04:00:32 AEST 1991
nto0302 at dsacg3.dsac.dla.mil (Bob Fisher) writes:
>How can I truncate the end of a large file without copying the part
>to be preserved to a new file and then doing a remove/rename?
>
>This is for SVR3 but may need ported to BSD4.3.
Check for a system call called 'truncate' or 'ftruncate'.
SunOS has these, but the man pages are (as usual) unclear
as to whether they're from BSD, System V, both, or neither.
I seem to remember seeing this under both BSD4.3 and SVR3.
This brings up another question: I was looking under the
man page for 'fcntl' to see if it had a truncate option,
and found the following under the description of F_SETLK:
A shared or exclusive lock is either advisory or mandatory
depending on the mode bits of the file containing the locked
segment. The lock is mandatory if the set-GID bit (S_ISGID)
is set and the group execute bit (S_IXGRP) is clear (see
stat(2V) for information about mode bits). Otherwise, the
lock is advisory.
This sounds really weird. Why should locking behaviour depend
on the setgid bit? Is this just a SunOS quirk?
Followups to comp.unix.questions....
--Joe English
jeenglis at alcor.usc.edu
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