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LOCKF(1) FreeBSD General Commands Manual LOCKF(1)
NAME lockf - execute a command while holding a file lock
SYNOPSIS lockf [-knsw] [-t seconds] file command [arguments]
DESCRIPTION The lockf utility acquires an exclusive lock on a file, creating it if necessary, and removing the file on exit unless explicitly told not to. While holding the lock, it executes a command with optional arguments. After the command completes, lockf releases the lock, and removes the file unless the -k option is specified. BSD-style locking is used, as described in flock(2); the mere existence of the file is not considered to constitute a lock.
If the lockf utility is being used to facilitate concurrency between a number of processes, it is recommended that the -k option be used. This will guarantee lock ordering, as well as implement a performance enhanced algorithm which minimizes CPU load associated with concurrent unlink, drop and re-acquire activity. It should be noted that if the -k option is not used, then no guarantees around lock ordering can be made.
The following options are supported:
-k Causes the lock file to be kept (not removed) after the command completes.
-s Causes lockf to operate silently. Failure to acquire the lock is indicated only in the exit status.
-n Causes lockf to fail if the specified lock file does not exist. If -n is not specified, lockf will create file if necessary.
-t seconds Specifies a timeout for waiting for the lock. By default, lockf waits indefinitely to acquire the lock. If a timeout is specified with this option, lockf will wait at most the given number of seconds before giving up. A timeout of 0 may be given, in which case lockf will fail unless it can acquire the lock immediately. When a lock times out, command is not executed.
-w Causes lockf to open file for writing rather than reading. This is necessary on filesystems (including NFSv4) where a file which has been opened read-only cannot be exclusively locked.
In no event will lockf break a lock that is held by another process.
EXIT STATUS If lockf successfully acquires the lock, it returns the exit status produced by command. Otherwise, it returns one of the exit codes defined in sysexits(3), as follows:
EX_TEMPFAIL The specified lock file was already locked by another process.
EX_USAGE There was an error on the lockf command line.
EX_OSERR A system call (e.g., fork(2)) failed unexpectedly.
EX_SOFTWARE The command did not exit normally, but may have been signaled or stopped.
EXAMPLES The first job takes a lock and sleeps for 5 seconds in the background. The second job tries to get the lock and timeouts after 1 second (PID numbers will differ):
$ lockf mylock sleep 5 & lockf -t 1 mylock echo "Success" [1] 94410 lockf: mylock: already locked
The first job takes a lock and sleeps for 1 second in the background. The second job waits up to 5 seconds to take the lock and echoes the message on success (PID numbers will differ):
$ lockf mylock sleep 1 & lockf -t 5 mylock echo "Success" [1] 19995 Success [1]+ Done lockf mylock sleep 1
SEE ALSO flock(2), lockf(3), sysexits(3)
HISTORY A lockf utility first appeared in FreeBSD 2.2.
AUTHORS John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 August 26, 2020 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11