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MMAP(P)			   POSIX Programmer's Manual		       MMAP(P)

NAME
       mmap - map pages of memory

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/mman.h>

       void *mmap(void *addr, size_t len, int prot, int flags,
	      int fildes, off_t off);

DESCRIPTION
       The  mmap()  function  shall  establish	a  mapping  between a process'
       address space and a  file,  shared  memory  object,  or	 typed	memory
       object.	The format of the call is as follows:

	      pa=mmap(addr, len, prot, flags, fildes, off);

       The mmap() function shall establish a mapping between the address space
       of the process at an address pa for len bytes to the memory object rep‐
       resented	 by  the  file	descriptor fildes at offset off for len bytes.
       The value of pa is an implementation-defined function of the  parameter
       addr  and  the  values  of flags, further described below. A successful
       mmap() call shall return pa as its result. The address  range  starting
       at pa and continuing for len bytes shall be legitimate for the possible
       (not necessarily current) address space of the process.	The  range  of
       bytes  starting at off and continuing for len bytes shall be legitimate
       for the possible (not necessarily current) offsets in the file,	shared
       memory object, or    typed memory object	  represented by fildes.

       If  fildes  represents  a  typed	 memory	 object opened with either the
       POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE flag  or  the  POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE_CONTIG
       flag, the memory object to be mapped shall be that portion of the typed
       memory object allocated by the implementation as	 specified  below.  In
       this  case, if off is non-zero, the behavior of mmap() is undefined. If
       fildes refers to a valid typed memory object  that  is  not  accessible
       from the calling process, mmap() shall fail.

       The  mapping  established by mmap() shall replace any previous mappings
       for those whole pages containing any part of the address space  of  the
       process starting at pa and continuing for len bytes.

       If  the	size  of the mapped file changes after the call to mmap() as a
       result of some other operation on the mapped file, the effect of refer‐
       ences  to  portions  of	the  mapped region that correspond to added or
       removed portions of the file is unspecified.

       The mmap() function shall be supported for regular files, shared memory
       objects,	 and	 typed	memory objects.	 Support for any other type of
       file is unspecified.

       The parameter prot determines whether read,  write,  execute,  or  some
       combination  of	accesses  are  permitted to the data being mapped. The
       prot shall be either PROT_NONE or the bitwise-inclusive OR  of  one  or
       more  of	 the  other  flags  in	the  following	table,	defined in the
       <sys/mman.h> header.

		    Symbolic Constant	Description
		    PROT_READ		Data can be read.
		    PROT_WRITE		Data can be written.
		    PROT_EXEC		Data can be executed.

		    PROT_NONE		Data cannot be accessed.

       If an implementation cannot support the	combination  of	 access	 types
       specified by prot, the call to mmap() shall fail.

       An  implementation  may	permit	accesses other than those specified by
       prot;	however, if the Memory Protection  option  is  supported,  the
       implementation shall not permit a write to succeed where PROT_WRITE has
       not been set or shall not permit any access where PROT_NONE  alone  has
       been set.  The implementation shall support at least the following val‐
       ues of prot: PROT_NONE, PROT_READ, PROT_WRITE, and  the	bitwise-inclu‐
       sive  OR	 of PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE.  If the Memory Protection option
       is not supported, the result of any  access  that  conflicts  with  the
       specified  protection  is  undefined.  The file descriptor fildes shall
       have been opened with read permission,  regardless  of  the  protection
       options	specified.  If	PROT_WRITE is specified, the application shall
       ensure that it has opened the file descriptor fildes with write permis‐
       sion  unless  MAP_PRIVATE  is  specified	 in  the  flags	 parameter  as
       described below.

       The parameter flags provides other information about  the  handling  of
       the  mapped  data.  The	value  of flags is the bitwise-inclusive OR of
       these options, defined in <sys/mman.h>:

		     Symbolic Constant	 Description
		     MAP_SHARED		 Changes are shared.
		     MAP_PRIVATE	 Changes are private.
		     MAP_FIXED		 Interpret addr exactly.

       Implementations that do not support the Memory Mapped Files option  are
       not required to support MAP_PRIVATE.

       It  is  implementation-defined  whether	MAP_FIXED  shall be supported.
	MAP_FIXED shall be supported on XSI-conformant systems.

       MAP_SHARED and MAP_PRIVATE describe the disposition of write references
       to  the	memory	object.	 If  MAP_SHARED is specified, write references
       shall change the underlying object. If MAP_PRIVATE is specified,	 modi‐
       fications  to  the  mapped data by the calling process shall be visible
       only to the calling process and shall not change the underlying object.
       It  is  unspecified whether modifications to the underlying object done
       after the MAP_PRIVATE mapping is established are	 visible  through  the
       MAP_PRIVATE mapping. Either MAP_SHARED or MAP_PRIVATE can be specified,
       but not both. The mapping type is retained across fork().

       When fildes represents a typed memory object  opened  with  either  the
       POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE	 flag  or  the POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE_CONTIG
       flag, mmap() shall, if there are enough resources  available,  map  len
       bytes  allocated	 from the corresponding typed memory object which were
       not previously allocated to any	process	 in  any  processor  that  may
       access  that  typed  memory  object.  If there are not enough resources
       available, the function shall fail. If fildes represents a typed memory
       object  opened  with  the  POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE_CONTIG  flag, these
       allocated bytes shall be contiguous within the typed memory object.  If
       fildes	represents   a	 typed	 memory	  object   opened   with   the
       POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE flag, these allocated bytes may be composed of
       non-contiguous fragments within the typed memory object. If fildes rep‐
       resents	 a   typed   memory   object   opened	with	neither	   the
       POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE_CONTIG	flag  nor the POSIX_TYPED_MEM_ALLOCATE
       flag, len bytes starting at offset off within the typed	memory	object
       are  mapped, exactly as when mapping a file or shared memory object. In
       this case, if two processes map an area of typed memory using the  same
       off  and	 len  values and using file descriptors that refer to the same
       memory pool (either from the same port or from a different port),  both
       processes shall map the same region of storage.

       When  MAP_FIXED	is  set	 in  the flags argument, the implementation is
       informed that the value of pa shall be addr, exactly. If	 MAP_FIXED  is
       set,  mmap()  may  return  MAP_FAILED  and  set errno to [EINVAL]. If a
       MAP_FIXED request is successful,	 the  mapping  established  by	mmap()
       replaces	 any  previous	mappings  for  the process' pages in the range
       [pa,pa+len).

       When MAP_FIXED is not set, the implementation uses addr in an implemen‐
       tation-defined  manner  to  arrive  at pa. The pa so chosen shall be an
       area of the address space that the implementation deems suitable for  a
       mapping of len bytes to the file. All implementations interpret an addr
       value of 0 as granting the implementation complete freedom in selecting
       pa, subject to constraints described below. A non-zero value of addr is
       taken to be a suggestion of a process address near  which  the  mapping
       should  be  placed.  When the implementation selects a value for pa, it
       never places a mapping at address 0, nor does  it  replace  any	extant
       mapping.

       The  off	 argument  is constrained to be aligned and sized according to
       the  value  returned  by	 sysconf()   when   passed   _SC_PAGESIZE   or
       _SC_PAGE_SIZE.  When  MAP_FIXED	is  specified,	the  application shall
       ensure that the argument addr also meets these constraints. The	imple‐
       mentation performs mapping operations over whole pages. Thus, while the
       argument len need not meet a size or alignment constraint,  the	imple‐
       mentation  shall	 include,  in  any mapping operation, any partial page
       specified by the range [pa,pa+len).

       The system shall always zero-fill any partial page at  the  end	of  an
       object. Further, the system shall never write out any modified portions
       of the last page of an object which are beyond its  end.	    References
       within the address range starting at pa and continuing for len bytes to
       whole pages following the end of an object shall result in delivery  of
       a SIGBUS signal.

       An  implementation  may	generate SIGBUS signals when a reference would
       cause an error in the mapped object, such as out-of-space condition.

       The mmap() function shall add an extra reference to the file associated
       with  the  file	descriptor fildes which is not removed by a subsequent
       close() on that file descriptor.	 This reference shall be removed  when
       there are no more mappings to the file.

       The  st_atime  field of the mapped file may be marked for update at any
       time between the mmap() call and the corresponding munmap()  call.  The
       initial	read  or  write	 reference  to a mapped region shall cause the
       file's st_atime field to be marked for update if	 it  has  not  already
       been marked for update.

       The  st_ctime  and  st_mtime  fields  of	 a  file  that	is mapped with
       MAP_SHARED and PROT_WRITE shall be marked for update at some  point  in
       the  interval  between  a  write reference to the mapped region and the
       next call to msync() with MS_ASYNC or MS_SYNC for that portion  of  the
       file  by	 any  process.	If there is no such call and if the underlying
       file is modified as a result of a write reference,  then	 these	fields
       shall be marked for update at some time after the write reference.

       There  may  be  implementation-defined  limits  on the number of memory
       regions that can be mapped (per process or per system).

       If such a limit is imposed, whether the number of memory	 regions  that
       can be mapped by a process is decreased by the use of shmat() is imple‐
       mentation-defined.

       If mmap() fails for reasons other than [EBADF], [EINVAL], or [ENOTSUP],
       some of the mappings in the address range starting at addr and continu‐
       ing for len bytes may have been unmapped.

RETURN VALUE
       Upon successful	completion,  the  mmap()  function  shall  return  the
       address	at  which  the	mapping	 was placed ( pa); otherwise, it shall
       return a value of MAP_FAILED and set errno to indicate the  error.  The
       symbol  MAP_FAILED is defined in the <sys/mman.h> header. No successful
       return from mmap() shall return the value MAP_FAILED.

ERRORS
       The mmap() function shall fail if:

       EACCES The fildes argument is not open for read, regardless of the pro‐
	      tection	specified,  or	fildes	is  not	 open  for  write  and
	      PROT_WRITE was specified for a MAP_SHARED type mapping.

       EAGAIN The mapping could not be locked in memory, if required by mlock‐
	      all(), due to a lack of resources.

       EBADF  The fildes argument is not a valid open file descriptor.

       EINVAL The  addr	 argument (if MAP_FIXED was specified) or off is not a
	      multiple of the page size as returned by sysconf(), or  is  con‐
	      sidered invalid by the implementation.

       EINVAL The   value   of	flags  is  invalid  (neither  MAP_PRIVATE  nor
	      MAP_SHARED is set).

       EMFILE The number of mapped regions  would  exceed  an  implementation-
	      defined limit (per process or per system).

       ENODEV The fildes argument refers to a file whose type is not supported
	      by mmap().

       ENOMEM MAP_FIXED was specified, and the range  [addr,addr+len)  exceeds
	      that  allowed  for  the  address	space  of  a  process;	or, if
	      MAP_FIXED was not specified and there is	insufficient  room  in
	      the address space to effect the mapping.

       ENOMEM The mapping could not be locked in memory, if required by mlock‐
	      all(), because it would require more space than  the  system  is
	      able to supply.

       ENOMEM Not enough unallocated memory resources remain in the typed mem‐
	      ory object designated by fildes to allocate len bytes.

       ENOTSUP
	      MAP_FIXED or MAP_PRIVATE was specified in the flags argument and
	      the implementation does not support this functionality.

       The  implementation  does  not  support	the  combination  of  accesses
       requested in the prot argument.

       ENXIO  Addresses in the range [off,off+len) are invalid for the	object
	      specified by fildes.

       ENXIO  MAP_FIXED	 was  specified	 in flags and the combination of addr,
	      len, and off is invalid for the object specified by fildes.

       ENXIO  The fildes argument refers to a typed memory object that is  not
	      accessible from the calling process.

       EOVERFLOW
	      The file is a regular file and the value of off plus len exceeds
	      the offset maximum established  in  the  open  file  description
	      associated with fildes.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES
       None.

APPLICATION USAGE
       Use of mmap() may reduce the amount of memory available to other memory
       allocation functions.

       Use of MAP_FIXED may result in unspecified behavior in further  use  of
       malloc()	 and  shmat().	The use of MAP_FIXED is discouraged, as it may
       prevent an  implementation  from	 making	 the  most  effective  use  of
       resources.

       The  application	 must ensure correct synchronization when using mmap()
       in conjunction with any other file access method, such  as  read()  and
       write(), standard input/output, and shmat().

       The mmap() function allows access to resources via address space manip‐
       ulations, instead of read()/ write(). Once a  file  is  mapped,	all  a
       process	has to do to access it is use the data at the address to which
       the file was mapped. So, using pseudo-code to  illustrate  the  way  in
       which  an  existing program might be changed to use mmap(), the follow‐
       ing:

	      fildes = open(...)
	      lseek(fildes, some_offset)
	      read(fildes, buf, len)
	      /* Use data in buf. */

       becomes:

	      fildes = open(...)
	      address = mmap(0, len, PROT_READ, MAP_PRIVATE, fildes, some_offset)
	      /* Use data at address. */

RATIONALE
       After considering several other alternatives, it was decided  to	 adopt
       the  mmap()  definition	found  in SVR4 for mapping memory objects into
       process address spaces. The SVR4 definition  is	minimal,  in  that  it
       describes  only	what  has been built, and what appears to be necessary
       for a general and portable mapping facility.

       Note that while mmap() was first designed  for  mapping	files,	it  is
       actually	 a general-purpose mapping facility. It can be used to map any
       appropriate object, such as memory, files, devices, and so on, into the
       address space of a process.

       When  a	mapping is established, it is possible that the implementation
       may need to map more than is requested into the address	space  of  the
       process because of hardware requirements. An application, however, can‐
       not count on this behavior. Implementations that do  not	 use  a	 paged
       architecture  may simply allocate a common memory region and return the
       address of it; such implementations probably do not allocate  any  more
       than  is	 necessary.  References past the end of the requested area are
       unspecified.

       If an application requests a mapping that would overlay	existing  map‐
       pings  in  the  process,	 it  might be desirable that an implementation
       detect this and inform the application. However, the default,  portable
       (not  MAP_FIXED)	 operation  does not overlay existing mappings. On the
       other hand, if the program specifies a  fixed  address  mapping	(which
       requires some implementation knowledge to determine a suitable address,
       if the function is supported at all), then the program is  presumed  to
       be  successfully	 managing  its own address space and should be trusted
       when it asks to map over existing data structures. Furthermore,	it  is
       also desirable to make as few system calls as possible, and it might be
       considered onerous to require an munmap() before an mmap() to the  same
       address	range.	This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 specifies that the
       new mappings replace any existing mappings, following existing practice
       in this regard.

       It  is  not  expected,  when the Memory Protection option is supported,
       that all hardware implementations are able to support all  combinations
       of  permissions at all addresses. When this option is supported, imple‐
       mentations are required to disallow write access	 to  mappings  without
       write  permission and to disallow access to mappings without any access
       permission. Other than these restrictions,  implementations  may	 allow
       access  types  other than those requested by the application. For exam‐
       ple, if the application requests only  PROT_WRITE,  the	implementation
       may  also allow read access.  A call to mmap() fails if the implementa‐
       tion cannot support allowing all the access requested by	 the  applica‐
       tion.  For  example,  some implementations cannot support a request for
       both write access and execute access  simultaneously.  All  implementa‐
       tions supporting the Memory Protection option must support requests for
       no access, read access, write access, and both read and	write  access.
       Strictly	 conforming  code must only rely on the required checks. These
       restrictions allow for portability across a wide range of hardware.

       The MAP_FIXED address treatment is likely to fail for  non-page-aligned
       values  and for certain architecture-dependent address ranges. Conform‐
       ing implementations cannot count on being able to choose address values
       for  MAP_FIXED  without	utilizing non-portable, implementation-defined
       knowledge. Nonetheless, MAP_FIXED is provided as a  standard  interface
       conforming to existing practice for utilizing such knowledge when it is
       available.

       Similarly, in order to allow implementations that do not	 support  vir‐
       tual  addresses,	 support for directly specifying any mapping addresses
       via MAP_FIXED is not required and thus a conforming application may not
       count on it.

       The  MAP_PRIVATE	 function  can	be implemented efficiently when memory
       protection hardware is available. When such hardware is not  available,
       implementations	can  implement such "mappings" by simply making a real
       copy of the relevant data into  process	private	 memory,  though  this
       tends to behave similarly to read().

       The  function  has  been	 defined to allow for many different models of
       using shared memory. However, all uses are not equally portable	across
       all  machine  architectures.  In particular, the mmap() function allows
       the system as well as the application to specify the address  at	 which
       to  map	a specific region of a memory object. The most portable way to
       use the function is always to let the system choose the address, speci‐
       fying  NULL  as	the  value  for	 the  argument addr and not to specify
       MAP_FIXED.

       If it is intended that a particular region of a memory object be mapped
       at  the same address in a group of processes (on machines where this is
       even possible), then MAP_FIXED can be used to pass in the desired  map‐
       ping  address.  The  system  can	 still	be  used to choose the desired
       address if the first such mapping is made without specifying MAP_FIXED,
       and then the resulting mapping address can be passed to subsequent pro‐
       cesses for them to pass in via MAP_FIXED.  The availability of  a  spe‐
       cific address range cannot be guaranteed, in general.

       The  mmap()  function  can  be  used  to map a region of memory that is
       larger than the current size of the object. Memory  access  within  the
       mapping but beyond the current end of the underlying objects may result
       in SIGBUS signals being sent to the process. The	 reason	 for  this  is
       that  the  size of the object can be manipulated by other processes and
       can change at any moment. The implementation should tell	 the  applica‐
       tion  that  a  memory reference is outside the object where this can be
       detected; otherwise, written data may be lost and  read	data  may  not
       reflect actual data in the object.

       Note  that  references  beyond  the end of the object do not extend the
       object as the new end cannot be determined precisely  by	 most  virtual
       memory  hardware.  Instead,  the	 size  can  be directly manipulated by
       ftruncate().

       Process memory locking does apply to shared  memory  regions,  and  the
       MEMLOCK_FUTURE  argument	 to mlockall() can be relied upon to cause new
       shared memory regions to be automatically locked.

       Existing implementations of mmap() return the value -1 when  unsuccess‐
       ful.  Since  the casting of this value to type void * cannot be guaran‐
       teed by the ISO C standard to be distinct from a successful value, this
       volume  of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 defines the symbol MAP_FAILED, which a
       conforming implementation does not return as the result of a successful
       call.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS
       None.

SEE ALSO
       exec() , fcntl() , fork() , lockf() , msync() , munmap() , mprotect() ,
       posix_typed_mem_open() , shmat() , sysconf()  ,	the  Base  Definitions
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, <sys/mman.h>

COPYRIGHT
       Portions	 of  this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form
       from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
       --  Portable  Operating	System	Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
       Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003	by  the	 Institute  of
       Electrical  and	Electronics  Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the
       event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
       The  Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
       is the referee document. The original Standard can be  obtained	online
       at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

IEEE/The Open Group		     2003			       MMAP(P)
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