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Manual Pages for UNIX Darwin command on man close

CLOSE(2) BSD System Calls Manual CLOSE(2)

NAME

cclloossee - delete a descriptor

SYNOPSIS

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int cclloossee(int fildes);

DESCRIPTION

The cclloossee() call deletes a descriptor from the per-process object refer-

ence table. If this is the last reference to the underlying object, the

object will be deactivated. For example, on the last close of a file the

current seek pointer associated with the file is lost; on the last close

of a socket(2) associated naming information and queued data are dis-

carded; on the last close of a file holding an advisory lock the lock is

released (see further flock(2)). When a process exits, all associated file descriptors are freed, but since there is a limit on active descriptors per processes, the cclloossee() function call is useful when a large quantity of file descriptors are being handled. When a process forks (see fork(2)), all descriptors for the new child process reference the same objects as they did in the parent before the fork. If a new process is then to be run using execve(2), the process would normally inherit these descriptors. Most of the descriptors can be rearranged with dup2(2) or deleted with cclloossee() before the execve is attempted, but if some of these descriptors will still be needed if the

execve fails, it is necessary to arrange for them to be closed if the

execve succeeds. For this reason, the call ``fcntl(d, FSETFD, 1)'' is

provided, which arranges that a descriptor will be closed after a suc-

cessful execve; the call ``fcntl(d, FSETFD, 0)'' restores the default,

which is to not close the descriptor.

RETURN VALUES

Upon successful completion, a value of 0 is returned. Otherwise, a value

of -1 is returned and the global integer variable errno is set to indi-

cate the error. EERRRROORRSS The cclloossee() system call will fail if: [EBADF] fildes is not a valid, active file descriptor. [EINTR] Its execution was interrupted by a signal.

[EIO] A previously-uncommitted write(2) encountered an

input/output error.

SEE ALSO

accept(2), execve(2), fcntl(2), flock(2), open(2), pipe(2), socket(2), socketpair(2) STANDARDS

CClloossee() conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-1988 (``POSIX.1'').

4th Berkeley Distribution April 19, 1994 4th Berkeley Distribution




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