NAME¶
/proc/locks - current file locks and leases
DESCRIPTION¶
- /proc/locks
- This file shows current file locks (flock(2) and fcntl(2))
and leases (fcntl(2)).
- An example of the content shown in this file is the following:
-
1: POSIX ADVISORY READ 5433 08:01:7864448 128 128
2: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 2001 08:01:7864554 0 EOF
3: FLOCK ADVISORY WRITE 1568 00:2f:32388 0 EOF
4: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 699 00:16:28457 0 EOF
5: POSIX ADVISORY WRITE 764 00:16:21448 0 0
6: POSIX ADVISORY READ 3548 08:01:7867240 1 1
7: POSIX ADVISORY READ 3548 08:01:7865567 1826 2335
8: OFDLCK ADVISORY WRITE -1 08:01:8713209 128 191
- The fields shown in each line are as follows:
- [1]
- The ordinal position of the lock in the list.
- [2]
- The lock type. Values that may appear here include:
- [3]
- Among the strings that can appear here are the following:
- [4]
- The type of lock. Values that can appear here are:
- READ
- This is a POSIX or OFD read lock, or a BSD shared lock.
- WRITE
- This is a POSIX or OFD write lock, or a BSD exclusive lock.
- [5]
- The PID of the process that owns the lock.
- Because OFD locks are not owned by a single process (since multiple
processes may have file descriptors that refer to the same open file
description), the value -1 is displayed in this field for OFD locks.
(Before Linux 4.14, a bug meant that the PID of the process that initially
acquired the lock was displayed instead of the value -1.)
- [6]
- Three colon-separated subfields that identify the major and minor device
ID of the device containing the filesystem where the locked file resides,
followed by the inode number of the locked file.
- [7]
- The byte offset of the first byte of the lock. For BSD locks, this value
is always 0.
- [8]
- The byte offset of the last byte of the lock. EOF in this field
means that the lock extends to the end of the file. For BSD locks, the
value shown is always EOF.
- Since Linux 4.9, the list of locks shown in /proc/locks is filtered
to show just the locks for the processes in the PID namespace (see
pid_namespaces(7)) for which the /proc filesystem was
mounted. (In the initial PID namespace, there is no filtering of the
records shown in this file.)
- The lslocks(8) command provides a bit more information about each
lock.