IPC::Semaphore - SysV Semaphore IPC object class
A class providing an object based interface to SysV IPC semaphores.
Create a new semaphore set associated with KEY
. NSEMS
is the number
of semaphores in the set. A new set is created if
KEY
is equal to IPC_PRIVATE
KEY
does not already have a semaphore identifier
associated with it, and <i>FLAGS</i> & IPC_CREAT
is true.
On creation of a new semaphore set FLAGS
is used to set the
permissions.
Returns the values of the semaphore set as an array.
Returns the number of processes waiting for the semaphore SEM
to
become greater than its current value
Returns the process id of the last process that performed an operation
on the semaphore SEM
.
Returns the current value of the semaphore SEM
.
Returns the number of processes waiting for the semaphore SEM
to
become zero.
Returns the system identifier for the semaphore set.
OPLIST
is a list of operations to pass to semop
. OPLIST
is
a concatenation of smaller lists, each which has three values. The
first is the semaphore number, the second is the operation and the last
is a flags value. See semop for more details. For example
- $sem->op(
- 0, -1, IPC_NOWAIT,
- 1, 1, IPC_NOWAIT
- );
Remove and destroy the semaphore set from the system.
set
will set the following values of the stat
structure associated
with the semaphore set.
- uid
- gid
- mode (only the permission bits)
set
accepts either a stat object, as returned by the stat
method,
or a list of name-value pairs.
Sets all values in the semaphore set to those given on the VALUES
list.
VALUES
must contain the correct number of values.
Set the N
th value in the semaphore set to VALUE
Returns an object of type IPC::Semaphore::stat
which is a sub-class of
Class::Struct
. It provides the following fields. For a description
of these fields see your system documentation.
- uid
- gid
- cuid
- cgid
- mode
- ctime
- otime
- nsems
IPC::SysV Class::Struct semget semctl semop
Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com>
Copyright (c) 1997 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.