Next: Atomicity of Pipe I/O, Previous: Pipe to a Subprocess, Up: Pipes and FIFOs [Contents][Index]
A FIFO special file is similar to a pipe, except that it is created in a
different way. Instead of being an anonymous communications channel, a
FIFO special file is entered into the file system by calling
mkfifo
.
Once you have created a FIFO special file in this way, any process can open it for reading or writing, in the same way as an ordinary file. However, it has to be open at both ends simultaneously before you can proceed to do any input or output operations on it. Opening a FIFO for reading normally blocks until some other process opens the same FIFO for writing, and vice versa.
The mkfifo
function is declared in the header file
sys/stat.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The mkfifo
function makes a FIFO special file with name
filename. The mode argument is used to set the file’s
permissions; see Assigning File Permissions.
The normal, successful return value from mkfifo
is 0
. In
the case of an error, -1
is returned. In addition to the usual
file name errors (see File Name Errors), the following
errno
error conditions are defined for this function:
EEXIST
The named file already exists.
ENOSPC
The directory or file system cannot be extended.
EROFS
The directory that would contain the file resides on a read-only file system.
Next: Atomicity of Pipe I/O, Previous: Pipe to a Subprocess, Up: Pipes and FIFOs [Contents][Index]