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PROLOG

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface
       may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface
       may not be implemented on Linux.

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 an address space of a process and a memory object.

       The mmap() function shall be supported for the following memory objects:

        *  Regular files

        *  Shared memory objects

        *  Typed memory objects

       Support for any other type of file is unspecified.

       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 represented 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 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 references to portions of the mapped region that correspond  to  added  or
       removed portions of the file is unspecified.

       If len is zero, mmap() shall fail and no mapping shall be established.

       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 ConstantDescription        │
                                    ├──────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
                                    │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,  the  implementation
       shall  not  permit  a  write to succeed where PROT_WRITE has not been set and shall not permit any access
       where PROT_NONE alone has been set. The implementation shall support at least  the  following  values  of
       prot:  PROT_NONE,  PROT_READ,  PROT_WRITE,  and the bitwise-inclusive OR of PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE. 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 permission 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 ConstantDescription       │
                                     ├──────────────────┼─────────────────────────┤
                                     │MAP_SHARED        │ Changes are shared.     │
                                     │MAP_PRIVATE       │ Changes are private.    │
                                     │MAP_FIXED         │ Interpret addr exactly. │
                                     └──────────────────┴─────────────────────────┘
       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,  modifications  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().

       The  state  of  synchronization  objects such as mutexes, semaphores, barriers, and conditional variables
       placed in shared memory mapped with MAP_SHARED becomes undefined when the  last  region  in  any  process
       containing the synchronization object is unmapped.

       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
       represents  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
       pages in the range [pa,pa+len) of the process.

       When  MAP_FIXED is not set, the implementation uses addr in an implementation-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.

       If  MAP_FIXED  is  specified and addr is non-zero, it shall have the same remainder as the off parameter,
       modulo  the  page  size  as  returned  by  sysconf()  when  passed  _SC_PAGESIZE  or  _SC_PAGE_SIZE.  The
       implementation  may  require  that  off  is  a  multiple of the page size. If MAP_FIXED is specified, the
       implementation may require that addr is a  multiple  of  the  page  size.  The  system  performs  mapping
       operations  over whole pages. Thus, while the parameter len need not meet a size or alignment constraint,
       the system shall include, in any mapping operation, any partial  page  specified  by  the  address  range
       starting at pa and continuing for len bytes.

       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 last data access timestamp 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 last data access timestamp to be marked for update if it has not already been marked for
       update.

       The last data modification and last file  status  change  timestamps  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 timestamps 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 implementation-defined.

       If  mmap()  fails  for  reasons  other  than [EBADF], [EINVAL], or [ENOTSUP], some of the mappings in the
       address range starting at addr and continuing 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 protection 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 mlockall(), due to a lack of resources.

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

       EINVAL The value of len is zero.

       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 mlockall(), because it would require
              more space than the system is able to supply.

       ENOMEM Not enough unallocated memory resources remain in the typed memory 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 mmap() function may fail if:

       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 considered invalid by the implementation.

       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.  Most  implementations require that off and addr are multiples of the page size as returned by
       sysconf().

       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  manipulations,  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 following:

           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,  cannot  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 mappings 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 POSIX.1‐2008 specifies that  the  new
       mappings replace any existing mappings, following existing practice in this regard.

       It  is not expected that all hardware implementations are able to support all combinations of permissions
       at all addresses.  Implementations 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
       example,  if  the  application requests only PROT_WRITE, the implementation may also allow read access. A
       call to mmap() fails if the implementation cannot support  allowing  all  the  access  requested  by  the
       application. For example, some implementations cannot support a request for both write access and execute
       access simultaneously. All implementations 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.  Conforming 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 virtual 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,
       specifying 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
       mapping  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
       processes  for  them  to  pass  in  via MAP_FIXED. The availability of a specific 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
       application 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 unsuccessful. Since the casting of this value
       to  type  void  * cannot be guaranteed by the ISO C standard to be distinct from a successful value, this
       volume of POSIX.1‐2008 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 POSIX.1‐2008, <sys_mman.h>

       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition,
       Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open  Group  Base
       Specifications  Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc
       and The Open Group.  (This is POSIX.1-2008 with the 2013 Technical Corrigendum 1 applied.) 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.unix.org/online.html .

       Any  typographical  or formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have been introduced
       during  the  conversion  of  the  source  files  to  man  page  format.  To  report  such   errors,   see
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .