The LockFileEx function locks a byte range within an open file for shared or exclusive access.
BOOL LockFileEx(
HANDLE hFile, | // handle of file to lock |
DWORD dwFlags, | // functional behavior modification flags |
DWORD dwReserved, | // reserved, must be set to zero |
DWORD nNumberOfBytesToLockLow, | // low-order 32 bits of length to lock |
DWORD nNumberOfBytesToLockHigh, | // high-order 32 bits of length to lock |
LPOVERLAPPED lpOverlapped | // addr. of structure with lock region start offset |
); |
Parameters
hFile
Identifies an open handle to a file that is to have a range of bytes locked for shared or exclusive access. The handle must have been created with either GENERIC_READ or GENERIC_WRITE access to the file.
dwFlags
Specifies flags that modify the behavior of this function. This parameter may be one or more of the following values:
Value | Meaning |
LOCKFILE_FAIL_IMMEDIATELY | If this value is specified, the function returns immediately if it is unable to acquire the requested lock. Otherwise, it waits. |
LOCKFILE_EXCLUSIVE_LOCK | If this value is specified, the function requests an exclusive lock. Otherwise, it requests a shared lock. |
dwReserved
Reserved parameter; must be set to zero.
nNumberOfBytesToLockLow
Specifies the low-order 32 bits of the length of the byte range to lock.
nNumberOfBytesToLockHigh
Specifies the high-order 32 bits of the length of the byte range to lock.
lpOverlapped
Points to an OVERLAPPED structure that the function uses with the locking request. This structure, which is required, contains the file offset of the beginning of the lock range.
Return Values
If the function succeeds, the return value is nonzero.
If the function fails, the return value is zero or NULL. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.
Remarks
Locking a region of a file is used to acquire shared or exclusive access to the specified region of the file. File locks are not inherited by a new process during process creation.
Locking a portion of a file for exclusive access denies all other processes both read and write access to the specified region of the file. Locking a region that goes beyond the current end-of-file position is not an error.
Locking a portion of a file for shared access denies all processes write access to the specified region of the file, including the process that first locks the region. All processes can read the locked region.
If an exclusive lock is requested for a range of a file that already has a shared or exclusive lock, this call waits until the lock is granted, unless the LOCKFILE_FAIL_IMMEDIATELY flag is specified.
Locks may not overlap an existing locked region of the file.
See Also