Interface to the Unix system.
Note: all the functions of this module (except error_message and handle_unix_error) are liable to raise the Unix_error exception whenever the underlying system call signals an error.
type error
=
The type of error codes. Errors defined in the POSIX standard and additional errors from UNIX98 and BSD. All other errors are mapped to EUNKNOWNERR.
exception
Unix_error of error * string * string
Raised by the system calls below when an error is encountered. The first component is the error code; the second component is the function name; the third component is the string parameter to the function, if it has one, or the empty string otherwise.
val handle_unix_error : ('a -> 'b) -> 'a -> 'b
handle_unix_error f x
applies f
to x
and returns the result.
If the exception Unix_error is raised, it prints a message
describing the error and exits with code 2.
val environment : unit -> string array
Return the process environment, as an array of strings with the format ``variable=value''.
val getenv : string -> string
Return the value associated to a variable in the process environment.
Raises Not_found: if the variable is unbound.
(This function is identical to Sys.getenv.)
val putenv : string -> string -> unit
Unix.putenv name value
sets the value associated to a
variable in the process environment.
name
is the name of the environment variable,
and value
its new associated value.
type process_status
=
The termination status of a process. See module Sys for the definitions of the standard signal numbers. Note that they are not the numbers used by the OS.
type wait_flag
=
| WNOHANG | (** Do not block if no child has died yet, but immediately return with a pid equal to 0. *) |
| WUNTRACED | (** Report also the children that receive stop signals. *) |
Flags for Unix.waitpid.
val execv : string -> string array -> 'a
execv prog args
execute the program in file prog
, with
the arguments args
, and the current process environment.
These execv*
functions never return: on success, the current
program is replaced by the new one.
val execve : string -> string array -> string array -> 'a
Same as Unix.execv, except that the third argument provides the environment to the program executed.
val execvp : string -> string array -> 'a
Same as Unix.execv, except that the program is searched in the path.
val execvpe : string -> string array -> string array -> 'a
Same as Unix.execve, except that the program is searched in the path.
val fork : unit -> int
Fork a new process. The returned integer is 0 for the child process, the pid of the child process for the parent process.
On Windows: not implemented, use create_process or threads.
val wait : unit -> int * process_status
Wait until one of the children processes die, and return its pid and termination status.
On Windows: Not implemented, use waitpid.
val waitpid : wait_flag list -> int -> int * process_status
Same as Unix.wait, but waits for the child process whose pid is given.
A pid of -1
means wait for any child.
A pid of 0
means wait for any child in the same process group
as the current process.
Negative pid arguments represent process groups.
The list of options indicates whether waitpid
should return
immediately without waiting, and whether it should report stopped
children.
On Windows, this function can only wait for a given PID, not any child process.
val system : string -> process_status
Execute the given command, wait until it terminates, and return
its termination status. The string is interpreted by the shell
/bin/sh
(or the command interpreter cmd.exe
on Windows) and
therefore can contain redirections, quotes, variables, etc. The
result WEXITED 127
indicates that the shell couldn't be
executed.
val getppid : unit -> int
Return the pid of the parent process. On Windows: not implemented (because it is meaningless).
val nice : int -> int
Change the process priority. The integer argument is added to the ``nice'' value. (Higher values of the ``nice'' value mean lower priorities.) Return the new nice value.
On Windows: not implemented.
type open_flag
=
| O_RDONLY | (** Open for reading *) |
| O_WRONLY | (** Open for writing *) |
| O_RDWR | (** Open for reading and writing *) |
| O_NONBLOCK | (** Open in non-blocking mode *) |
| O_APPEND | (** Open for append *) |
| O_CREAT | (** Create if nonexistent *) |
| O_TRUNC | (** Truncate to 0 length if existing *) |
| O_EXCL | (** Fail if existing *) |
| O_NOCTTY | (** Don't make this dev a controlling tty *) |
| O_DSYNC | (** Writes complete as `Synchronised I/O data integrity completion' *) |
| O_SYNC | (** Writes complete as `Synchronised I/O file integrity completion' *) |
| O_RSYNC | (** Reads complete as writes (depending on O_SYNC/O_DSYNC) *) |
| O_SHARE_DELETE | (** Windows only: allow the file to be deleted while still open *) |
| O_CLOEXEC | (** Set the close-on-exec flag on the descriptor returned by openfile. See set_close_on_exec for more information. *) |
| O_KEEPEXEC | (** Clear the close-on-exec flag. This is currently the default. *) |
The flags to Unix.openfile.
type file_perm
= int
The type of file access rights, e.g. 0o640
is read and write for user,
read for group, none for others
val openfile : string -> open_flag list -> file_perm -> file_descr
Open the named file with the given flags. Third argument is the permissions to give to the file if it is created (see umask). Return a file descriptor on the named file.
val read : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> int
read fd buff ofs len
reads len
bytes from descriptor fd
,
storing them in byte sequence buff
, starting at position ofs
in
buff
. Return the number of bytes actually read.
val write : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> int
write fd buff ofs len
writes len
bytes to descriptor fd
,
taking them from byte sequence buff
, starting at position ofs
in buff
. Return the number of bytes actually written. write
repeats the writing operation until all bytes have been written or
an error occurs.
val single_write : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> int
Same as write
, but attempts to write only once.
Thus, if an error occurs, single_write
guarantees that no data
has been written.
val write_substring : file_descr -> string -> int -> int -> int
Same as write
, but take the data from a string instead of a byte
sequence.
val single_write_substring : file_descr -> string -> int -> int -> int
Same as single_write
, but take the data from a string instead of
a byte sequence.
val in_channel_of_descr : file_descr -> Stdlib.in_channel
Create an input channel reading from the given descriptor.
The channel is initially in binary mode; use
set_binary_mode_in ic false
if text mode is desired.
Text mode is supported only if the descriptor refers to a file
or pipe, but is not supported if it refers to a socket.
On Windows, set_binary_mode_in
always fails on channels created
with this function.
Beware that channels are buffered so more characters may have been read from the file descriptor than those accessed using channel functions. Channels also keep a copy of the current position in the file.
You need to explicitly close all channels created with this function. Closing the channel also closes the underlying file descriptor (unless it was already closed).
val out_channel_of_descr : file_descr -> Stdlib.out_channel
Create an output channel writing on the given descriptor.
The channel is initially in binary mode; use
set_binary_mode_out oc false
if text mode is desired.
Text mode is supported only if the descriptor refers to a file
or pipe, but is not supported if it refers to a socket.
On Windows, set_binary_mode_out
always fails on channels created
with this function.
Beware that channels are buffered so you may have to flush
them
to ensure that all data has been sent to the file descriptor.
Channels also keep a copy of the current position in the file.
You need to explicitly close all channels created with this function. Closing the channel flushes the data and closes the underlying file descriptor (unless it has already been closed, in which case the buffered data is lost).
val descr_of_in_channel : Stdlib.in_channel -> file_descr
Return the descriptor corresponding to an input channel.
val descr_of_out_channel : Stdlib.out_channel -> file_descr
Return the descriptor corresponding to an output channel.
type seek_command
=
Positioning modes for Unix.lseek.
val lseek : file_descr -> int -> seek_command -> int
Set the current position for a file descriptor, and return the resulting offset (from the beginning of the file).
val truncate : string -> int -> unit
Truncates the named file to the given size.
On Windows: not implemented.
val ftruncate : file_descr -> int -> unit
Truncates the file corresponding to the given descriptor to the given size.
On Windows: not implemented.
type stats
=
{
st_dev : int; | (** Device number *) |
st_ino : int; | (** Inode number *) |
st_kind : file_kind; | (** Kind of the file *) |
st_perm : file_perm; | (** Access rights *) |
st_nlink : int; | (** Number of links *) |
st_uid : int; | (** User id of the owner *) |
st_gid : int; | (** Group ID of the file's group *) |
st_rdev : int; | (** Device minor number *) |
st_size : int; | (** Size in bytes *) |
st_atime : float; | (** Last access time *) |
st_mtime : float; | (** Last modification time *) |
st_ctime : float; | (** Last status change time *) |
}
The information returned by the Unix.stat calls.
val lstat : string -> stats
Same as Unix.stat, but in case the file is a symbolic link, return the information for the link itself.
val fstat : file_descr -> stats
Return the information for the file associated with the given descriptor.
val isatty : file_descr -> bool
Return true
if the given file descriptor refers to a terminal or
console window, false
otherwise.
module LargeFile : sig ... end
File operations on large files.
This sub-module provides 64-bit variants of the functions
Unix.lseek (for positioning a file descriptor),
Unix.truncate and Unix.ftruncate (for changing the size of a file),
and Unix.stat, Unix.lstat and Unix.fstat (for obtaining
information on files). These alternate functions represent
positions and sizes by 64-bit integers (type int64
) instead of
regular integers (type int
), thus allowing operating on files
whose sizes are greater than max_int
.
val map_file : file_descr -> ?pos:int64 -> ('a, 'b) CamlinternalBigarray.kind -> 'c CamlinternalBigarray.layout -> bool -> int array -> ('a, 'b, 'c) CamlinternalBigarray.genarray
Memory mapping of a file as a big array.
map_file fd kind layout shared dims
returns a big array of kind kind
, layout layout
,
and dimensions as specified in dims
. The data contained in
this big array are the contents of the file referred to by
the file descriptor fd
(as opened previously with
Unix.openfile
, for example). The optional pos
parameter
is the byte offset in the file of the data being mapped;
it defaults to 0 (map from the beginning of the file).
If shared
is true
, all modifications performed on the array
are reflected in the file. This requires that fd
be opened
with write permissions. If shared
is false
, modifications
performed on the array are done in memory only, using
copy-on-write of the modified pages; the underlying file is not
affected.
Genarray.map_file
is much more efficient than reading
the whole file in a big array, modifying that big array,
and writing it afterwards.
To adjust automatically the dimensions of the big array to
the actual size of the file, the major dimension (that is,
the first dimension for an array with C layout, and the last
dimension for an array with Fortran layout) can be given as
-1
. Genarray.map_file
then determines the major dimension
from the size of the file. The file must contain an integral
number of sub-arrays as determined by the non-major dimensions,
otherwise Failure
is raised.
If all dimensions of the big array are given, the file size is
matched against the size of the big array. If the file is larger
than the big array, only the initial portion of the file is
mapped to the big array. If the file is smaller than the big
array, the file is automatically grown to the size of the big array.
This requires write permissions on fd
.
Array accesses are bounds-checked, but the bounds are determined by
the initial call to map_file
. Therefore, you should make sure no
other process modifies the mapped file while you're accessing it,
or a SIGBUS signal may be raised. This happens, for instance, if the
file is shrunk.
Invalid_argument
or Failure
may be raised in cases where argument
validation fails.
val unlink : string -> unit
Removes the named file.
If the named file is a directory, raises:
EPERM
on POSIX compliant systemEISDIR
on Linux >= 2.1.132EACCESS
on Windowsval link : string -> string -> unit
link source dest
creates a hard link named dest
to the file
named source
.
type access_permission
=
| R_OK | (** Read permission *) |
| W_OK | (** Write permission *) |
| X_OK | (** Execution permission *) |
| F_OK | (** File exists *) |
Flags for the Unix.access call.
val fchmod : file_descr -> file_perm -> unit
Change the permissions of an opened file. On Windows: not implemented.
val chown : string -> int -> int -> unit
Change the owner uid and owner gid of the named file. On Windows: not implemented (make no sense on a DOS file system).
val fchown : file_descr -> int -> int -> unit
Change the owner uid and owner gid of an opened file. On Windows: not implemented (make no sense on a DOS file system).
val umask : int -> int
Set the process's file mode creation mask, and return the previous mask. On Windows: not implemented.
val access : string -> access_permission list -> unit
Check that the process has the given permissions over the named file.
Raises Unix_error: otherwise.
On Windows, execute permission X_OK
, cannot be tested, it just
tests for read permission instead.
val dup : ?cloexec:bool -> file_descr -> file_descr
Return a new file descriptor referencing the same file as
the given descriptor.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val dup2 : ?cloexec:bool -> file_descr -> file_descr -> unit
dup2 fd1 fd2
duplicates fd1
to fd2
, closing fd2
if already
opened.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val set_nonblock : file_descr -> unit
Set the ``non-blocking'' flag on the given descriptor.
When the non-blocking flag is set, reading on a descriptor
on which there is temporarily no data available raises the
EAGAIN
or EWOULDBLOCK
error instead of blocking;
writing on a descriptor on which there is temporarily no room
for writing also raises EAGAIN
or EWOULDBLOCK
.
val clear_nonblock : file_descr -> unit
Clear the ``non-blocking'' flag on the given descriptor. See Unix.set_nonblock.
val set_close_on_exec : file_descr -> unit
Set the ``close-on-exec'' flag on the given descriptor.
A descriptor with the close-on-exec flag is automatically
closed when the current process starts another program with
one of the exec
, create_process
and open_process
functions.
It is often a security hole to leak file descriptors opened on, say, a private file to an external program: the program, then, gets access to the private file and can do bad things with it. Hence, it is highly recommended to set all file descriptors ``close-on-exec'', except in the very few cases where a file descriptor actually needs to be transmitted to another program.
The best way to set a file descriptor ``close-on-exec'' is to create
it in this state. To this end, the openfile
function has
O_CLOEXEC
and O_KEEPEXEC
flags to enforce ``close-on-exec'' mode
or ``keep-on-exec'' mode, respectively. All other operations in
the Unix module that create file descriptors have an optional
argument ?cloexec:bool
to indicate whether the file descriptor
should be created in ``close-on-exec'' mode (by writing
~cloexec:true
) or in ``keep-on-exec'' mode (by writing
~cloexec:false
). For historical reasons, the default file
descriptor creation mode is ``keep-on-exec'', if no cloexec
optional
argument is given. This is not a safe default, hence it is highly
recommended to pass explicit cloexec
arguments to operations that
create file descriptors.
The cloexec
optional arguments and the O_KEEPEXEC
flag were introduced
in OCaml 4.05. Earlier, the common practice was to create file descriptors
in the default, ``keep-on-exec'' mode, then call set_close_on_exec
on those freshly-created file descriptors. This is not as safe as
creating the file descriptor in ``close-on-exec'' mode because, in
multithreaded programs, a window of vulnerability exists between the time
when the file descriptor is created and the time set_close_on_exec
completes. If another thread spawns another program during this window,
the descriptor will leak, as it is still in the ``keep-on-exec'' mode.
Regarding the atomicity guarantees given by ~cloexec:true
or by
the use of the O_CLOEXEC
flag: on all platforms it is guaranteed
that a concurrently-executing Caml thread cannot leak the descriptor
by starting a new process. On Linux, this guarantee extends to
concurrently-executing C threads. As of Feb 2017, other operating
systems lack the necessary system calls and still expose a window
of vulnerability during which a C thread can see the newly-created
file descriptor in ``keep-on-exec'' mode.
val clear_close_on_exec : file_descr -> unit
Clear the ``close-on-exec'' flag on the given descriptor. See Unix.set_close_on_exec.
val readdir : dir_handle -> string
Return the next entry in a directory.
val pipe : ?cloexec:bool -> unit -> file_descr * file_descr
Create a pipe. The first component of the result is opened
for reading, that's the exit to the pipe. The second component is
opened for writing, that's the entrance to the pipe.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val mkfifo : string -> file_perm -> unit
Create a named pipe with the given permissions (see umask). On Windows: not implemented.
val create_process : string -> string array -> file_descr -> file_descr -> file_descr -> int
create_process prog args new_stdin new_stdout new_stderr
forks a new process that executes the program
in file prog
, with arguments args
. The pid of the new
process is returned immediately; the new process executes
concurrently with the current process.
The standard input and outputs of the new process are connected
to the descriptors new_stdin
, new_stdout
and new_stderr
.
Passing e.g. stdout
for new_stdout
prevents the redirection
and causes the new process to have the same standard output
as the current process.
The executable file prog
is searched in the path.
The new process has the same environment as the current process.
val create_process_env : string -> string array -> string array -> file_descr -> file_descr -> file_descr -> int
create_process_env prog args env new_stdin new_stdout new_stderr
works as Unix.create_process, except that the extra argument
env
specifies the environment passed to the program.
val open_process_in : string -> Stdlib.in_channel
High-level pipe and process management. This function
runs the given command in parallel with the program.
The standard output of the command is redirected to a pipe,
which can be read via the returned input channel.
The command is interpreted by the shell /bin/sh
(or cmd.exe
on Windows), cf. system
.
val open_process_out : string -> Stdlib.out_channel
Same as Unix.open_process_in, but redirect the standard input of the command to a pipe. Data written to the returned output channel is sent to the standard input of the command. Warning: writes on output channels are buffered, hence be careful to call Pervasives.flush at the right times to ensure correct synchronization.
val open_process : string -> Stdlib.in_channel * Stdlib.out_channel
Same as Unix.open_process_out, but redirects both the standard input and standard output of the command to pipes connected to the two returned channels. The input channel is connected to the output of the command, and the output channel to the input of the command.
val open_process_full : string -> string array -> Stdlib.in_channel * Stdlib.out_channel * Stdlib.in_channel
Similar to Unix.open_process, but the second argument specifies the environment passed to the command. The result is a triple of channels connected respectively to the standard output, standard input, and standard error of the command.
val close_process_in : Stdlib.in_channel -> process_status
Close channels opened by Unix.open_process_in, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
val close_process_out : Stdlib.out_channel -> process_status
Close channels opened by Unix.open_process_out, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
val close_process : (Stdlib.in_channel * Stdlib.out_channel) -> process_status
Close channels opened by Unix.open_process, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
val close_process_full : (Stdlib.in_channel * Stdlib.out_channel * Stdlib.in_channel) -> process_status
Close channels opened by Unix.open_process_full, wait for the associated command to terminate, and return its termination status.
val symlink : ?to_dir:bool -> string -> string -> unit
symlink ?to_dir source dest
creates the file dest
as a symbolic link
to the file source
. On Windows, ~to_dir
indicates if the symbolic link
points to a directory or a file; if omitted, symlink
examines source
using stat
and picks appropriately, if source
does not exist then false
is assumed (for this reason, it is recommended that the ~to_dir
parameter
be specified in new code). On Unix, ~to_dir
is ignored.
Windows symbolic links are available in Windows Vista onwards. There are some important differences between Windows symlinks and their POSIX counterparts.
Windows symbolic links come in two flavours: directory and regular, which designate whether the symbolic link points to a directory or a file. The type must be correct - a directory symlink which actually points to a file cannot be selected with chdir and a file symlink which actually points to a directory cannot be read or written (note that Cygwin's emulation layer ignores this distinction).
When symbolic links are created to existing targets, this distinction doesn't
matter and symlink
will automatically create the correct kind of symbolic
link. The distinction matters when a symbolic link is created to a
non-existent target.
The other caveat is that by default symbolic links are a privileged operation. Administrators will always need to be running elevated (or with UAC disabled) and by default normal user accounts need to be granted the SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege via Local Security Policy (secpol.msc) or via Active Directory.
has_symlink can be used to check that a process is able to create symbolic links.
val has_symlink : unit -> bool
Returns true
if the user is able to create symbolic links. On Windows,
this indicates that the user not only has the SeCreateSymbolicLinkPrivilege
but is also running elevated, if necessary. On other platforms, this is
simply indicates that the symlink system call is available.
val select : file_descr list -> file_descr list -> file_descr list -> float -> file_descr list * file_descr list * file_descr list
Wait until some input/output operations become possible on some channels. The three list arguments are, respectively, a set of descriptors to check for reading (first argument), for writing (second argument), or for exceptional conditions (third argument). The fourth argument is the maximal timeout, in seconds; a negative fourth argument means no timeout (unbounded wait). The result is composed of three sets of descriptors: those ready for reading (first component), ready for writing (second component), and over which an exceptional condition is pending (third component).
type lock_command
=
Commands for Unix.lockf.
val lockf : file_descr -> lock_command -> int -> unit
lockf fd cmd size
puts a lock on a region of the file opened
as fd
. The region starts at the current read/write position for
fd
(as set by Unix.lseek), and extends size
bytes forward if
size
is positive, size
bytes backwards if size
is negative,
or to the end of the file if size
is zero.
A write lock prevents any other
process from acquiring a read or write lock on the region.
A read lock prevents any other
process from acquiring a write lock on the region, but lets
other processes acquire read locks on it.
The F_LOCK
and F_TLOCK
commands attempts to put a write lock
on the specified region.
The F_RLOCK
and F_TRLOCK
commands attempts to put a read lock
on the specified region.
If one or several locks put by another process prevent the current process
from acquiring the lock, F_LOCK
and F_RLOCK
block until these locks
are removed, while F_TLOCK
and F_TRLOCK
fail immediately with an
exception.
The F_ULOCK
removes whatever locks the current process has on
the specified region.
Finally, the F_TEST
command tests whether a write lock can be
acquired on the specified region, without actually putting a lock.
It returns immediately if successful, or fails otherwise.
What happens when a process tries to lock a region of a file that is already locked by the same process depends on the OS. On POSIX-compliant systems, the second lock operation succeeds and may "promote" the older lock from read lock to write lock. On Windows, the second lock operation will block or fail.
Note: installation of signal handlers is performed via the functions Sys.signal and Sys.set_signal.
val kill : int -> int -> unit
kill pid sig
sends signal number sig
to the process
with id pid
. On Windows, only the Sys.sigkill signal
is emulated.
val sigprocmask : sigprocmask_command -> int list -> int list
sigprocmask cmd sigs
changes the set of blocked signals.
If cmd
is SIG_SETMASK
, blocked signals are set to those in
the list sigs
.
If cmd
is SIG_BLOCK
, the signals in sigs
are added to
the set of blocked signals.
If cmd
is SIG_UNBLOCK
, the signals in sigs
are removed
from the set of blocked signals.
sigprocmask
returns the set of previously blocked signals.
On Windows: not implemented (no inter-process signals on Windows).
val sigpending : unit -> int list
Return the set of blocked signals that are currently pending.
On Windows: not implemented (no inter-process signals on Windows).
val sigsuspend : int list -> unit
sigsuspend sigs
atomically sets the blocked signals to sigs
and waits for a non-ignored, non-blocked signal to be delivered.
On return, the blocked signals are reset to their initial value.
On Windows: not implemented (no inter-process signals on Windows).
val pause : unit -> unit
Wait until a non-ignored, non-blocked signal is delivered.
On Windows: not implemented (no inter-process signals on Windows).
type process_times
=
{
}
The execution times (CPU times) of a process.
type tm
=
{
}
The type representing wallclock time and calendar date.
val gmtime : float -> tm
val localtime : float -> tm
Convert a date and time, specified by the tm
argument, into
a time in seconds, as returned by Unix.time. The tm_isdst
,
tm_wday
and tm_yday
fields of tm
are ignored. Also return a
normalized copy of the given tm
record, with the tm_wday
,
tm_yday
, and tm_isdst
fields recomputed from the other fields,
and the other fields normalized (so that, e.g., 40 October is
changed into 9 November). The tm
argument is interpreted in the
local time zone.
val alarm : int -> int
Schedule a SIGALRM
signal after the given number of seconds.
On Windows: not implemented.
val sleepf : float -> unit
Stop execution for the given number of seconds. Like sleep
,
but fractions of seconds are supported.
val times : unit -> process_times
Return the execution times of the process. On Windows, it is partially implemented, will not report timings for child processes.
val utimes : string -> float -> float -> unit
Set the last access time (second arg) and last modification time
(third arg) for a file. Times are expressed in seconds from
00:00:00 GMT, Jan. 1, 1970. If both times are 0.0
, the access
and last modification times are both set to the current time.
type interval_timer
=
The three kinds of interval timers.
type interval_timer_status
=
{
it_interval : float; | (** Period *) |
it_value : float; | (** Current value of the timer *) |
}
The type describing the status of an interval timer
val getitimer : interval_timer -> interval_timer_status
Return the current status of the given interval timer.
On Windows: not implemented.
val setitimer : interval_timer -> interval_timer_status -> interval_timer_status
setitimer t s
sets the interval timer t
and returns
its previous status. The s
argument is interpreted as follows:
s.it_value
, if nonzero, is the time to the next timer expiration;
s.it_interval
, if nonzero, specifies a value to
be used in reloading it_value
when the timer expires.
Setting s.it_value
to zero disables the timer.
Setting s.it_interval
to zero causes the timer to be disabled
after its next expiration.
On Windows: not implemented.
val getuid : unit -> int
Return the user id of the user executing the process.
On Windows, always return 1
.
val geteuid : unit -> int
Return the effective user id under which the process runs.
On Windows, always return 1
.
val setuid : int -> unit
Set the real user id and effective user id for the process. On Windows: not implemented.
val getgid : unit -> int
Return the group id of the user executing the process.
On Windows, always return 1
.
val getegid : unit -> int
Return the effective group id under which the process runs.
On Windows, always return 1
.
val setgid : int -> unit
Set the real group id and effective group id for the process. On Windows: not implemented.
val getgroups : unit -> int array
Return the list of groups to which the user executing the process
belongs.
On Windows, always return [|1|]
.
val setgroups : int array -> unit
setgroups groups
sets the supplementary group IDs for the
calling process. Appropriate privileges are required.
On Windows: not implemented.
val initgroups : string -> int -> unit
initgroups user group
initializes the group access list by
reading the group database /etc/group and using all groups of
which user
is a member. The additional group group
is also
added to the list.
On Windows: not implemented.
type passwd_entry
=
{
pw_name : string; |
pw_passwd : string; |
pw_uid : int; |
pw_gid : int; |
pw_gecos : string; |
pw_dir : string; |
pw_shell : string; |
}
Structure of entries in the passwd
database.
val getpwnam : string -> passwd_entry
Find an entry in passwd
with the given name.
Raises Not_found: if no such entry exist.
On Windows, always raise Not_found
.
val getgrnam : string -> group_entry
Find an entry in group
with the given name.
Raises Not_found: if no such entry exist.
On Windows, always raise Not_found
.
val getpwuid : int -> passwd_entry
Find an entry in passwd
with the given user id.
Raises Not_found: if no such entry exist.
On Windows, always raise Not_found
.
val getgrgid : int -> group_entry
Find an entry in group
with the given group id.
Raises Not_found: if no such entry exist.
On Windows, always raise Not_found
.
val inet_addr_of_string : string -> inet_addr
Conversion from the printable representation of an Internet
address to its internal representation. The argument string
consists of 4 numbers separated by periods (XXX.YYY.ZZZ.TTT
)
for IPv4 addresses, and up to 8 numbers separated by colons
for IPv6 addresses.
val string_of_inet_addr : inet_addr -> string
Return the printable representation of the given Internet address. See Unix.inet_addr_of_string for a description of the printable representation.
val inet_addr_any : inet_addr
A special IPv4 address, for use only with bind
, representing
all the Internet addresses that the host machine possesses.
val inet6_addr_any : inet_addr
A special IPv6 address, for use only with bind
, representing
all the Internet addresses that the host machine possesses.
type socket_domain
=
| PF_UNIX | (** Unix domain *) |
| PF_INET | (** Internet domain (IPv4) *) |
| PF_INET6 | (** Internet domain (IPv6) *) |
The type of socket domains. Not all platforms support
IPv6 sockets (type PF_INET6
). Windows does not support
PF_UNIX
.
type socket_type
=
| SOCK_STREAM | (** Stream socket *) |
| SOCK_DGRAM | (** Datagram socket *) |
| SOCK_RAW | (** Raw socket *) |
| SOCK_SEQPACKET | (** Sequenced packets socket *) |
The type of socket kinds, specifying the semantics of
communications. SOCK_SEQPACKET
is included for completeness,
but is rarely supported by the OS, and needs system calls that
are not available in this library.
type sockaddr
=
| ADDR_UNIX of string | |
| ADDR_INET of inet_addr * int | (** The type of socket addresses. |
val socket : ?cloexec:bool -> socket_domain -> socket_type -> int -> file_descr
Create a new socket in the given domain, and with the
given kind. The third argument is the protocol type; 0 selects
the default protocol for that kind of sockets.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val domain_of_sockaddr : sockaddr -> socket_domain
Return the socket domain adequate for the given socket address.
val socketpair : ?cloexec:bool -> socket_domain -> socket_type -> int -> file_descr * file_descr
Create a pair of unnamed sockets, connected together.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val accept : ?cloexec:bool -> file_descr -> file_descr * sockaddr
Accept connections on the given socket. The returned descriptor
is a socket connected to the client; the returned address is
the address of the connecting client.
See set_close_on_exec for documentation on the cloexec
optional argument.
val listen : file_descr -> int -> unit
Set up a socket for receiving connection requests. The integer argument is the maximal number of pending requests.
type shutdown_command
=
| SHUTDOWN_RECEIVE | (** Close for receiving *) |
| SHUTDOWN_SEND | (** Close for sending *) |
| SHUTDOWN_ALL | (** Close both *) |
The type of commands for shutdown
.
val shutdown : file_descr -> shutdown_command -> unit
Shutdown a socket connection. SHUTDOWN_SEND
as second argument
causes reads on the other end of the connection to return
an end-of-file condition.
SHUTDOWN_RECEIVE
causes writes on the other end of the connection
to return a closed pipe condition (SIGPIPE
signal).
val getpeername : file_descr -> sockaddr
Return the address of the host connected to the given socket.
type msg_flag
=
| MSG_OOB | |
| MSG_DONTROUTE | |
| MSG_PEEK | (** The flags for Unix.recv, Unix.recvfrom, Unix.send and Unix.sendto. *) |
val recv : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> int
Receive data from a connected socket.
val recvfrom : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> int * sockaddr
Receive data from an unconnected socket.
val send : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> int
Send data over a connected socket.
val send_substring : file_descr -> string -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> int
Same as send
, but take the data from a string instead of a byte
sequence.
val sendto : file_descr -> bytes -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> sockaddr -> int
Send data over an unconnected socket.
val sendto_substring : file_descr -> string -> int -> int -> msg_flag list -> sockaddr -> int
Same as sendto
, but take the data from a string instead of a
byte sequence.
type socket_bool_option
=
The socket options that can be consulted with Unix.getsockopt
and modified with Unix.setsockopt. These options have a boolean
(true
/false
) value.
type socket_int_option
=
| SO_SNDBUF | (** Size of send buffer *) |
| SO_RCVBUF | (** Size of received buffer *) |
| SO_ERROR | (** Deprecated. Use Unix.getsockopt_error instead. *) |
| SO_TYPE | (** Report the socket type *) |
| SO_RCVLOWAT | (** Minimum number of bytes to process for input operations *) |
| SO_SNDLOWAT | (** Minimum number of bytes to process for output operations *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with Unix.getsockopt_int and modified with Unix.setsockopt_int. These options have an integer value.
type socket_optint_option
=
| SO_LINGER | (** Whether to linger on closed connections that have data present, and for how long (in seconds) *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with Unix.getsockopt_optint
and modified with Unix.setsockopt_optint. These options have a
value of type int option
, with None
meaning ``disabled''.
type socket_float_option
=
| SO_RCVTIMEO | (** Timeout for input operations *) |
| SO_SNDTIMEO | (** Timeout for output operations *) |
The socket options that can be consulted with Unix.getsockopt_float and modified with Unix.setsockopt_float. These options have a floating-point value representing a time in seconds. The value 0 means infinite timeout.
val getsockopt : file_descr -> socket_bool_option -> bool
Return the current status of a boolean-valued option in the given socket.
val setsockopt : file_descr -> socket_bool_option -> bool -> unit
Set or clear a boolean-valued option in the given socket.
val getsockopt_int : file_descr -> socket_int_option -> int
Same as Unix.getsockopt for an integer-valued socket option.
val setsockopt_int : file_descr -> socket_int_option -> int -> unit
Same as Unix.setsockopt for an integer-valued socket option.
val getsockopt_optint : file_descr -> socket_optint_option -> int option
Same as Unix.getsockopt for a socket option whose value is an
int option
.
val setsockopt_optint : file_descr -> socket_optint_option -> int option -> unit
Same as Unix.setsockopt for a socket option whose value is an
int option
.
val getsockopt_float : file_descr -> socket_float_option -> float
Same as Unix.getsockopt for a socket option whose value is a floating-point number.
val setsockopt_float : file_descr -> socket_float_option -> float -> unit
Same as Unix.setsockopt for a socket option whose value is a floating-point number.
val getsockopt_error : file_descr -> error option
Return the error condition associated with the given socket, and clear it.
val open_connection : sockaddr -> Stdlib.in_channel * Stdlib.out_channel
Connect to a server at the given address. Return a pair of buffered channels connected to the server. Remember to call Pervasives.flush on the output channel at the right times to ensure correct synchronization.
val shutdown_connection : Stdlib.in_channel -> unit
``Shut down'' a connection established with Unix.open_connection; that is, transmit an end-of-file condition to the server reading on the other side of the connection. This does not fully close the file descriptor associated with the channel, which you must remember to free via Pervasives.close_in.
val establish_server : (Stdlib.in_channel -> Stdlib.out_channel -> unit) -> sockaddr -> unit
Establish a server on the given address. The function given as first argument is called for each connection with two buffered channels connected to the client. A new process is created for each connection. The function Unix.establish_server never returns normally.
On Windows, it is not implemented. Use threads.
type host_entry
=
{
h_name : string; |
h_aliases : string array; |
h_addrtype : socket_domain; |
h_addr_list : inet_addr array; |
}
Structure of entries in the hosts
database.
val gethostbyname : string -> host_entry
Find an entry in hosts
with the given name.
val gethostbyaddr : inet_addr -> host_entry
Find an entry in hosts
with the given address.
val getprotobyname : string -> protocol_entry
Find an entry in protocols
with the given name.
val getprotobynumber : int -> protocol_entry
Find an entry in protocols
with the given protocol number.
val getservbyname : string -> string -> service_entry
Find an entry in services
with the given name.
val getservbyport : int -> string -> service_entry
Find an entry in services
with the given service number.
type addr_info
=
{
ai_family : socket_domain; | (** Socket domain *) |
ai_socktype : socket_type; | (** Socket type *) |
ai_protocol : int; | (** Socket protocol number *) |
ai_addr : sockaddr; | (** Address *) |
ai_canonname : string; | (** Canonical host name *) |
}
Address information returned by Unix.getaddrinfo.
type getaddrinfo_option
=
| AI_FAMILY of socket_domain | (** Impose the given socket domain *) |
| AI_SOCKTYPE of socket_type | (** Impose the given socket type *) |
| AI_PROTOCOL of int | (** Impose the given protocol *) |
| AI_NUMERICHOST | (** Do not call name resolver, expect numeric IP address *) |
| AI_CANONNAME | (** Fill the |
| AI_PASSIVE | (** Set address to ``any'' address for use with Unix.bind *) |
Options to Unix.getaddrinfo.
val getaddrinfo : string -> string -> getaddrinfo_option list -> addr_info list
getaddrinfo host service opts
returns a list of Unix.addr_info
records describing socket parameters and addresses suitable for
communicating with the given host and service. The empty list is
returned if the host or service names are unknown, or the constraints
expressed in opts
cannot be satisfied.
host
is either a host name or the string representation of an IP
address. host
can be given as the empty string; in this case,
the ``any'' address or the ``loopback'' address are used,
depending whether opts
contains AI_PASSIVE
.
service
is either a service name or the string representation of
a port number. service
can be given as the empty string;
in this case, the port field of the returned addresses is set to 0.
opts
is a possibly empty list of options that allows the caller
to force a particular socket domain (e.g. IPv6 only or IPv4 only)
or a particular socket type (e.g. TCP only or UDP only).
type name_info
=
{
ni_hostname : string; | (** Name or IP address of host *) |
ni_service : string; | (** Name of service or port number *) |
}
Host and service information returned by Unix.getnameinfo.
type getnameinfo_option
=
Options to Unix.getnameinfo.
val getnameinfo : sockaddr -> getnameinfo_option list -> name_info
getnameinfo addr opts
returns the host name and service name
corresponding to the socket address addr
. opts
is a possibly
empty list of options that governs how these names are obtained.
The following functions implement the POSIX standard terminal
interface. They provide control over asynchronous communication ports
and pseudo-terminals. Refer to the termios
man page for a
complete description.
type terminal_io
=
{
}
val tcgetattr : file_descr -> terminal_io
Return the status of the terminal referred to by the given file descriptor. On Windows, not implemented.
val tcsetattr : file_descr -> setattr_when -> terminal_io -> unit
Set the status of the terminal referred to by the given
file descriptor. The second argument indicates when the
status change takes place: immediately (TCSANOW
),
when all pending output has been transmitted (TCSADRAIN
),
or after flushing all input that has been received but not
read (TCSAFLUSH
). TCSADRAIN
is recommended when changing
the output parameters; TCSAFLUSH
, when changing the input
parameters.
On Windows, not implemented.
val tcsendbreak : file_descr -> int -> unit
Send a break condition on the given file descriptor. The second argument is the duration of the break, in 0.1s units; 0 means standard duration (0.25s).
On Windows, not implemented.
val tcdrain : file_descr -> unit
Waits until all output written on the given file descriptor has been transmitted.
On Windows, not implemented.
val tcflush : file_descr -> flush_queue -> unit
Discard data written on the given file descriptor but not yet
transmitted, or data received but not yet read, depending on the
second argument: TCIFLUSH
flushes data received but not read,
TCOFLUSH
flushes data written but not transmitted, and
TCIOFLUSH
flushes both.
On Windows, not implemented.
val tcflow : file_descr -> flow_action -> unit
Suspend or restart reception or transmission of data on
the given file descriptor, depending on the second argument:
TCOOFF
suspends output, TCOON
restarts output,
TCIOFF
transmits a STOP character to suspend input,
and TCION
transmits a START character to restart input.
On Windows, not implemented.