func Read(name string) ([]byte, error)
Read opens the named file with a read-lock and returns its contents.
func Transform(name string, t func([]byte) ([]byte, error)) (err error)
Transform invokes t with the result of reading the named file, with its lock still held.
If t returns a nil error, Transform then writes the returned contents back to the file, making a best effort to preserve existing contents on error.
t must not modify the slice passed to it.
func Write(name string, content io.Reader, perm fs.FileMode) (err error)
Write opens the named file (creating it with the given permissions if needed), then write-locks it and overwrites it with the given content.
A File is a locked *os.File.
Closing the file releases the lock.
If the program exits while a file is locked, the operating system releases the lock but may not do so promptly: callers must ensure that all locked files are closed before exiting.
type File struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
func Create(name string) (*File, error)
Create is like os.Create, but returns a write-locked file.
func Edit(name string) (*File, error)
Edit creates the named file with mode 0666 (before umask), but does not truncate existing contents.
If Edit succeeds, methods on the returned File can be used for I/O. The associated file descriptor has mode O_RDWR and the file is write-locked.
func Open(name string) (*File, error)
Open is like os.Open, but returns a read-locked file.
func OpenFile(name string, flag int, perm fs.FileMode) (*File, error)
OpenFile is like os.OpenFile, but returns a locked file. If flag includes os.O_WRONLY or os.O_RDWR, the file is write-locked; otherwise, it is read-locked.
func (f *File) Close() error
Close unlocks and closes the underlying file.
Close may be called multiple times; all calls after the first will return a non-nil error.
A Mutex provides mutual exclusion within and across processes by locking a well-known file. Such a file generally guards some other part of the filesystem: for example, a Mutex file in a directory might guard access to the entire tree rooted in that directory.
Mutex does not implement sync.Locker: unlike a sync.Mutex, a lockedfile.Mutex can fail to lock (e.g. if there is a permission error in the filesystem).
Like a sync.Mutex, a Mutex may be included as a field of a larger struct but must not be copied after first use. The Path field must be set before first use and must not be change thereafter.
type Mutex struct { Path string // The path to the well-known lock file. Must be non-empty. // contains filtered or unexported fields }
func MutexAt(path string) *Mutex
MutexAt returns a new Mutex with Path set to the given non-empty path.
func (mu *Mutex) Lock() (unlock func(), err error)
Lock attempts to lock the Mutex.
If successful, Lock returns a non-nil unlock function: it is provided as a return-value instead of a separate method to remind the caller to check the accompanying error. (See https://golang.org/issue/20803.)
func (mu *Mutex) String() string
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