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Full Discussion: shared memory deallocation
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers shared memory deallocation Post 2803 by joecbc on Tuesday 5th of June 2001 02:48:59 PM
Old 06-05-2001
shared memory deallocation

This is on HP UNIX version 11. I have a shared memory segment that is marked for deallocation .... see below

m 521 0x00000000 D-rw-rw---- oracle dba

The D says it marked for deallocation. I tried to do the ipcrm -m 521. The message said it cannot find the segment. I assume because it is already marked for deallocation.

How do I get rid of this ? (other than re-booting) ..

How can I find out what it is waiting on ?


 

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shmctl(2)							System Calls Manual							 shmctl(2)

NAME
shmctl() - shared memory control operations SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The system call provides a variety of shared memory control operations as specified by the cmd argument. cmd can have the following val- ues: Place the current value of each member of the data structure associated with shmid into the structure pointed to by buf. The contents of this structure are defined in glossary(9). Set the value of the following members of the data structure associated with shmid to the corresponding value found in the structure pointed to by buf: shm_perm.uid shm_perm.gid shm_perm.mode /* only low 9 bits */ This cmd can only be executed by a process that has an effective user ID equal to either that of a user having appro- priate privileges or to the value of either or in the data structure associated with shmid. This cmd cannot be executed on a shared memory segment that has been created with relaxed isolation. Remove the shared memory identifier specified by shmid from the system and destroy the shared memory segment and data structure associated with it. If the segment is attached to one or more processes, then the segment key is changed to and the segment is marked removed. The segment disappears when the last attached process detaches it. This cmd can only be executed by a process that has an effec- tive user ID equal to either that of a user with appropriate privileges or to the value of either or in the data structure associated with shmid. Lock the shared memory segment specified by shmid in memory. This cmd can only be executed by a process that either has an effective user ID equal to that of a user having appropriate privileges or has an effective user ID equal to the value of either or in the data structure associated with shmid and has the privilege (see getprivgrp(2)). Unlock the shared memory segment specified by shmid. This cmd can only be executed by a process that either has an effective user ID equal to a user having appro- priate privileges or has an effective user ID equal to the value of either or in the data structure associated with shmid and has the privilege (see getprivgrp(2)). RETURN VALUE
returns the following values: Successful completion. Failure. is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
If fails, is set to one of the following values. cmd is equal to and Read operation permission is denied to the calling process (see in glossary(9)). buf points to an illegal address. The reliable detection of this error is implementation dependent. cmd is equal to and the shared-memory segment specified by shmid is not locked in memory. shmid is not a valid shared memory identifier. cmd is not a valid command, or the command contains invalid parameters. cmd is equal to and there is not sufficient lockable memory to fill the request. cmd is equal to The attached process count of a shared memory object is too large for the field in the data structure provided by the application. Recompile the application with the latest file to resolve this issue. cmd is equal to or and the effective user ID of the calling process is not equal to that of a user having appropriate privileges and it is not equal to the value of either or in the data structure associated with shmid. cmd is equal to and the shared memory segment has cmd is equal to or and the effective user ID of the calling process is not equal to that of a user having appropriate privileges and the calling process does not have the privilege (see getprivgrp(2)). EXAMPLES
The following call to locks in memory the shared memory segment represented by This example assumes the process has a valid shmid, which can be obtained by calling shmget(2). The following call to removes the shared memory segment represented by This example assumes the process has a valid shmid, which can be obtained by calling (see shmget(2). AUTHOR
was developed by AT&T and HP. SEE ALSO
ipcrm(1), ipcs(1), shmget(2), shmop(2), stdipc(3C), privileges(5), STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
shmctl(2)
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