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Top Forums Programming Shared memory between two c program Post 302582425 by DreamWarrior on Friday 16th of December 2011 12:01:03 AM
Old 12-16-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by tafazzi87
thanks a lot for your exhaustive answer, i will try soon
You're welcome.
Quote:
Originally Posted by tafazzi87
so, for example i have to declare :
Code:
key_t shmkey=0x200;

and then use that for shmget in both programs?
That will work, there is also the ftok function. I've seen hard-coded keys and ftok used, more often the former (don't know why, really). Another method I've seen is a hard-coded base with a xor'd in integer from the environment. I suppose for a toy application, it doesn't much matter. For something more production quality, you should probably at the very least insure that the key is configurable so that it can't conflict with any other potentially running application.
 

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FTOK(3) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   FTOK(3)

NAME
ftok - convert a pathname and a project identifier to a System V IPC key SYNOPSIS
# include <sys/types.h> # include <sys/ipc.h> key_t ftok(const char *pathname, int proj_id); DESCRIPTION
The ftok function uses the identity of the file named by the given pathname (which must refer to an existing, accessible file) and the least significant 8 bits of proj_id (which must be nonzero) to generate a key_t type System V IPC key, suitable for use with msgget(2), semget(2), or shmget(2). The resulting value is the same for all pathnames that name the same file, when the same value of proj_id is used. The value returned should be different when the (simultaneously existing) files or the project IDs differ. RETURN VALUE
On success the generated key_t value is returned. On failure -1 is returned, with errno indicating the error as for the stat(2) system call. CONFORMING TO
XPG4 NOTES
Under libc4 and libc5 (and under SunOS 4.x) the prototype was key_t ftok(char *pathname, char proj_id); Today proj_id is an int, but still only 8 bits are used. Typical usage has an ASCII character proj_id, that is why the behaviour is said to be undefined when proj_id is zero. Of course no guarantee can be given that the resulting key_t is unique. Typically, a best effort attempt combines the given proj_id byte, the lower 16 bits of the i-node number, and the lower 8 bits of the device number into a 32-bit result. Collisions may easily happen, for example between files on /dev/hda1 and files on /dev/sda1. SEE ALSO
ipc(5), msgget(2), semget(2), shmget(2), stat(2) Linux 2.4 2001-11-28 FTOK(3)
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