NAME

File::Sync - Perl access to fsync() and sync() function calls

SYNOPSIS

use File::Sync qw(fsync sync);
sync();
fsync(\*FILEHANDLE) or die "fsync: $!";
# and if fdatasync() is available on your system:
fdatasync($fh) or die "fdatasync: $!";

use File::Sync qw(fsync);
use FileHandle;
$fh = new FileHandle("> /tmp/foo") 
    or die "new FileHandle: $!";
...
$fh->fsync() or die "fsync: $!";

DESCRIPTION

The fsync() function takes a Perl file handle as its only argument, and passes its fileno() to the C function fsync(). It returns undef on failure, or true on success. fdatasync() is identical in return value, but it calls C fdatasync() instead of fsync(), synchronizing only the data in the file, not the metadata.

The fsync_fd() function is used internally by fsync(); it takes a file descriptor as its only argument.

The sync() function is identical to the C function sync().

This module does not export any methods by default, but fsync() is made available as a method of the FileHandle class. Note carefully that as of 0.11, we no longer clobber anything in IO::Handle. You can replace any calls to IO::Handle::fsync() with IO::Handle::sync(): https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Display.html?id=50418

NOTES

Doing fsync() if the stdio buffers aren't flushed (with $| or the autoflush method) is probably pointless.

Calling sync() too often on a multi-user system is slightly antisocial.

AUTHOR

Carey Evans <c.evans@clear.net.nz>

SEE ALSO

perl(1), fsync(2), sync(2), perlvar(1)