I'm looking for mutex/semaphore/concurrency mechanism in shell script. Lets consider following situation: Unless "a" user does not close the shared file, "b" user should not able to open/update it. I'm just wondering how to implement mutex,semaphore, critical sections mechanism in shell scripting.
One more question : Which is the easiest way to implement locking mechanism [file level] in shell scripting ?

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2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

See BashFAQ and ProcessManagment for discussions on file locking in Bash.

Tagging your question as shell (only) limits the number of people that can help you. You may want to add unix, ksh, bash.

There are numerous questions/answers on this topic posted here already on S.O.

I hope this helps.

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if this is a duplicate, can you point to one in particular? – momeara Dec 9 '11 at 20:40
I didn't say it was a duplicate, the intention was to point a relatively new user to search a little more thoroughly through S.O. I looked for [bash] file lock and [bash] mutex and found numerous that would add perspective. Good luck. – shellter Dec 10 '11 at 0:41
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The BashFAQ noted by shellter has some good examples. The basic idea, which I'm moving here so the page is self-contained, is to use an operation that both tests and sets at the same time: mkdir

mkdir will fail if the directory exists and will make it if it does. It's an atomic operation and you can use it like so to do a mutex in your shell script (from the above BashFAQ)

# Bourne
lockdir=/tmp/myscript.lock
if mkdir "$lockdir"
then    # directory did not exist, but was created successfully
    echo >&2 "successfully acquired lock: $lockdir"
    # continue script
else
  echo >&2 "cannot acquire lock, giving up on $lockdir"
  exit 0
fi

follow the link for more detail on cleanup and other items.

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