Memory-mapped file objects behave like both strings and like
file objects. Unlike normal string objects, however, these are
mutable. You can use mmap objects in most places where strings
are expected; for example, you can use the re module to
search through a memory-mapped file. Since they're mutable, you can
change a single character by doing obj[index] = 'a'
, or
change a substring by assigning to a slice:
obj[i1:i2] = '...'
. You can also read and write
data starting at the current file position, and seek()
through the file to different positions.
A memory-mapped file is created by the mmap() function, which is different on Unix and on Windows. In either case you must provide a file descriptor for a file opened for update. If you wish to map an existing Python file object, use its fileno() method to obtain the correct value for the fileno parameter. Otherwise, you can open the file using the os.open() function, which returns a file descriptor directly (the file still needs to be closed when done).
For both the Unix and Windows versions of the function, access may be specified as an optional keyword parameter. access accepts one of three values: ACCESS_READ, ACCESS_WRITE, or ACCESS_COPY to specify readonly, write-through or copy-on-write memory respectively. access can be used on both Unix and Windows. If access is not specified, Windows mmap returns a write-through mapping. The initial memory values for all three access types are taken from the specified file. Assignment to an ACCESS_READ memory map raises a TypeError exception. Assignment to an ACCESS_WRITE memory map affects both memory and the underlying file. Assignment to an ACCESS_COPY memory map affects memory but does not update the underlying file. Changed in version 2.5: To map anonymous memory, -1 should be passed as the fileno along with the length.
fileno, length[, tagname[, access]]) |
0
, the maximum length of the map is the current size
of the file, except that if the file is empty Windows raises an
exception (you cannot create an empty mapping on Windows).
tagname, if specified and not None
, is a string giving
a tag name for the mapping. Windows allows you to have many
different mappings against the same file. If you specify the name
of an existing tag, that tag is opened, otherwise a new tag of this
name is created. If this parameter is omitted or None
, the
mapping is created without a name. Avoiding the use of the tag
parameter will assist in keeping your code portable between Unix
and Windows.
fileno, length[, flags[, prot[, access]]]) |
0
, the maximum length of the map
will be the current size of the file when mmap() is
called.
flags specifies the nature of the mapping. MAP_PRIVATE creates a private copy-on-write mapping, so changes to the contents of the mmap object will be private to this process, and MAP_SHARED creates a mapping that's shared with all other processes mapping the same areas of the file. The default value is MAP_SHARED.
prot, if specified, gives the desired memory protection; the two most useful values are PROT_READ and PROT_WRITE, to specify that the pages may be read or written. prot defaults to PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE.
access may be specified in lieu of flags and prot as an optional keyword parameter. It is an error to specify both flags, prot and access. See the description of access above for information on how to use this parameter.
Memory-mapped file objects support the following methods:
) |
string[, start]) |
-1
on failure. start
is the index at which the search begins, and defaults to zero.
[offset, size]) |
dest, src, count) |
num) |
) |
) |
newsize) |
pos[, whence]) |
0
(absolute file positioning); other values
are 1
(seek relative to the current position) and 2
(seek relative to the file's end).
) |
) |
string) |
byte) |
1
. If the mmap was created with ACCESS_READ,
then writing to it will throw a TypeError exception.