For the record, the example given here has an explicit command to truncate the file, however with a 'write mode' of 'w', it will do this for you automatically, so the truncate call is not needed.
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8)
SplFileObject::flock — Portable file locking
Locks or unlocks the file in the same portable way as flock().
operation
operation
is one of the following:
LOCK_SH
to acquire a shared lock (reader).
LOCK_EX
to acquire an exclusive lock (writer).
LOCK_UN
to release a lock (shared or exclusive).
It is also possible to add LOCK_NB
as a bitmask to one
of the above operations, if flock() should not
block during the locking attempt.
wouldBlock
Set to true
if the lock would block (EWOULDBLOCK errno condition).
Beispiel #1 SplFileObject::flock() example
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject("/tmp/lock.txt", "w");
if ($file->flock(LOCK_EX)) { // do an exclusive lock
$file->ftruncate(0); // truncate file
$file->fwrite("Write something here\n");
$file->flock(LOCK_UN); // release the lock
} else {
echo "Couldn't get the lock!";
}
?>
For the record, the example given here has an explicit command to truncate the file, however with a 'write mode' of 'w', it will do this for you automatically, so the truncate call is not needed.
@digitalprecision What you said is not completely true, ftruncate(0); is needed if there was a write to the file before the lock is acquired. You also may need fseek(0); to move back the file pointer to the beginning of the file
<?php
$file = new SplFileObject("/tmp/lock.txt", "w");
$file->fwrite("xxxxx"); // write something before the lock is acquired
sleep(5); // wait for 5 seconds
if ($file->flock(LOCK_EX)) { // do an exclusive lock
$file->fwrite("Write something here\n");
$file->flock(LOCK_UN); // release the lock
} else {
echo "Couldn't get the lock!";
}
?>
"lock.txt" content:
xxxxxWrite something here