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Emmap

Erlang Memory Map

Install / Use

/learn @krestenkrab/Emmap
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

Erlang MMAP emmap

This Erlang library provides a wrapper that allows you to memory map files into the Erlang memory space.

Basic Usage

The basic usage is

{ok, Mem} = emmap:open("filename", [read, shared, direct]),
{ok, Binary} = file:pread(Mem, 100, 40),
...
ok = file:close(Mem).

The open options is a list containing zero or more of these:

  • read, write: Open for reading and/or writing (you can specify both).
  • private, shared: The file is opened with copy-on-write semantics, or sharing memory with the underlying file.
  • direct: read/pread operations do not copy memory, but rather use "resource binaries" that can change content if the underlying data is changed. This is the most performant, but also has other implications.
  • lock, nolock do (or do not) use a semaphore to control state changes internally in the NIF library.

From this point, Mem can be used with the file operations

  • {ok, Binary} = file:pread(Mem, Position, Length) read Length bytes at Position in the file.
  • ok = file:pwrite(Mem, Position, Binary) writes to the given position.
  • {ok, Binary} = file:read(Mem, Length) read 1..Length bytes from current position, or return eof if pointer is at end of file.
  • {ok, Pos} = file:position(Mem, Where) see file:position/2 documentation.
  • ok = file:close(Mem)

Notes

Using the option direct has the effect that the mmap file is not closed until all references to binaries coming out of read/pread have been garbage collected. This is a consequence of that such binaries are referring directly to the mmap'ed memory.

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GitHub Stars80
CategoryDevelopment
Updated1y ago
Forks22

Languages

C++

Security Score

75/100

Audited on Mar 24, 2025

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