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GETPAGESIZE

Section: Linux Programmer's Manual (2)
Updated: 2001-12-21
Index Return to Main Contents
 

NAME

getpagesize - get memory page size  

SYNOPSIS

#include <unistd.h>

int getpagesize(void);  

DESCRIPTION

The function getpagesize() returns the number of bytes in a page, where a "page" is the thing used where it says in the description of mmap(2) that files are mapped in page-sized units.

The size of the kind of pages that mmap uses, is found using

#include <unistd.h>
long sz = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);

(where some systems also allow the synonym _SC_PAGE_SIZE for _SC_PAGESIZE), or

#include <unistd.h>
int sz = getpagesize();
 

HISTORY

This call first appeared in 4.2BSD.  

CONFORMING TO

SVr4, 4.4BSD, SUSv2. In SUSv2 the getpagesize() call is labeled "legacy", and in POSIX 1003.1-2001 it has been dropped. HPUX does not have this call.  

NOTES

Whether getpagesize() is present as a Linux system call depends on the architecture. If it is, it returns the kernel symbol PAGE_SIZE, which is architecture and machine model dependent. Generally, one uses binaries that are architecture but not machine model dependent, in order to have a single binary distribution per architecture. This means that a user program should not find PAGE_SIZE at compile time from a header file, but use an actual system call, at least for those architectures (like sun4) where this dependency exists. Here libc4, libc5, glibc 2.0 fail because their getpagesize() returns a statically derived value, and does not use a system call. Things are OK in glibc 2.1.  

SEE ALSO

mmap(2), sysconf(3)


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
HISTORY
CONFORMING TO
NOTES
SEE ALSO

This document was created by man2html, using the manual pages.
Time: 00:11:36 GMT, May 13, 2005





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