What is the best way to create a lock on a file in Perl?
Is it best to flock on the file or to create a lock file to place a lock on and check for a lock on the lock
use strict;
use Fcntl ':flock'; # Import LOCK_* constants
# We will use this file path in error messages and function calls.
# Don't type it out more than once in your code. Use a variable.
my $file = '/path/to/some/file';
# Open the file for appending. Note the file path is in quoted
# in the error message. This helps debug situations where you
# have a stray space at the start or end of the path.
open(my $fh, '>>', $file) or die "Could not open '$file' - $!";
# Get exclusive lock (will block until it does)
flock($fh, LOCK_EX);
# Do something with the file here...
# Do NOT use flock() to unlock the file if you wrote to the
# file in the "do something" section above. This could create
# a race condition. The close() call below will unlock it
# for you, but only after writing any buffered data.
# In a world of buffered i/o, some or all of your data will not
# be written until close() completes. Always, always, ALWAYS
# check the return value on close()!
close($fh) or die "Could not write '$file' - $!";