#include <db_cxx.h> int DbMpoolFile::set_fileid(u_int8_t *fileid);
The DbMpoolFile::set_fileid()
method specifies a unique identifier
for the file. (The shared memory buffer pool functions must be able to
uniquely identify files in order that multiple processes wanting to
share a file will correctly identify it in the cache.)
On most UNIX/POSIX systems, the fileid field will not need
to be set, and the memory pool functions will use the file's device and inode numbers for
this purpose. On Windows systems, the memory pool functions use the values returned by
GetFileInformationByHandle()
by default — these values are
known to be constant between processes and over reboot in the case of NTFS (in which they
are the NTFS MFT indices).
On other filesystems (for example, FAT or NFS), these default values
are not necessarily unique between processes or across system reboots.
Applications wanting to maintain a shared
cache between processes or across system reboots, in which the
cache contains pages from files stored on such filesystems, must
specify a unique file identifier using the DbMpoolFile::set_fileid()
method, and each process opening the file must provide the same unique
identifier.
This call should not be necessary for most applications. Specifically, it is not necessary if the cache is not shared between processes and is reinstantiated after each system reboot, if the application is using the Berkeley DB access methods instead of calling the pool functions explicitly, or if the files in the cache are stored on filesystems in which the default values as described previously are invariant between process and across system reboots.
The DbMpoolFile::set_fileid()
method configures a file in the
cache, not only operations performed using the specified
DbMpoolFile handle.
The DbMpoolFile::set_fileid()
method may not be called after the
DbMpoolFile::open()
method is called.
The DbMpoolFile::set_fileid()
method either returns a non-zero error value or throws an
exception that encapsulates a non-zero error value on
failure, and returns 0 on success.