Most file systems support allocating large files in a non-contiguous fashion: the file is split into fragments which are allocated sequentially, but the fragments themselves can be scattered across the disk. File systems generally try to avoid such fragmentation because it decreases performance, but if a file gradually increases in size, there might be no other option than to fragment it. In addition, many file systems support sparse files with holes: regions of null bytes for which no backing storage has been allocated by the file system. When the holes are finally overwritten with data, fragmentation can occur as well.
Explicit allocation of storage for yet-unwritten parts of the file can
help the system to avoid fragmentation. Additionally, if storage
pre-allocation fails, it is possible to report the out-of-disk error
early, often without filling up the entire disk. However, due to
deduplication, copy-on-write semantics, and file compression, such
pre-allocation may not reliably prevent the out-of-disk-space error from
occurring later. Checking for write errors is still required, and
writes to memory-mapped regions created with mmap can still
result in SIGBUS.
int posix_fallocate (int fd, off_t offset, off_t length) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Allocate backing store for the region of length bytes starting at byte offset in the file for the descriptor fd. The file length is increased to ‘length + offset’ if necessary.
fd must be a regular file opened for writing, or EBADF is
returned. If there is insufficient disk space to fulfill the allocation
request, ENOSPC is returned.
Note: If fallocate is not available (because the file
system does not support it), posix_fallocate is emulated, which
has the following drawbacks:
fallocate
support (see below), the file system can examine the internal file
allocation data structures and eliminate holes directly, maybe even
using unwritten extents (which are pre-allocated but uninitialized on
disk).
O_WRONLY flag, the function
will fail with an errno value of EBADF.
O_APPEND flag, the function
will fail with an errno value of EBADF.
ftruncate is used to increase the file
size as requested, without allocating file system blocks. There is a
race condition which means that ftruncate can accidentally
truncate the file if it has been extended concurrently.
On Linux, if an application does not benefit from emulation or if the
emulation is harmful due to its inherent race conditions, the
application can use the Linux-specific fallocate function, with a
zero flag argument. For the fallocate function, the GNU C Library does
not perform allocation emulation if the file system does not support
allocation. Instead, an EOPNOTSUPP is returned to the caller.
int posix_fallocate64 (int fd, off64_t offset, off64_t length) ¶Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Safe | AC-Safe | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is a variant of posix_fallocate64 which accepts
64-bit file offsets on all platforms.