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When two users edit the same file at the same time, they are likely to interfere with each other. Emacs tries to prevent this situation from arising by recording a file lock when a file is being modified. Emacs can then detect the first attempt to modify a buffer visiting a file that is locked by another Emacs job, and ask the user what to do. The file lock is really a file, a symbolic link with a special name, stored in the same directory as the file you are editing. (On file systems that do not support symbolic links, a regular file is used.)
When you access files using NFS, there may be a small probability that you and another user will both lock the same file simultaneously. If this happens, it is possible for the two users to make changes simultaneously, but Emacs will still warn the user who saves second. Also, the detection of modification of a buffer visiting a file changed on disk catches some cases of simultaneous editing; see Modification Time.
This function returns nil if the file
filename is not locked. It returns t
if it is locked by this Emacs process, and it returns the
name of the user who has locked it if it is locked by some
other job.
(file-locked-p "foo")
⇒ nil
This function locks the file filename, if the
current buffer is modified. The argument filename
defaults to the current buffer’s visited file. Nothing
is done if the current buffer is not visiting a file, or is
not modified, or if the option create-lockfiles
is nil.
This function unlocks the file being visited in the current buffer, if the buffer is modified. If the buffer is not modified, then the file should not be locked, so this function does nothing. It also does nothing if the current buffer is not visiting a file, or is not locked.
If this variable is nil, Emacs does not lock
files.
This function is called when the user tries to modify file, but it is locked by another user named other-user. The default definition of this function asks the user to say what to do. The value this function returns determines what Emacs does next:
t says to grab the lock on the
file. Then this user may edit the file and
other-user loses the lock.nil says to ignore the lock and
let this user edit the file anyway.file-locked error, in which case
the change that the user was about to make does not take
place.
The error message for this error looks like this:
error→ File is locked: file other-user
where file is the name of the file and
other-user is the name of the user who has
locked the file.
If you wish, you can replace the
ask-user-about-lock function with your own
version that makes the decision in another way.
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