Berkeley DB Reference Guide:
Building Berkeley DB for UNIX systems

PrevRefNext

QNX

  1. To what versions of QNX has DB been ported?

    Berkeley DB has been ported to the QNX Neutrino technology which is commonly referred to as QNX RTP (Real-Time Platform). Berkeley DB has not been ported to earlier versions of QNX, such as QNX 4.25.

  2. What is the impact of QNX's use of shm_open(2) for shared memory regions?

    QNX requires the use of the POSIX shm_open(2) and shm_unlink(2) calls for shared memory regions that will later be mapped into memory using mmap(2). QNX's implementation of the shared memory functions requires that the name given must begin with a slash, and that no other slash may appear in the name.

    In order to comply with those requirements and allow relative pathnames to find the same environment, Berkeley DB uses only the last component of the home directory path and the name of the shared memory file, separated by a colon, as the name specified to the shared memory functions. For example, if an application specifies a home directory of /home/db/DB_DIR, Berkeley DB will use /DB_DIR:__db.001 as the name for the shared memory area argument to shm_open(2).

    The impact of this decision is that the last component of all environment home directory pathnames on QNX must be unique with respect to each other. Additionally, Berkeley DB requires that environments use home directories for QNX in order to generate a reasonable entry in the shared memory area.

  3. What are the implications of QNX's requirement to use shm_open(2) in order to use mmap(2)?

    QNX requires that files mapped with mmap(2) be opened using shm_open(2). There are other places in addition to the environment shared memory regions, where Berkeley DB tries to memory map files if it can.

    The memory pool subsystem normally attempts to use mmap(2) even when using private memory, as indicated by the DB_PRIVATE flag to DBENV->open. In the case of QNX, if an application is using private memory, Berkeley DB will not attempt to map the memory and will instead use the local cache.


PrevRefNext

Copyright Sleepycat Software