LockHandler
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Consider upgrading your projects to Symfony 7.2.
3.4
The LockHandler
class was deprecated in Symfony 3.4 and will be
removed in Symfony 4.0. Use SemaphoreStore
or FlockStore from the Lock component instead.
What is a Lock?
File locking is a mechanism that restricts access to a computer file by allowing only one user or process access at any specific time. This mechanism was introduced a few decades ago for mainframes, but continues being useful for modern applications.
Symfony provides a LockHelper to help you use locks in your project.
Usage
Caution
The lock handler only works if you're using just one server. If you have several hosts, you must not use this helper.
A lock can be used, for example, to allow only one instance of a command to run:
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use Symfony\Component\Filesystem\LockHandler;
$lockHandler = new LockHandler('hello.lock');
if (!$lockHandler->lock()) {
// the resource "hello" is already locked by another process
return 0;
}
The first argument of the constructor is a string that it will use as part of
the name of the file used to create the lock on the local filesystem. A best
practice for Symfony commands is to use the command name, such as acme:my-command
.
LockHandler
sanitizes the contents of the string before creating
the file, so you can pass any value for this argument.
Tip
The .lock
extension is optional, but it's a common practice to include
it. This will make it easier to find lock files on the filesystem. Moreover,
to avoid name collisions, LockHandler
also appends a hash to the name of
the lock file.
By default, the lock will be created in the system's temporary directory, but you can optionally select the directory where locks are created by passing it as the second argument of the constructor.
Tip
Another way to configure the directory where the locks are created is to
define a special environment variable, because PHP will use that value to
override the default temporary directory. On Unix-based systems, define the
TMPDIR
variable. On Windows systems, define any of these variables:
TMP
, TEMP
or USERPROFILE
(they are checked in this order). This
technique is useful for example when deploying a third-party Symfony
application whose code can't be modified.
The lock() method tries to
acquire the lock. If the lock is acquired, the method returns true
,
false
otherwise. If the lock()
method is called several times on the same
instance it will always return true
if the lock was acquired on the first
call.
You can pass an optional blocking argument as the first argument to the
lock()
method, which defaults to false
. If this is set to true
, your
PHP code will wait indefinitely until the lock is released by another process.
Caution
Be aware of the fact that the resource lock is automatically released as soon
as PHP applies the garbage-collection process to the LockHandler
object.
This means that if you refactor the first example shown in this article as
follows:
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use Symfony\Component\Filesystem\LockHandler;
if (!(new LockHandler('hello.lock'))->lock()) {
// the resource "hello" is already locked by another process
return 0;
}
Now the code won't work as expected because PHP's garbage collection mechanism
removes the reference to the LockHandler
object and thus, the lock is released
just after it's been created.
Another alternative way to release the lock explicitly when needed is to use the release() method.