| NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ERRORS | STANDARDS | HISTORY | BUGS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON | |
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mincore(2)                 System Calls Manual                 mincore(2)
       mincore - determine whether pages are resident in memory
       Standard C library (libc, -lc)
       #include <sys/mman.h>
       int mincore(size_t length;
                   void addr[length], size_t length, unsigned char *vec);
   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see
   feature_test_macros(7)):
       mincore():
           Since glibc 2.19:
               _DEFAULT_SOURCE
           glibc 2.19 and earlier:
               _BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE
       mincore() returns a vector that indicates whether pages of the
       calling process's virtual memory are resident in core (RAM), and
       so will not cause a disk access (page fault) if referenced.  The
       kernel returns residency information about the pages starting at
       the address addr, and continuing for length bytes.
       The addr argument must be a multiple of the system page size.  The
       length argument need not be a multiple of the page size, but since
       residency information is returned for whole pages, length is
       effectively rounded up to the next multiple of the page size.  One
       may obtain the page size (PAGE_SIZE) using sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE).
       The vec argument must point to an array containing at least
       (length+PAGE_SIZE-1) / PAGE_SIZE bytes.  On return, the least
       significant bit of each byte will be set if the corresponding page
       is currently resident in memory, and be clear otherwise.  (The
       settings of the other bits in each byte are undefined; these bits
       are reserved for possible later use.)  Of course the information
       returned in vec is only a snapshot: pages that are not locked in
       memory can come and go at any moment, and the contents of vec may
       already be stale by the time this call returns.
       On success, mincore() returns zero.  On error, -1 is returned, and
       errno is set to indicate the error.
       EAGAIN kernel is temporarily out of resources.
       EFAULT vec points to an invalid address.
       EINVAL addr is not a multiple of the page size.
       ENOMEM length is greater than (TASK_SIZE - addr).  (This could
              occur if a negative value is specified for length, since
              that value will be interpreted as a large unsigned
              integer.)  In Linux 2.6.11 and earlier, the error EINVAL
              was returned for this condition.
       ENOMEM addr to addr + length contained unmapped memory.
       None.
       Linux 2.3.99pre1, glibc 2.2.
       First appeared in 4.4BSD.
       NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris 8, AIX 5.1, SunOS 4.1.
       Before Linux 2.6.21, mincore() did not return correct information
       for MAP_PRIVATE mappings, or for nonlinear mappings (established
       using remap_file_pages(2)).
       fincore(1), madvise(2), mlock(2), mmap(2), posix_fadvise(2),
       posix_madvise(3)
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Linux man-pages 6.15            2025-06-28                     mincore(2)
Pages that refer to this page: fincore(1), madvise(2), mlock(2), mmap(2), posix_fadvise(2), syscalls(2)