getpagesize(2) - Linux man page
Name
getpagesize - get memory page size
Synopsis
#include <unistd.h>
int getpagesize(void);
Description
The function
getpagesize() returns the number of bytes in a page, where a "page" is the thing used
where it says in the description of
mmap(2) that files are mapped in page-sized units.
The size of the kind of pages that mmap() uses, is found using
#include <unistd.h>
long sz = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);
(where some systems also allow the synonym _SC_PAGE_SIZE for _SC_PAGESIZE),
or
#include <unistd.h>
int sz = getpagesize();
History
This call first appeared in 4.2BSD.
Conforming to
SVr4, 4.4BSD, SUSv2. In SUSv2 the
getpagesize() call is labeled LEGACY, and in POSIX.1-2001 it
has been dropped. HP-UX does not have this call.
Notes
Whether
getpagesize() is present as a Linux system call depends on the architecture. If it is, it returns
the kernel symbol PAGE_SIZE, which is architecture and machine model dependent. Generally, one uses binaries that are architecture but not machine model
dependent, in order to have a single binary distribution per architecture. This means that a user program should not find PAGE_SIZE at compile time from a
header file, but use an actual system call, at least for those architectures (like sun4) where this dependency exists. Here libc4, libc5, glibc 2.0 fail
because their
getpagesize() returns a statically derived value, and does not use a system call. Things are OK in glibc 2.1.
See Also
mmap(2),
sysconf(3)
Referenced By
mincore(2),
mmap2(2),
mremap(2),
numa(3),
posix_memalign(3),
remap_file_pages(2),
syscalls(2)