ELF>@D@8@,!,! -- -  -- - $$Ptd(((LLQtdRtd-- - PPGNUYNԺ# HLL +DHLuH;DHH5 1IMLHHl$0Ht$ HgLd$pHLrD,pt$|$IL1#LAEHHLH@H1H H5HH8iLL$HGH5 1MLHD$1&,)t$T$Iċ|$1sLx+HcmHH 1H8H H8ATHUSHH5HH@dH%(H$81Ld$HD$(Hl$LL$ H$M1HYHT$(HHt$ H\$0H3t$|$HH1>HAEHt$(H-HH$8dH3 %(HH@[]A\@KLL$HH5H1MHHD$1tHT$t$Iċ|$1LcxMHcHeHY H5L1H8AHA 1H8'(H+ H8IfATIUHHS^HHt6HLHx$H1HPHHu HCHP0[]A\ffATHHH5US1HdH%(HD$1LD$HXt2_t$<$HpHA5Ex*HY HHHT$dH3%(HuH[]A\H H8@UH=X' SHHHeHH5HH.H5HH5HH5HjH5 HNH5@H2H5}HH5lHjH5X1HQH5GH5H53HH5HH5 HqH5HUH5H9H5HH5 HqH5HUH5 H9H5 HH5p1HH5_HxH5KH\H57H@H5%H$H5HxH5 H\H5H@H5H$H5HH5H|H5H`H5HDH5H(H5mH |H5[HudH5MHuLH5?Hu4H51 HuH5#HHHH[]fD1HHO&i|OOi:lockfunrecognized lockf argumentO&Iw*|i:ioctlioctl string arg too longO&Is*:ioctlO&is#:fcntlfcntl string arg too longO&i:flockLOCK_SHLOCK_EXLOCK_NBLOCK_UNLOCK_MANDLOCK_READLOCK_WRITELOCK_RWF_DUPFDF_GETFDF_SETFDF_GETFLF_SETFLF_GETLKF_SETLKF_SETLKWF_GETOWNF_SETOWNF_GETSIGF_SETSIGF_RDLCKF_WRLCKF_UNLCKF_GETLK64F_SETLK64F_SETLKW64FASYNCF_SETLEASEF_GETLEASEF_NOTIFYF_EXLCKF_SHLCKFD_CLOEXECDN_ACCESSDN_MODIFYDN_CREATEDN_DELETEDN_RENAMEDN_ATTRIBDN_MULTISHOTO&I|i;ioctl requires a file or file descriptor, an integer and optionally an integer or buffer argumentO&i|l;fcntl requires a file or file descriptor, an integer and optionally a third integer or a string;Lhh0hzRx $FJ w?;*3$",D@ARDO AAH t$AT K CLBIB B(A0N8G  8A0A(B BBBG 4BHA T  AABE ,(WBDG { CBC 4LXBRA F0j  AABA ,AMD m AAG -  ? h L- - o0  0 (@ p o`ooo- &6FVfvThis module performs file control and I/O control on file descriptors. It is an interface to the fcntl() and ioctl() Unix routines. File descriptors can be obtained with the fileno() method of a file or socket object.lockf (fd, operation, length=0, start=0, whence=0) This is essentially a wrapper around the fcntl() locking calls. fd is the file descriptor of the file to lock or unlock, and operation is one of the following values: LOCK_UN - unlock LOCK_SH - acquire a shared lock LOCK_EX - acquire an exclusive lock When operation is LOCK_SH or LOCK_EX, it can also be bitwise ORed with LOCK_NB to avoid blocking on lock acquisition. If LOCK_NB is used and the lock cannot be acquired, an IOError will be raised and the exception will have an errno attribute set to EACCES or EAGAIN (depending on the operating system -- for portability, check for either value). length is the number of bytes to lock, with the default meaning to lock to EOF. start is the byte offset, relative to whence, to that the lock starts. whence is as with fileobj.seek(), specifically: 0 - relative to the start of the file (SEEK_SET) 1 - relative to the current buffer position (SEEK_CUR) 2 - relative to the end of the file (SEEK_END)flock(fd, operation) Perform the lock operation op on file descriptor fd. See the Unix manual page for flock(2) for details. (On some systems, this function is emulated using fcntl().)ioctl(fd, op[, arg[, mutate_flag]]) Perform the operation op on file descriptor fd. The values used for op are operating system dependent, and are available as constants in the fcntl or termios library modules, using the same names as used in the relevant C header files. The argument arg is optional, and defaults to 0; it may be an int or a buffer containing character data (most likely a string or an array). If the argument is a mutable buffer (such as an array) and if the mutate_flag argument (which is only allowed in this case) is true then the buffer is (in effect) passed to the operating system and changes made by the OS will be reflected in the contents of the buffer after the call has returned. The return value is the integer returned by the ioctl system call. If the argument is a mutable buffer and the mutable_flag argument is not passed or is false, the behavior is as if a string had been passed. This behavior will change in future releases of Python. If the argument is an immutable buffer (most likely a string) then a copy of the buffer is passed to the operating system and the return value is a string of the same length containing whatever the operating system put in the buffer. The length of the arg buffer in this case is not allowed to exceed 1024 bytes. If the arg given is an integer or if none is specified, the result value is an integer corresponding to the return value of the ioctl call in the C code.fcntl(fd, op, [arg]) Perform the operation op on file descriptor fd. The values used for op are operating system dependent, and are available as constants in the fcntl module, using the same names as used in the relevant C header files. The argument arg is optional, and defaults to 0; it may be an int or a string. If arg is given as a string, the return value of fcntl is a string of that length, containing the resulting value put in the arg buffer by the operating system. The length of the arg string is not allowed to exceed 1024 bytes. If the arg given is an integer or if none is specified, the result value is an integer corresponding to the return value of the fcntl call in the C code.0 ? `< 6  5 `1 fcntl.cpython-33m.so.debug# 7zXZִF!t/6]?Eh=ڊ2N1tT(n>?43$doZW ؛wL;d\RW)U DW$R/aùHSSeS&v&pRoLQM4>7|rmL4 v8=-0nW%Ijg5'RXX}kY EAe7YNw g\x6A`5m૴Y´o: )ΛzHS_!,pJö ӟI.<>0m^~ ׶7LpSuOqq8&~)r~EȶXi{G{pcG. ˘7>|gWE7#;17v? U^v:\9ەM ۊΦOeFM:{:4갻+|xE5z#Qsk'gYZ.shstrtab.note.gnu.build-id.gnu.hash.dynsym.dynstr.gnu.version.gnu.version_r.rela.dyn.rela.plt.init.text.fini.rodata.eh_frame_hdr.eh_frame.init_array.fini_array.jcr.data.rel.ro.dynamic.got.got.plt.data.bss.gnu_debuglink.gnu_debugdata $o<( 00`08oHEo``pTp^B@ @ (hh h c n< tLL z2XX((Lxx- -- -- -- -- -/ /@0 00 0` @@ @@@@ `@xC