Prev Next

FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME info  Overview  Group

The FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME DeviceIoControl operation locks a volume. A locked volume can be accessed only through handles to the file object (*hDevice) that locks the volume.

dwIoControlCode = FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME;   // operation code 

lpInBuffer = NULL; // pointer to input buffer; not used; must be NULL 

nInBufferSize = 0; // size of input buffer; not used; must be zero 

lpOutBuffer ;      // pointer to output buffer; not used; must be NULL 

nOutBufferSize ;   // size of output buffer; not used; must be zero 

lpBytesReturned ;  // pointer to DWORD used by DeviceIoControl function 

 

Parameters

lpInBuffer
Points to an input buffer. Not used with this operation. Set to NULL.
nInBufferSize
Specifies the size, in bytes, of the buffer pointed to by lpInBuffer. Not used with this operation. Set to zero.
lpOutBuffer
Points to an output buffer. Not used with this operation. Set to NULL.
nOutBufferSize
Specifies the size, in bytes, of the buffer pointed to by lpOutBuffer. Not used with this operation. Set to zero.
lpBytesReturned
Pointer to a DWORD. This value cannot be NULL. Although the FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME operation produces no output data and lpOutBuffer should be NULL, the DeviceIoControl function uses the variable pointed to by lpBytesReturned. After the operation, the value of this variable is without meaning.

Return Values

If the operation succeeds, DeviceIoControl returns a nonzero value.

If the operation fails, DeviceIoControl returns zero. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.

Remarks

The hDevice handle passed to DeviceIoControl must be a handle to a volume, opened for direct access. An application can obtain such a handle by calling CreateFile with lpFileName set to a string that looks like this:

\\.\X:

 

where X is a hard-drive partition letter, floppy disk drive, or CD-ROM drive. The application must also specify the FILE_SHARE_READ and FILE_SHARE_WRITE flags in the dwShareMode parameter of CreateFile.

The FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME operation fails if there are any open files on the volume. Conversely, success of this operation indicates there are no open files.

The operation is useful for applications that need exclusive access to a volume for a period of time¾for example, disk utility programs.

A locked volume remains locked until one of the following occurs:

The system flushes all cached data to the volume before locking it. For example, any data held in a lazy-write cache is written to the volume.

See Also

CloseHandle, CreateFile, DeviceIoControl, FSCTL_UNLOCK_VOLUME

Questions: