The first step in mapping a file is to open the file by calling the CreateFile function. To ensure that other processes cannot write to the portion of the file that is mapped, you should open the file with exclusive access. In addition, the file handle should remain open until the process no longer needs the file-mapping object. An easy way to obtain exclusive access is to specify zero in the fdwShareMode parameter of CreateFile. The handle returned by CreateFile is used by the CreateFileMapping function to create a file-mapping object.
The CreateFileMapping function returns a handle to the file-mapping object. This handle will be used when creating a file view so that you can access the shared memory. When you call CreateFileMapping, you specify an object name, the number of bytes to be mapped from the file, and the read/write permission for the mapped memory. The first process that calls CreateFileMapping creates the file-mapping object. Processes calling CreateFileMapping for an existing object receive a handle to the existing object. You can tell whether or not a successful call to CreateFileMapping created or opened the file-mapping object by calling the GetLastError function. GetLastError returns NO_ERROR to the creating process and ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS to subsequent processes.
The CreateFileMapping function fails if the access flags conflict with those specified when the CreateFile function opened the file. For example, to read and write to the file:
The size of the file-mapping object is independent of the size of the file being mapped. However, if the file-mapping object is larger than the file, the system expands the file before CreateFileMapping returns. If the file-mapping object is smaller than the file, the system maps only the specified number of bytes from the file.
The dwMaximumSizeHigh and dwMaximumSizeLow parameters of CreateFileMapping allow you to specify the number of bytes to be mapped from the file.
Windows 95: The dwMaximumSizeHigh parameter is not used because it is not supported by the 32-bit file system. The value should be zero.
When you do not want the size of the file to change (for example, when mapping read-only files), call CreateFileMapping and specify zero for both dwMaximumSizeHigh and dwMaximumSizeLow. Doing this creates a file-mapping object exactly the same size as the file. Otherwise, you must calculate or estimate the size of the finished file because file-mapping objects are static in size; once created, their size cannot increase or decrease.
Windows NT: The size of a file-mapping object backed by a named file is limited by disk space. The size of a file view is limited to the largest available contiguous block of unreserved virtual memory. This is at most 2 GB minus the virtual memory already reserved by the process.
Windows 95: The size of a file-mapping object backed by a named file is also limited by disk space. The size of a file view is limited to the largest available contiguous block of unreserved virtual memory in the shared address space. This is at most 1 GB minus the virtual memory in use by other processes, such as 16-bit Windows-based applications or Win32-based applications using file mapping.