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diff --git a/man-pages-posix-2003/man3p/readdir.3p b/man-pages-posix-2003/man3p/readdir.3p new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5d83fcf --- /dev/null +++ b/man-pages-posix-2003/man3p/readdir.3p @@ -0,0 +1,286 @@ +.\" Copyright (c) 2001-2003 The Open Group, All Rights Reserved +.TH "READDIR" 3P 2003 "IEEE/The Open Group" "POSIX Programmer's Manual" +.\" readdir +.SH PROLOG +This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. +The Linux implementation of this interface may differ (consult +the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), +or the interface may not be implemented on Linux. +.SH NAME +readdir, readdir_r \- read a directory +.SH SYNOPSIS +.LP +\fB#include <dirent.h> +.br +.sp +struct dirent *readdir(DIR *\fP\fIdirp\fP\fB); +.br +\fP +.LP +\fBint readdir_r(DIR *restrict\fP \fIdirp\fP\fB, struct dirent *restrict\fP +\fIentry\fP\fB, +.br +\ \ \ \ \ \ struct dirent **restrict\fP \fIresult\fP\fB); \fP +\fB +.br +\fP +.SH DESCRIPTION +.LP +The type \fBDIR\fP, which is defined in the \fI<dirent.h>\fP header, +represents +a \fIdirectory stream\fP, which is an ordered sequence of all the +directory entries in a particular directory. Directory entries +represent files; files may be removed from a directory or added to +a directory asynchronously to the operation of +\fIreaddir\fP(). +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function shall return a pointer to a structure +representing the directory entry at the current position in +the directory stream specified by the argument \fIdirp\fP, and position +the directory stream at the next entry. It shall return a +null pointer upon reaching the end of the directory stream. The structure +\fBdirent\fP defined in the \fI<dirent.h>\fP header describes a directory +entry. +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function shall not return directory entries containing +empty names. If entries for dot or dot-dot exist, +one entry shall be returned for dot and one entry shall be returned +for dot-dot; otherwise, they shall not be returned. +.LP +The pointer returned by \fIreaddir\fP() points to data which may be +overwritten by another call to \fIreaddir\fP() on the same +directory stream. This data is not overwritten by another call to +\fIreaddir\fP() on a different directory stream. +.LP +If a file is removed from or added to the directory after the most +recent call to \fIopendir\fP() or \fIrewinddir\fP(), whether a +subsequent call to \fIreaddir\fP() returns an entry for that file +is unspecified. +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function may buffer several directory entries +per actual read operation; \fIreaddir\fP() shall mark for +update the \fIst_atime\fP field of the directory each time the directory +is actually read. +.LP +After a call to \fIfork\fP(), either the parent or child (but not +both) may continue +processing the directory stream using \fIreaddir\fP(), \fIrewinddir\fP(), +\ or \fIseekdir\fP(). If both the +parent and child processes use these functions, the result is undefined. +.LP +If the entry names a symbolic link, the value of the \fId_ino\fP member +is unspecified. +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function need not be reentrant. A function that +is not required to be reentrant is not required to be +thread-safe. +.LP +The \fIreaddir_r\fP() function shall initialize the \fBdirent\fP structure +referenced by \fIentry\fP to represent the directory +entry at the current position in the directory stream referred to +by \fIdirp\fP, store a pointer to this structure at the location +referenced by \fIresult\fP, and position the directory stream at the +next entry. +.LP +The storage pointed to by \fIentry\fP shall be large enough for a +\fBdirent\fP with an array of \fBchar\fP \fId_name\fP +members containing at least {NAME_MAX}+1 elements. +.LP +Upon successful return, the pointer returned at *\fIresult\fP shall +have the same value as the argument \fIentry\fP. Upon +reaching the end of the directory stream, this pointer shall have +the value NULL. +.LP +The \fIreaddir_r\fP() function shall not return directory entries +containing empty names. +.LP +If a file is removed from or added to the directory after the most +recent call to \fIopendir\fP() or \fIrewinddir\fP(), whether a +subsequent call to \fIreaddir_r\fP() returns an entry for that file +is unspecified. +.LP +The \fIreaddir_r\fP() function may buffer several directory entries +per actual read operation; the \fIreaddir_r\fP() function +shall mark for update the \fIst_atime\fP field of the directory each +time the directory is actually read. +.LP +Applications wishing to check for error situations should set \fIerrno\fP +to 0 before calling \fIreaddir\fP(). If \fIerrno\fP +is set to non-zero on return, an error occurred. +.SH RETURN VALUE +.LP +Upon successful completion, \fIreaddir\fP() shall return a pointer +to an object of type \fBstruct dirent\fP. When an error is +encountered, a null pointer shall be returned and \fIerrno\fP shall +be set to indicate the error. When the end of the directory is +encountered, a null pointer shall be returned and \fIerrno\fP is not +changed. +.LP +If successful, the \fIreaddir_r\fP() function shall return zero; otherwise, +an error number shall be returned to indicate the +error. +.SH ERRORS +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function shall fail if: +.TP 7 +.B EOVERFLOW +One of the values in the structure to be returned cannot be represented +correctly. +.sp +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function may fail if: +.TP 7 +.B EBADF +The \fIdirp\fP argument does not refer to an open directory stream. +.TP 7 +.B ENOENT +The current position of the directory stream is invalid. +.sp +.LP +The \fIreaddir_r\fP() function may fail if: +.TP 7 +.B EBADF +The \fIdirp\fP argument does not refer to an open directory stream. +.sp +.LP +\fIThe following sections are informative.\fP +.SH EXAMPLES +.LP +The following sample program searches the current directory for each +of the arguments supplied on the command line. +.sp +.RS +.nf + +\fB#include <dirent.h> +#include <errno.h> +#include <stdio.h> +#include <string.h> +.sp + +static void lookup(const char *arg) +{ + DIR *dirp; + struct dirent *dp; +.sp + + if ((dirp = opendir(".")) == NULL) { + perror("couldn't open '.'"); + return; + } +.sp + + do { + errno = 0; + if ((dp = readdir(dirp)) != NULL) { + if (strcmp(dp->d_name, arg) != 0) + continue; +.sp + + (void) printf("found %s\\n", arg); + (void) closedir(dirp); + return; +.sp + + } + } while (dp != NULL); +.sp + + if (errno != 0) + perror("error reading directory"); + else + (void) printf("failed to find %s\\n", arg); + (void) closedir(dirp); + return; +} +.sp + +int main(int argc, char *argv[]) +{ + int i; + for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) + lookup(arvg[i]); + return (0); +} +\fP +.fi +.RE +.SH APPLICATION USAGE +.LP +The \fIreaddir\fP() function should be used in conjunction with \fIopendir\fP(), +\fIclosedir\fP(), and \fIrewinddir\fP() to +examine the contents of the directory. +.LP +The \fIreaddir_r\fP() function is thread-safe and shall return values +in a user-supplied buffer instead of possibly using a +static data area that may be overwritten by each call. +.SH RATIONALE +.LP +The returned value of \fIreaddir\fP() merely \fIrepresents\fP a directory +entry. No equivalence should be inferred. +.LP +Historical implementations of \fIreaddir\fP() obtain multiple directory +entries on a single read operation, which permits +subsequent \fIreaddir\fP() operations to operate from the buffered +information. Any wording that required each successful +\fIreaddir\fP() operation to mark the directory \fIst_atime\fP field +for update would disallow such historical +performance-oriented implementations. +.LP +Since \fIreaddir\fP() returns NULL when it detects an error and when +the end of the directory is encountered, an application +that needs to tell the difference must set \fIerrno\fP to zero before +the call and check it if NULL is returned. Since the +function must not change \fIerrno\fP in the second case and must set +it to a non-zero value in the first case, a zero \fIerrno\fP +after a call returning NULL indicates end-of-directory; otherwise, +an error. +.LP +Routines to deal with this problem more directly were proposed: +.sp +.RS +.nf + +\fBint derror (\fP\fIdirp\fP\fB) +DIR *\fP\fIdirp\fP\fB; +.sp + +void clearderr (\fP\fIdirp\fP\fB) +DIR *\fP\fIdirp\fP\fB; +\fP +.fi +.RE +.LP +The first would indicate whether an error had occurred, and the second +would clear the error indication. The simpler method +involving \fIerrno\fP was adopted instead by requiring that \fIreaddir\fP() +not change \fIerrno\fP when end-of-directory is +encountered. +.LP +An error or signal indicating that a directory has changed while open +was considered but rejected. +.LP +The thread-safe version of the directory reading function returns +values in a user-supplied buffer instead of possibly using a +static data area that may be overwritten by each call. Either the +{NAME_MAX} compile-time constant or the corresponding \fIpathconf\fP() +option can be used to determine the maximum sizes of returned pathnames. +.SH FUTURE DIRECTIONS +.LP +None. +.SH SEE ALSO +.LP +\fIclosedir\fP(), \fIlstat\fP(), \fIopendir\fP(), \fIrewinddir\fP(), +\fIsymlink\fP(), +the Base Definitions volume of IEEE\ Std\ 1003.1-2001, \fI<dirent.h>\fP, +\fI<sys/types.h>\fP +.SH COPYRIGHT +Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form +from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology +-- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base +Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of +Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the +event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and +The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard +is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at +http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html . |