.TH BIO 2 .SH NAME Bopen, Binit, Binits, Brdline, Brdstr, Bgetc, Bgetrune, Bgetd, Bungetc, Bungetrune, Bread, Bseek, Boffset, Bfildes, Blinelen, Bputc, Bputrune, Bprint, Bvprint, Bwrite, Bflush, Bterm, Bbuffered \- buffered input/output .SH SYNOPSIS .ta \w'Biobuf* 'u .B #include .br .B #include .br .B #include .PP .B Biobuf* Bopen(char *file, int mode) .PP .B int Binit(Biobuf *bp, int fd, int mode) .PP .B int Binits(Biobufhdr *bp, int fd, int mode, uchar *buf, int size) .PP .B int Bterm(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bprint(Biobufhdr *bp, char *format, ...) .PP .B int Bvprint(Biobufhdr *bp, char *format, va_list arglist); .PP .B void* Brdline(Biobufhdr *bp, int delim) .PP .B char* Brdstr(Biobufhdr *bp, int delim, int nulldelim) .PP .B int Blinelen(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B vlong Boffset(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bfildes(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bgetc(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B long Bgetrune(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bgetd(Biobufhdr *bp, double *d) .PP .B int Bungetc(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bungetrune(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B vlong Bseek(Biobufhdr *bp, vlong n, int type) .PP .B int Bputc(Biobufhdr *bp, int c) .PP .B int Bputrune(Biobufhdr *bp, long c) .PP .B long Bread(Biobufhdr *bp, void *addr, long nbytes) .PP .B long Bwrite(Biobufhdr *bp, void *addr, long nbytes) .PP .B int Bflush(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .B int Bbuffered(Biobufhdr *bp) .PP .SH DESCRIPTION These routines implement fast buffered I/O. I/O on different file descriptors is independent. .PP .I Bopen opens .I file for mode .B OREAD or creates for mode .BR OWRITE . It calls .IR malloc (2) to allocate a buffer. .PP .I Binit initializes a standard size buffer, type .IR Biobuf , with the open file descriptor passed in by the user. .I Binits initializes a non-standard size buffer, type .IR Biobufhdr , with the open file descriptor, buffer area, and buffer size passed in by the user. .I Biobuf and .I Biobufhdr are related by the declaration: .IP .EX typedef struct Biobuf Biobuf; struct Biobuf { Biobufhdr; uchar b[Bungetsize+Bsize]; }; .EE .PP Arguments of types pointer to Biobuf and pointer to Biobufhdr can be used interchangeably in the following routines. .PP .IR Bopen , .IR Binit , or .I Binits should be called before any of the other routines on that buffer. .I Bfildes returns the integer file descriptor of the associated open file. .PP .I Bterm flushes the buffer for .IR bp . If the buffer was allocated by .IR Bopen , the buffer is .I freed and the file is closed. .PP .I Brdline reads a string from the file associated with .I bp up to and including the first .I delim character. The delimiter character at the end of the line is not altered. .I Brdline returns a pointer to the start of the line or .L 0 on end-of-file or read error. .I Blinelen returns the length (including the delimiter) of the most recent string returned by .IR Brdline . .PP .I Brdstr returns a .IR malloc (2)-allocated buffer containing the next line of input delimited by .IR delim , terminated by a NUL (0) byte. Unlike .IR Brdline , which returns when its buffer is full even if no delimiter has been found, .I Brdstr will return an arbitrarily long line in a single call. If .I nulldelim is set, the terminal delimiter will be overwritten with a NUL. After a successful call to .IR Brdstr , the return value of .I Blinelen will be the length of the returned buffer, excluding the NUL. .PP .I Bgetc returns the next character from .IR bp , or a negative value at end of file. .I Bungetc may be called immediately after .I Bgetc to allow the same character to be reread. .PP .I Bgetrune calls .I Bgetc to read the bytes of the next .SM UTF sequence in the input stream and returns the value of the rune represented by the sequence. It returns a negative value at end of file. .I Bungetrune may be called immediately after .I Bgetrune to allow the same .SM UTF sequence to be reread as either bytes or a rune. .I Bungetc and .I Bungetrune may back up a maximum of five bytes. .PP .I Bgetd uses .I charstod (see .IR atof (2)) and .I Bgetc to read the formatted floating-point number in the input stream, skipping initial blanks and tabs. The value is stored in .BR *d. .PP .I Bread reads .I nbytes of data from .I bp into memory starting at .IR addr . The number of bytes read is returned on success and a negative value is returned if a read error occurred. .PP .I Bseek applies .IR seek (2) to .IR bp . It returns the new file offset. .I Boffset returns the file offset of the next character to be processed. .PP .I Bputc outputs the low order 8 bits of .I c on .IR bp . If this causes a .IR write to occur and there is an error, a negative value is returned. Otherwise, a zero is returned. .PP .I Bputrune calls .I Bputc to output the low order 16 bits of .I c as a rune in .SM UTF format on the output stream. .PP .I Bprint is a buffered interface to .IR print (2). If this causes a .IR write to occur and there is an error, a negative value .RB ( Beof ) is returned. Otherwise, .I Bprint returns zero. .I Bvprint does the same except it takes as argument a .B va_list parameter, so it can be called within a variadic function. .PP .I Bwrite outputs .I nbytes of data starting at .I addr to .IR bp . If this causes a .IR write to occur and there is an error, a negative value is returned. Otherwise, the number of bytes written is returned. .PP .I Bflush causes any buffered output associated with .I bp to be written. The return is as for .IR Bputc . .I Bflush is called on exit for every buffer still open for writing. .PP .I Bbuffered returns the number of bytes in the buffer. When reading, this is the number of bytes still available from the last read on the file; when writing, it is the number of bytes ready to be written. .SH SOURCE .B /sys/src/libbio .SH SEE ALSO .IR open (2), .IR print (2), .IR exits (2), .IR utf (6), .SH DIAGNOSTICS .I Bio routines that return integers yield .B Beof if .I bp is not the descriptor of an open file. .I Bopen returns zero if the file cannot be opened in the given mode. All routines set .I errstr on error. .SH BUGS .I Brdline returns an error on strings longer than the buffer associated with the file and also if the end-of-file is encountered before a delimiter. .I Blinelen will tell how many characters are available in these cases. In the case of a true end-of-file, .I Blinelen will return zero. At the cost of allocating a buffer, .I Brdstr sidesteps these issues. .PP The data returned by .I Brdline may be overwritten by calls to any other .I bio routine on the same .IR bp.