123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375 |
- .TH BIO 2
- .SH NAME
- Bopen, Bfdopen, 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 <u.h>
- .br
- .B #include <libc.h>
- .br
- .B #include <bio.h>
- .PP
- .B
- Biobuf* Bopen(char *file, int mode)
- .PP
- .B
- Biobuf* Bfdopen(int fd, 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 Bfdopen
- allocates a buffer for the already-open file descriptor
- .I fd
- for mode
- .B OREAD
- or
- .BR OWRITE .
- It calls
- .IR malloc (2)
- to allocate the 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
- and returns
- .IR Bflush 's
- return value.
- 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, thus the returned string probably won't be NUL-terminated.
- .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
- 21 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 the number of bytes written.
- .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
- Only the low byte of
- .IR Brdstr 's
- .I delim
- is examined, so
- .I delim
- cannot be an arbitrary rune.
- .PP
- The data returned by
- .I Brdline
- may be overwritten by calls to any other
- .I bio
- routine on the same
- .IR bp.
|