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Compaq C

Compaq C
Run-Time Library Reference Manual for OpenVMS Systems


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stat

Accesses information about the specified file.

Format

#include <stat.h>

int stat (const char *file_spec, struct stat *buffer); (ISO POSIX-1)

int stat (const char *file_spec, struct stat *buffer, ...); (DEC C EXTENSION)

Function Variants Compiling with the _DECC_V4_SOURCE and _VMS_V6_SOURCE feature-test macros defined enables a local-time-based entry point to this function that is equivalent to the behavior before OpenVMS Version 7.0.

Arguments

file_spec

A valid OpenVMS or UNIX style file specification (no wildcards). Read, write, or execute permission of the named file is not required, but you must be able to reach all directories listed in the file specification leading to the file. For more information about UNIX style file specifications, see Chapter 1.

buffer

A pointer to a structure of type stat_t that is defined in the <stat.h> header file.

The argument receives information about the particular file. The members of the structure pointed to by buffer are described as follows:
Member Type Definition
st_dev dev_t Pointer to the physical device name
st_ino[3] ino_t Three words to receive the file ID
st_mode mode_t File "mode" (prot, dir,...)
st_nlink nlink_t For UNIX system compatibility only
st_uid uid_t Owner user ID
st_gid gid_t Group member: from st_uid
st_rdev dev_t UNIX system compatibility -- always 0
st_size off_t File size, in bytes
st_atime time_t File access time; always the same as st_mtime
st_mtime time_t Last modification time
st_ctime time_t File creation time
st_fab_rfm char Record format
st_fab_rat char Record attributes
st_fab_fsz char Fixed header size
st_fab_mrs unsigned Record size

The types dev_t , ino_t , off_t , mode_t , nlink_t , uid_t , gid_t , and time_t , are defined in the <stat.h> header file. However, when compiling for compatibility (/DEFINE=_DECC_V4_SOURCE), only dev_t , ino_t , and off_t are defined.

As of OpenVMS Version 7.0, times are given in seconds since the Epoch (00:00:00 GMT, January 1, 1970).

The st_mode structure member is the status information mode defined in the <stat.h> header file. The st_mode bits are described as follows:
Bits Constant Definition
0170000 S_IFMT Type of file
0040000 S_IFDIR Directory
0020000 S_IFCHR Character special
0060000 S_IFBLK Block special
0100000 S_IFREG Regular
0030000 S_IFMPC Multiplexed char special
0070000 S_IFMPB Multiplexed block special
0004000 S_ISUID Set user ID on execution
0002000 S_ISGID Set group ID on execution
0001000 S_ISVTX Save swapped text even after use
0000400 S_IREAD Read permission, owner
0000200 S_IWRITE Write permission, owner
0000100 S_IEXEC Execute/search permission, owner

...

An optional default file-name string.

This is the only optional RMS keyword that can be specified for the stat function. See the description of the creat function for the full list of optional RMS keywords and their values.


Description

This function does not work on remote network files.

If the file is a record file, the st_size field includes carriage-control information. Consequently, the st_size value will not correspond to the number of characters that can be read from the file.

The physical device name string referred to by the st_dev member of the stat structure is overwritten by the next stat call.

Note (ALPHA ONLY)

On OpenVMS Alpha systems, the stat , fstat , utime , and utimes functions have been enhanced to take advantage of the new file-system support for POSIX-compliant file timestamps.

This support is available only on ODS-5 devices on OpenVMS Alpha systems beginning with a version of OpenVMS Alpha after Version 7.3.

Before this change, the stat and fstat functions were setting the values of the st_ctime, st_mtime, and st_atime fields based on the following file attributes:
st_ctime - ATR$C_CREDATE (file creation time)
st_mtime - ATR$C_REVDATE (file revision time)
st_atime - was always set to st_mtime because no support for file access time was available


Also, for the file-modification time, utime and utimes were modifying the ATR$C_REVDATE file attribute, and ignoring the file-access-time argument.

After the change, for a file on an ODS-5 device, the stat and fstat functions set the values of the st_ctime, st_mtime, and st_atime fields based on the following new file attributes:
st_ctime - ATR$C_ATTDATE (last attribute modification time)
st_mtime - ATR$C_MODDATE (last data modification time)
st_atime - ATR$C_ACCDATE (last access time)


If ATR$C_ACCDATE is zero, as on an ODS-2 device, the stat and fstat functions set st_atime to st_mtime.

For the file-modification time, the utime and utimes functions modify both the ATR$C_REVDATE and ATR$C_MODDATE file attributes. For the file-access time, these functions modify the ATR$C_ACCDATE file attribute. Setting the ATR$C_MODDATE and ATR$C_ACCDATE file attributes on an ODS-2 device has no effect.

For compatibility, the old behavior of stat , fstat , utime and utimes remains the default, regardless of the kind of device.

The new behavior must be explicitly enabled by defining the DECC$EFS_FILE_TIMESTAMPS logical name to "ENABLE" before invoking the application. Setting this logical does not affect the behavior of stat , fstat , utime and utimes for files on an ODS-2 device.

Return Values

0 Indicates success.
--1 Indicates an error other than a privilege violation; errno is set to indicate the error.
--2 Indicates a privilege violation.

strcasecmp

Does a case-insensitive comparison of two 7-bit ASCII strings.

Format

#include <strings.h>

int strcasecmp (const char *s1, const char *s2);


Arguments

s1

The first of two strings to compare.

s2

The second of two strings to compare.

Description

This function is case-insensitive. The returned lexicographic difference reflects a conversion to lowercase.

The strcasecmp function works for 7-bit ASCII compares only. Do not use this function for internationalized applications.


Return Values

n An integer value greater than, equal to, or less than 0 (zero), depending on whether the s1 string is greater than, equal to, or less than the s2 string.

strcat

Concatenates str_2, including the terminating null character, to the end of str_1.

Format

#include <string.h>

char *strcat (char *str_1, const char *str_2);

Function Variants This function also has variants named _strcat32 and _strcat64 for use with 32-bit and 64-bit pointer sizes, respectively. See Section 1.8 for more information on using pointer-size-specific functions.

Arguments

str_1, str_2

Pointers to null-terminated character strings.

Description

See also strncat in this section.

Return Value

x The address of the first argument, str_1, which is assumed to be large enough to hold the concatenated result.

Example


#include <string.h> 
#include <stdio.h> 
 
/* This program concatenates two strings using the strcat       */ 
/* function, and then manually compares the result of strcat    */ 
/* to the expected result.                                      */ 
 
#define S1LENGTH 10 
#define S2LENGTH 8 
 
main() 
{ 
    static char s1buf[S1LENGTH + S2LENGTH] = "abcmnexyz"; 
    static char s2buf[] = " orthis"; 
    static char test1[] = "abcmnexyz orthis"; 
 
    int i; 
    char *status; 
 
    /* Take static buffer s1buf, concatenate static buffer      */ 
    /* s2buf to it, and compare the answer in s1buf with the    */ 
    /* static answer in test1.                                  */ 
 
    status = strcat(s1buf, s2buf); 
    for (i = 0; i <= S1LENGTH + S2LENGTH - 2; i++) { 
        /* Check for correct returned string.   */ 
 
        if (test1[i] != s1buf[i]) 
            printf("error in strcat"); 
    } 
}                                         


strchr

Returns the address of the first occurrence of a given character in a null-terminated string. The terminating null character is considered to be part of the string.

Format

#include <string.h>

char *strchr (const char *str, int character);

Function Variants This function also has variants named _strchr32 and _strchr64 for use with 32-bit and 64-bit pointer sizes, respectively. See Section 1.8 for more information on using pointer-size-specific functions.

Arguments

str

A pointer to a null-terminated character string.

character

An object of type int .

Description

See also strrchr in this section.

Return Values

x The address of the first occurrence of the specified character.
NULL Indicates that the character does not occur in the string.

Example


#include <stdio.h> 
#include <string.h> 
 
main() 
{ 
 
    static char s1buf[] = "abcdefghijkl lkjihgfedcba"; 
 
    int i; 
 
    char *status; 
 
    /*  This program checks the strchr function by incrementally   */ 
    /*  going through a string that ascends to the middle and then */ 
    /*  descends towards the end.                                  */ 
 
    for (i = 0; s1buf[i] != '\0' && s1buf[i] != ' '; i++) { 
        status = strchr(s1buf, s1buf[i]); 
 
        /* Check for pointer to leftmost character - test 1. */ 
                                                                   
        if (status != &s1buf[i]) 
            printf("error in strchr"); 
    } 
} 


strcmp

Compares two ASCII character strings and returns a negative, 0, or positive integer, indicating that the ASCII values of the individual characters in the first string are less than, equal to, or greater than the values in the second string.

Format

#include <string.h>

int strcmp (const char *str_1, const char *str_2);


Arguments

str_1, str_2

Pointers to character strings.

Description

The strings are compared until a null character is encountered or until the strings differ.

Return Values

< 0 Indicates that str_1 is less than str_2.
= 0 Indicates that str_1 equals str_2.
> 0 Indicates that str_1 is greater than str_2.

strcoll

Compares two strings and returns an integer that indicates if the strings differ and how they differ. The function uses the collating information in the LC_COLLATE category of the current locale to determine how the comparison is performed.

Format

#include <string.h>

int strcoll (const char *s1, const char *s2);


Arguments

s1, s2

Pointers to character strings.

Description

This function, unlike strcmp , compares two strings in a locale-dependent manner. Because no value is reserved for error indication, the application must check for one by setting errno to 0 before the function call and testing it after the call.

See also the strxfrm function is this section.


Return Values

< 0 Indicates that s1 is less than s2.
= 0 Indicates that the strings are equal.
> 0 Indicates that s1 is greater than s2.

strcpy

Copies all of source, including the terminating null character, into dest.

Format

#include <string.h>

char *strcpy (char *dest, const char *source);

Function Variants This function also has variants named _strcpy32 and _strcpy64 for use with 32-bit and 64-bit pointer sizes, respectively. See Section 1.8 for more information on using pointer-size-specific functions.

Arguments

dest

Pointer to the destination character string.

source

Pointer to the source character string.

Description

This function copies source into dest, and stops after copying source's null character.

The behavior of this function is undefined if the area pointed to by dest overlaps the area pointed to by source.


Return Value

x The address of dest.

strcspn

Returns the length of the prefix of a string that consists entirely of characters not in a specified set of characters.

Format

#include <string.h>

size_t strcspn (const char *str, const char *charset);


Arguments

str

A pointer to a character string. If this character string is a null string, 0 is returned.

charset

A pointer to a character string containing the set of characters.

Description

This function scans the characters in the string, stops when it encounters a character found in charset, and returns the length of the string's initial segment formed by characters not found in charset.

If none of the characters match in the character strings pointed to by str and charset, strcspn returns the length of string.


Return Value

x The length of the segment.

strdup

Finds and points to a duplicate string.

Format

#include <string.h>

char *strdup (const char *s1);

Function Variants This function also has variants named _strdup32 and _strdup64 for use with 32-bit and 64-bit pointer sizes, respectively. See Section 1.8 for more information on using pointer-size-specific functions.

Arguments

s1

The first of two strings to compare.

Description

This function returns a pointer to a string that is an exact duplicate of the string pointed to by s1. The malloc function is used to allocate space for the new string. The strdup function is provided for compatibility with existing systems.

Return Values

x A pointer to the resulting string.
NULL Indicates an error.

strerror

Maps the error number in error_code to a locale-dependent error message string.

Format

#include <string.h>

char *strerror (int error_code); (ANSI C)

char *strerror (int error_code[, int vms_error_code]); (DEC C EXTENSION)


Arguments

error_code

An error code.

vms_error_code

An OpenVMS error code.

Description

This function uses the error number in error_code to retrieve the appropriate locale-dependent error message. The contents of the error message strings are determined by the LC_MESSAGES category of the program's current locale.

When a program is not compiled with any standards-related feature-test macros (see Section 1.5.1), strerror has a second argument (vms_error_code), which is used in the following way:

See the strerror example.

Use of the second argument is not included in the ANSI C definition of strerror and is, therefore, not portable.

Because no return value is reserved to indicate an error, applications should set the value of errno to 0, call strerror , and then test the value of errno ; a nonzero value indicates an error condition.


Return Values

x A pointer to a buffer containing the appropriate error message. Do not modify this buffer in your programs. Moreover, calls to the strerror function may overwrite this buffer with a new message.

Example


#include <stdio.h> 
#include <errno.h> 
#include <string.h> 
#include <stdlib.h> 
#include <ssdef.h> 
 
main() 
{ 
    puts(strerror(EVMSERR)); 
    errno = EVMSERR; 
    vaxc$errno = SS$_LINKEXIT; 
    puts(strerror(errno)); 
    puts(strerror(EVMSERR, SS$_ABORT)); 
    exit(1); 
} 

Running this example produces the following output:


non-translatable vms error code: <none> 
network partner exited 
abort 


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