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Full Discussion: seekdir()? what does it do?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers seekdir()? what does it do? Post 302490064 by Perderabo on Sunday 23rd of January 2011 07:58:53 PM
Old 01-23-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by l flipboi l
I wanted to know what seekdir does, because I'm trying to write a program that imitates cp copying a filename to a directory.
You're barking up the wrong tree. chdir() to destination directory, creat() output file, write() to output file. There's more to it, but this at least has you barking up the right tree.
 
CREAT(2)							System Calls Manual							  CREAT(2)

NAME
creat - create a new file SYNOPSIS
creat(name, mode) char *name; DESCRIPTION
Creat creates a new file or prepares to rewrite an existing file called name, given as the address of a null-terminated string. If the file did not exist, it is given mode mode, as modified by the process's mode mask (see umask(2)). Also see chmod(2) for the construction of the mode argument. If the file did exist, its mode and owner remain unchanged but it is truncated to 0 length. The file is also opened for writing, and its file descriptor is returned. The mode given is arbitrary; it need not allow writing. This feature is used by programs which deal with temporary files of fixed names. The creation is done with a mode that forbids writing. Then if a second instance of the program attempts a creat, an error is returned and the program knows that the name is unusable for the moment. SEE ALSO
write(2), close(2), chmod(2), umask (2) DIAGNOSTICS
The value -1 is returned if: a needed directory is not searchable; the file does not exist and the directory in which it is to be created is not writable; the file does exist and is unwritable; the file is a directory; there are already too many files open. ASSEMBLER
(creat = 8.) sys creat; name; mode (file descriptor in r0) CREAT(2)
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