stdio(3head) [opensolaris man page]
stdio.h(3HEAD) Headers stdio.h(3HEAD) NAME
stdio.h, stdio - standard buffered input/output SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> DESCRIPTION
The <stdio.h> header defines the following macros as positive integer constant expressions: BUFSIZ size of <stdio.h> buffers _IOFBF input/output fully buffered _IOLBF input/output line buffered _IONBF input/output unbuffered L_ctermid maximum size of character array to hold ctermid() output L_tmpnam maximum size of character array to hold tmpnam() output SEEK_CUR seek relative to current position SEEK_END seek relative to end-of-file SEEK_SET seek relative to start-of-file The following macros are defined as positive integer constant expressions that denote implementation limits: {FILENAME_MAX} Maximum size in bytes of the longest filename string that the implementation guarantees can be opened. {FOPEN_MAX} Number of streams that the implementation guarantees can be open simultaneously. The value is at least eight. {TMP_MAX} Minimum number of unique filenames generated by tmpnam(). Maximum number of times an application can call tmpnam() reli- ably. The value of {TMP_MAX} is at least 25. On XSI-conformant systems, the value of {TMP_MAX} is at least 10000. The following macro name is defined as a negative integer constant expression: EOF end-of-file return value The following macro name is defined as a null pointer constant: NULL null pointer The following macro name is defined as a string constant: P_tmpdir default directory prefix for tempnam() The following is defined as expressions of type "pointer to FILE" point to the FILE objects associated, respectively, with the standard error, input, and output streams: stderr standard error output stream stdin standard input stream stdout standard output stream The following data types are defined through typedef: FILE structure containing information about a file fpos_t non-array type containing all information needed to specify uniquely every position within a file va_list as described in <stdarg.h> size_t as described in <stddef.h> ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
rename(2), ctermid(3C), fclose(3C), fdopen(3C), fflush(3C), fgetc(3C), fgetpos(3C), fgets(3C), flockfile(3C), fopen(3C), fputc(3C), fputs(3C), fputwc(3C), fread(3C), freopen(3C), fseek(3C), fsetpos(3C), ftell(3C), fwrite(3C), getwchar(3C), getopt(3C), perror(3C), popen(3C), printf(3C), remove(3C), rewind(3C), scanf(3C), setbuf(3C), stdio(3C), system(3C), tmpfile(3C), tmpnam(3C), ungetc(3C), vprintf(3C), attributes(5), standards(5) SunOS 5.11 10 Sep 2004 stdio.h(3HEAD)
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setbuf(3s) setbuf(3s) Name setbuf, setbuffer, setlinebuf, setvbuf - assign buffering to a stream Syntax #include <stdio.h> void setbuf(stream, buf) FILE *stream; char *buf; void setbuffer(stream, buf, size) FILE *stream; char *buf; int size; void setlinebuf(stream) FILE *stream; int setvbuf(stream, buf, type, size) FILE *stream; char *buf; int type; size_t size; Description The three types of buffering available are unbuffered, block buffered, and line buffered. When an output stream is unbuffered, information appears on the destination file or terminal as soon as written; when it is block buffered many characters are saved up and written as a block; when it is line buffered characters are saved up until a new line is encountered or input is read from stdin. The routine may be used to force the block out early. Normally all files are block buffered. For further information, see A buffer is obtained from upon the first or on the file. If the standard stream stdout refers to a terminal it is line buffered. The standard stream stderr is always unbuffered. The routine is used after a stream has been opened but before it is read or written. The character array buf is used instead of an auto- matically allocated buffer. If buf is the constant pointer NULL, input/output will be completely unbuffered. A manifest constant BUFSIZ tells how big an array is needed: char buf[BUFSIZ]; The routine, an alternate form of is used after a stream has been opened but before it is read or written. The character array buf whose size is determined by the size argument is used instead of an automatically allocated buffer. If buf is the constant pointer NULL, input/output will be completely unbuffered. The routine is used to change stdout or stderr from block buffered or unbuffered to line buffered. Unlike and it can be used at any time that the file descriptor is active. The routine may be used after a stream has been opened but before it is read or written. Type determines how stream will be buffered. Legal values for type, defined in stdio.h are: _IOFBF causes input/output to be fully buffered. _IOLBF causes output to be line buffered; the buffer will be flushed when a new line is written, the buffer is full, or input is requested. _IONBF causes input/output to be completely unbuffered. If buf is not the NULL pointer, the array it points to will be used for buffering, instead of an automatically allocated buffer. The size specifies the size of the buffer to be used. The constant BUFSIZ in <stdio.h> is suggested as a good buffer size. If input/output is unbuffered, buf and size are ignored. By default, output to a terminal is line buffered and all other input/output is fully buffered. A file can be changed from unbuffered or line buffered to block buffered by using For further information, see A file can be changed from block buffered or line buffered to unbuffered by using followed by with a buffer argument of NULL. Restrictions The standard error stream should be line buffered by default. The and functions are not portable to non 4.2 BSD versions of UNIX. See Also malloc(3), fclose(3s), fopen(3s), fread(3s), getc(3s), printf(3s), putc(3s), puts(3s). setbuf(3s)