NAME
qio - Quick I/O routines for reading files
SYNOPSIS
#include <inn/qio.h>
QIOSTATE *QIOopen(const char *name);
QIOSTATE *QIOfdopen(int fd);
void QIOclose(QIOSTATE *qp);
char *QIOread(QIOSTATE *qp);
int QIOfileno(QIOSTATE *qp);
size_t QIOlength(QIOSTATE *qp);
int QIOrewind(QIOSTATE *qp);
off_t QIOtell(QIOSTATE *qp);
bool QIOerror(QIOSTATE *qp);
bool QIOtoolong(QIOSTATE *qp);
DESCRIPTION
The routines described in this manual page are part of libinn(3). They
are used to provide quick read access to files; the QIO routines use
buffering adapted to the block size of the device, similar to stdio,
but with a more convenient syntax for reading newline-terminated lines.
QIO is short for "Quick I/O" (a bit of a misnomer, as QIO provides
read-only access to files only).
The QIOSTATE structure returned by QIOopen and QIOfdopen is the analog
to stdio’s FILE structure and should be treated as a black box by all
users of these routines. Only the above API should be used.
QIOopen opens the given file for reading. For regular files, if your
system provides that information and the size is reasonable, QIO will
use the block size of the underlying file system as its buffer size;
otherwise, it will default to a buffer of 8 KB. Returns a pointer to
use for subsequent calls, or NULL on error. QIOfdopen performs the
same operation except on an already-open file descriptor (fd must
designate a file open for reading).
QIOclose closes the open file and releases any resources used by the
QIOSTATE structure. The QIOSTATE pointer should not be used again
after it has been passed to this function.
QIOread reads the next newline-terminated line in the file and returns
a pointer to it, with the trailing newline replaced by nul. The
returned pointer is a pointer into a buffer in the QIOSTATE object and
therefore will remain valid until QIOclose is called on that object.
If EOF is reached, an error occurs, or if the line is longer than the
buffer size, NULL is returned instead. To distinguish between the
error cases, use QIOerror and QIOtoolong.
QIOfileno returns the descriptor of the open file.
QIOlength returns the length in bytes of the last line returned by
QIOread. Its return value is only defined after a successful call to
QIOread.
QIOrewind sets the read pointer back to the beginning of the file and
reads the first block of the file in anticipation of future reads. It
returns 0 if successful and -1 on error.
QIOtell returns the current value of the read pointer (the lseek(2)
offset at which the next line will start).
QIOerror returns true if there was an error in the last call to
QIOread, false otherwise. QIOtoolong returns true if there was an
error and the error was that the line was too long. If QIOread returns
NULL, these functions should be called to determine what happened. If
QIOread returned NULL and QIOerror is false, EOF was reached. Note
that if QIOtoolong returns true, the next call to QIOread will try to
read the remainder of the line and will likely return a partial line;
users of this library should in general treat long lines as fatal
errors.
EXAMPLES
This block of code opens /etc/motd and reads it a line at a time,
printing out each line preceded by its offset in the file.
QIOSTATE *qp;
off_t offset;
char *p;
qp = QIOopen("/etc/motd");
if (qp == NULL) {
perror("Open error");
exit(1);
}
for (p = QIOread(qp); p != NULL; p = QIOread(qp))
printf("%ld: %s\n", (unsigned long) QIOtell(qp), p);
if (QIOerror(qp)) {
perror("Read error");
exit(1);
}
QIOclose(qp);
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. Updated by
Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>.
$Id: qio.pod 8517 2009-06-17 17:49:36Z iulius $