funopen
, fropen
, fwopen
—open a stream with custom callbacksSynopsis
#include <stdio.h> FILE *funopen(const void *cookie, int (*readfn) (void *cookie, char *buf, int n), int (*writefn) (void *cookie, const char *buf, int n), fpos_t (*seekfn) (void *cookie, fpos_t off, int whence), int (*closefn) (void *cookie)); FILE *fropen(const void *cookie, int (*readfn) (void *cookie, char *buf, int n)); FILE *fwopen(const void *cookie, int (*writefn) (void *cookie, const char *buf, int n));
Description
funopen
creates a FILE
stream where I/O is performed using
custom callbacks. At least one of readfn and writefn must be
provided, which determines whether the stream behaves with mode <"r">,
<"w">, or <"r+">.
readfn should return -1 on failure, or else the number of bytes
read (0 on EOF). It is similar to read
, except that <int> rather
than <size_t> bounds a transaction size, and cookie will be passed
as the first argument. A NULL readfn makes attempts to read the
stream fail.
writefn should return -1 on failure, or else the number of bytes
written. It is similar to write
, except that <int> rather than
<size_t> bounds a transaction size, and cookie will be passed as
the first argument. A NULL writefn makes attempts to write the
stream fail.
seekfn should return (fpos_t)-1 on failure, or else the current
file position. It is similar to lseek
, except that cookie
will be passed as the first argument. A NULL seekfn makes the
stream behave similarly to a pipe in relation to stdio functions that
require positioning. This implementation assumes fpos_t and off_t are
the same type.
closefn should return -1 on failure, or 0 on success. It is
similar to close
, except that cookie will be passed as the
first argument. A NULL closefn merely flushes all data then lets
fclose
succeed. A failed close will still invalidate the stream.
Read and write I/O functions are allowed to change the underlying
buffer on fully buffered or line buffered streams by calling
setvbuf
. They are also not required to completely fill or empty
the buffer. They are not, however, allowed to change streams from
unbuffered to buffered or to change the state of the line buffering
flag. They must also be prepared to have read or write calls occur on
buffers other than the one most recently specified.
The functions fropen
and fwopen
are convenience macros around
funopen
that only use the specified callback.
Returns
The return value is an open FILE pointer on success. On error,
NULL
is returned, and errno
will be set to EINVAL if a
function pointer is missing, ENOMEM if the stream cannot be created,
or EMFILE if too many streams are already open.
Portability
This function is a newlib extension, copying the prototype from BSD.
It is not portable. See also the fopencookie
interface from Linux.
Supporting OS subroutines required: sbrk
.