man(1) Manual page archive

 SYS-READ(2) SYS-READ(2)
 NAME
 read, write, pread, pwrite, stream - read or write file
 SYNOPSIS
 include "sys.m";
 sys := load Sys Sys->PATH;
 read: fn(fd: ref FD, buf: array of byte, nbytes: int): int;
 readn: fn(fd: ref FD, buf: array of byte, nbytes: int): int;
 write: fn(fd: ref FD, buf: array of byte, nbytes: int): int;
 pread: fn(fd: ref FD, buf: array of byte, nbytes: int,
 offset: big): int;
 pwrite: fn(fd: ref FD, buf: array of byte, nbytes: int,
 offset: big): int;
 stream: fn(src, dst: ref FD, bufsiz: int): int;
 DESCRIPTION
 Read reads nbytes bytes of data from the offset in the file
 associated with fd into memory at buf. The file offset is
 advanced by the number of bytes read. It is not guaranteed
 that all nbytes bytes will be read; for example if the file
 refers to the console, at most one line will be returned.
 In any event the number of bytes read is returned. A return
 value of 0 is conventionally interpreted as end of file.
 Readn continues to read from fd sequentially into buf, until
 nbytes have been read, or read returns a non-positive count.
 Write writes nbytes bytes of data starting at buf to the
 file associated with fd at the file offset. The offset is
 advanced by the number of bytes written. The number of
 bytes actually written is returned. It should be regarded
 as an error if this is not the same as requested.
 Pread and pwrite take an explicit file offset as a parame-
 ter, leaving fd's current offset untouched; they are other-
 wise identical in behaviour to read and write. They are
 particulary useful when several processes must access the
 same fd concurrently and it is inconvenient or undesirable
 to synchronise their activity to avoid interference.
 Stream continually reads data from src, using a buffer of
 bufsiz bytes, and writes the data to dst. It copies data
 until a read fails (returning zero bytes or an error) or a
 write fails. Stream returns the number of bytes actually
 copied. The implementation may be more efficient than a
 read/write loop in the application, but is otherwise
 equivalent to calling read and write directly.
 SYS-READ(2) SYS-READ(2)
 SEE ALSO
 bufio(2), sys-intro(2), sys-dup(2), sys-open(2), read(5)

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /