By: Baski in C Tutorials on 2007年09月26日 [フレーム]
Input and output are normally sequential: each read or write takes place at a position in the file right after the previous one. When necessary, however, a file can be read or written in any arbitrary order. The system call lseek provides a way to move around in a file without reading or writing any data:long lseek(int fd, long offset, int origin);sets the current position in the file whose descriptor is fd to offset, which is taken relative to the location specified by origin. Subsequent reading or writing will begin at that position. origin can be 0, 1, or 2 to specify that offset is to be measured from the beginning, from the current position, or from the end of the file respectively. For example, to append to a file (the redirection >> in the UNIX shell, or "a" for fopen), seek to the end before writing:
lseek(fd, 0L, 2);To get back to the beginning (``rewind''),
lseek(fd, 0L, 0);Notice the 0L argument; it could also be written as (long) 0 or just as 0 if lseek is properly declared.
With lseek, it is possible to treat files more or less like arrays, at the price of slower access. For example, the following function reads any number of bytes from any arbitrary place in a file. It returns the number read, or -1 on error.
#include "syscalls.h"
/*get: read n bytes from position pos */
int get(int fd, long pos, char *buf, int n)
{
if (lseek(fd, pos, 0) >= 0) /* get to pos */
return read(fd, buf, n);
else
return -1;
}
The return value from lseek is a long that gives the new position in
the file, or -1 if an error occurs. The standard library function fseek
is similar to lseek except that the first argument is a FILE *
and the return is non-zero if an error occurred. This policy contains information about your privacy. By posting, you are declaring that you understand this policy:
This policy is subject to change at any time and without notice.
These terms and conditions contain rules about posting comments. By submitting a comment, you are declaring that you agree with these rules:
Failure to comply with these rules may result in being banned from submitting further comments.
These terms and conditions are subject to change at any time and without notice.
Most Viewed Articles (in C )
Passing double value to a function in C
Sum of the elements of an array in C
Printing a simple histogram in C
Simple arithmetic calculations in C
Passing pointer to a function in C
Find square and square root for a given number in C
Using memset(), memcpy(), and memmove() in C
Latest Articles (in C)
Simple arithmetic calculations in C
Find square and square root for a given number in C
Printing a simple histogram in C
Sum of the elements of an array in C
Passing pointer to a function in C
Passing double value to a function in C
Infix to Prefix And Postfix in C
Sum of the elements of an array in C
Printing a simple histogram in C
Find square and square root for a given number in C
Simple arithmetic calculations in C
Passing double value to a function in C
Passing pointer to a function in C
Infix to Prefix And Postfix in C
while, do while and for loops in C
© 2023 Java-samples.com
Tutorial Archive: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C C++ C# Cocoa Cloud Computing EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Trends WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate
Latest Tutorials on: Data Science React Native Android AJAX ASP.net C Cocoa C++ C# EJB Errors Java Certification Interview iPhone Javascript JSF JSP Java Beans J2ME JDBC Linux Mac OS X MySQL Perl PHP Python Ruby SAP VB.net EJB Struts Cloud Computing WebServices XML Office 365 Hibernate