STDIO_EXT(3) Linux Programmer's Manual STDIO_EXT(3)
NAME
__fbufsize, __flbf, __fpending, __fpurge, __freadable, __freading,
__fsetlocking, __fwritable, __fwriting, _flushlbf - interfaces to stdio
FILE structure
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdio_ext.h>
size_t __fbufsize(FILE *stream);
size_t __fpending(FILE *stream);
int __flbf(FILE *stream);
int __freadable(FILE *stream);
int __fwritable(FILE *stream);
int __freading(FILE *stream);
int __fwriting(FILE *stream);
int __fsetlocking(FILE *stream, int type);
void _flushlbf(void);
void __fpurge(FILE *stream);
DESCRIPTION
Solaris introduced routines to allow portable access to the internals
of the FILE structure, and glibc also implemented these.
The __fbufsize() function returns the size of the buffer currently used
by the given stream.
The __fpending() function returns the number of bytes in the output
buffer. For wide-oriented streams the unit is wide characters. This
function is undefined on buffers in reading mode, or opened read-only.
The __flbf() function returns a nonzero value if the stream is line-
buffered, and zero otherwise.
The __freadable() function returns a nonzero value if the stream allows
reading, and zero otherwise.
The __fwritable() function returns a nonzero value if the stream allows
writing, and zero otherwise.
The __freading() function returns a nonzero value if the stream is
read-only, or if the last operation on the stream was a read operation,
and zero otherwise.
The __fwriting() function returns a nonzero value if the stream is
write-only (or append-only), or if the last operation on the stream was
a write operation, and zero otherwise.
The __fsetlocking() function can be used to select the desired type of
locking on the stream. It returns the current type. The type argument
can take the following three values:
FSETLOCKING_INTERNAL
Perform implicit locking around every operation on the given
stream (except for the *_unlocked ones). This is the default.
FSETLOCKING_BYCALLER
The caller will take care of the locking (possibly using flock-
file(3) in case there is more than one thread), and the stdio
routines will not do locking until the state is reset to FSET-
LOCKING_INTERNAL.
FSETLOCKING_QUERY
Don't change the type of locking. (Only return it.)
The _flushlbf() function flushes all line-buffered streams. (Presum-
ably so that output to a terminal is forced out, say before reading
keyboard input.)
The __fpurge() function discards the contents of the stream's buffer.
ATTRIBUTES
Multithreading (see pthreads(7))
The __fbufsize(), __fpending(), __fpurge() and __fsetlocking() func-
tions do not lock the stream, so they are not thread-safe.
The __flbf(), __freadable(), __freading(), __fwritable(), __fwriting()
and _flushlbf() functions are thread-safe.
SEE ALSO
flockfile(3), fpurge(3)
COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A
description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can
be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2013-06-21 STDIO_EXT(3)