/* * Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California. * All rights reserved. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted * provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are * duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation, * and/or other materials related to such * distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed * by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the * University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived * from this software without specific prior written permission. * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR * IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED * WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. */ /* FUNCTION <>, <>---set file position INDEX fseek INDEX fseeko INDEX _fseek_r INDEX _fseeko_r SYNOPSIS #include int fseek(FILE *<[fp]>, long <[offset]>, int <[whence]>) int fseeko(FILE *<[fp]>, off_t <[offset]>, int <[whence]>) int _fseek_r(struct _reent *<[ptr]>, FILE *<[fp]>, long <[offset]>, int <[whence]>) int _fseeko_r(struct _reent *<[ptr]>, FILE *<[fp]>, off_t <[offset]>, int <[whence]>) DESCRIPTION Objects of type <> can have a ``position'' that records how much of the file your program has already read. Many of the <> functions depend on this position, and many change it as a side effect. You can use <>/<> to set the position for the file identified by <[fp]>. The value of <[offset]> determines the new position, in one of three ways selected by the value of <[whence]> (defined as macros in `<>'): <>---<[offset]> is the absolute file position (an offset from the beginning of the file) desired. <[offset]> must be positive. <>---<[offset]> is relative to the current file position. <[offset]> can meaningfully be either positive or negative. <>---<[offset]> is relative to the current end of file. <[offset]> can meaningfully be either positive (to increase the size of the file) or negative. See <>/<> to determine the current file position. RETURNS <>/<> return <<0>> when successful. On failure, the result is <>. The reason for failure is indicated in <>: either <> (the stream identified by <[fp]> doesn't support repositioning) or <> (invalid file position). PORTABILITY ANSI C requires <>. <> is defined by the Single Unix specification. Supporting OS subroutines required: <>, <>, <>, <>, <>, <>, <>. */ #include <_ansi.h> #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "local.h" #define POS_ERR (-(_fpos_t)1) /* * Seek the given file to the given offset. * `Whence' must be one of the three SEEK_* macros. */ int _fseeko_r (struct _reent *ptr, register FILE *fp, _off_t offset, int whence) { _fpos_t (*seekfn) (struct _reent *, void *, _fpos_t, int); _fpos_t target; _fpos_t curoff = 0; size_t n; #ifdef __USE_INTERNAL_STAT64 struct stat64 st; #else struct stat st; #endif int havepos; /* Make sure stdio is set up. */ CHECK_INIT (ptr, fp); _newlib_flockfile_start (fp); /* If we've been doing some writing, and we're in append mode then we don't really know where the filepos is. */ if (fp->_flags & __SAPP && fp->_flags & __SWR) { /* So flush the buffer and seek to the end. */ _fflush_r (ptr, fp); } /* Have to be able to seek. */ if ((seekfn = fp->_seek) == NULL) { ptr->_errno = ESPIPE; /* ??? */ _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return EOF; } /* * Change any SEEK_CUR to SEEK_SET, and check `whence' argument. * After this, whence is either SEEK_SET or SEEK_END. */ switch (whence) { case SEEK_CUR: /* * In order to seek relative to the current stream offset, * we have to first find the current stream offset a la * ftell (see ftell for details). */ _fflush_r (ptr, fp); /* may adjust seek offset on append stream */ if (fp->_flags & __SOFF) curoff = fp->_offset; else { curoff = seekfn (ptr, fp->_cookie, (_fpos_t) 0, SEEK_CUR); if (curoff == -1L) { _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return EOF; } } if (fp->_flags & __SRD) { curoff -= fp->_r; if (HASUB (fp)) curoff -= fp->_ur; } else if (fp->_flags & __SWR && fp->_p != NULL) curoff += fp->_p - fp->_bf._base; offset += curoff; whence = SEEK_SET; havepos = 1; break; case SEEK_SET: case SEEK_END: havepos = 0; break; default: ptr->_errno = EINVAL; _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return (EOF); } /* * Can only optimise if: * reading (and not reading-and-writing); * not unbuffered; and * this is a `regular' Unix file (and hence seekfn==__sseek). * We must check __NBF first, because it is possible to have __NBF * and __SOPT both set. */ if (fp->_bf._base == NULL) __smakebuf_r (ptr, fp); #ifdef _FSEEK_OPTIMIZATION if (fp->_flags & (__SWR | __SRW | __SNBF | __SNPT)) goto dumb; if ((fp->_flags & __SOPT) == 0) { if (seekfn != __sseek || fp->_file < 0 #ifdef __USE_INTERNAL_STAT64 || _fstat64_r (ptr, fp->_file, &st) #else || _fstat_r (ptr, fp->_file, &st) #endif || (st.st_mode & S_IFMT) != S_IFREG) { fp->_flags |= __SNPT; goto dumb; } #ifdef HAVE_BLKSIZE fp->_blksize = st.st_blksize; #else fp->_blksize = 1024; #endif fp->_flags |= __SOPT; } /* * We are reading; we can try to optimise. * Figure out where we are going and where we are now. */ if (whence == SEEK_SET) target = offset; else { #ifdef __USE_INTERNAL_STAT64 if (_fstat64_r (ptr, fp->_file, &st)) #else if (_fstat_r (ptr, fp->_file, &st)) #endif goto dumb; target = st.st_size + offset; } if (!havepos) { if (fp->_flags & __SOFF) curoff = fp->_offset; else { curoff = seekfn (ptr, fp->_cookie, 0L, SEEK_CUR); if (curoff == POS_ERR) goto dumb; } curoff -= fp->_r; if (HASUB (fp)) curoff -= fp->_ur; } /* * Compute the number of bytes in the input buffer (pretending * that any ungetc() input has been discarded). Adjust current * offset backwards by this count so that it represents the * file offset for the first byte in the current input buffer. */ if (HASUB (fp)) { curoff += fp->_r; /* kill off ungetc */ n = fp->_up - fp->_bf._base; curoff -= n; n += fp->_ur; } else { n = fp->_p - fp->_bf._base; curoff -= n; n += fp->_r; } /* * If the target offset is within the current buffer, * simply adjust the pointers, clear EOF, undo ungetc(), * and return. */ if (target >= curoff && target < curoff + n) { register int o = target - curoff; fp->_p = fp->_bf._base + o; fp->_r = n - o; if (HASUB (fp)) FREEUB (ptr, fp); fp->_flags &= ~__SEOF; memset (&fp->_mbstate, 0, sizeof (_mbstate_t)); _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return 0; } /* * The place we want to get to is not within the current buffer, * but we can still be kind to the kernel copyout mechanism. * By aligning the file offset to a block boundary, we can let * the kernel use the VM hardware to map pages instead of * copying bytes laboriously. Using a block boundary also * ensures that we only read one block, rather than two. */ curoff = target & ~(fp->_blksize - 1); if (seekfn (ptr, fp->_cookie, curoff, SEEK_SET) == POS_ERR) goto dumb; fp->_r = 0; fp->_p = fp->_bf._base; if (HASUB (fp)) FREEUB (ptr, fp); fp->_flags &= ~__SEOF; n = target - curoff; if (n) { if (__srefill_r (ptr, fp) || fp->_r < n) goto dumb; fp->_p += n; fp->_r -= n; } memset (&fp->_mbstate, 0, sizeof (_mbstate_t)); _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return 0; /* * We get here if we cannot optimise the seek ... just * do it. Allow the seek function to change fp->_bf._base. */ #endif dumb: if (_fflush_r (ptr, fp) || seekfn (ptr, fp->_cookie, offset, whence) == POS_ERR) { _newlib_flockfile_exit (fp); return EOF; } /* success: clear EOF indicator and discard ungetc() data */ if (HASUB (fp)) FREEUB (ptr, fp); fp->_p = fp->_bf._base; fp->_r = 0; /* fp->_w = 0; *//* unnecessary (I think...) */ fp->_flags &= ~__SEOF; /* Reset no-optimization flag after successful seek. The no-optimization flag may be set in the case of a read stream that is flushed which by POSIX/SUSv3 standards, means that a corresponding seek must not optimize. The optimization is then allowed if no subsequent flush is performed. */ fp->_flags &= ~__SNPT; memset (&fp->_mbstate, 0, sizeof (_mbstate_t)); _newlib_flockfile_end (fp); return 0; } #ifndef _REENT_ONLY int fseeko (register FILE *fp, _off_t offset, int whence) { return _fseeko_r (_REENT, fp, offset, whence); } #endif /* !_REENT_ONLY */