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The file position of a stream describes where in the file the stream is currently reading or writing. I/O on the stream advances the file position through the file. On GNU systems, the file position is represented as an integer, which counts the number of bytes from the beginning of the file. See File Position.
During I/O to an ordinary disk file, you can change the file position whenever you wish, so as to read or write any portion of the file. Some other kinds of files may also permit this. Files which support changing the file position are sometimes referred to as random-access files.
You can use the functions in this section to examine or modify the file position indicator associated with a stream. The symbols listed below are declared in the header file stdio.h.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function returns the current file position of the stream stream.
This function can fail if the stream doesn’t support file positioning,
or if the file position can’t be represented in a long int
, and
possibly for other reasons as well. If a failure occurs, a value of
-1
is returned.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The ftello
function is similar to ftell
, except that it
returns a value of type off_t
. Systems which support this type
use it to describe all file positions, unlike the POSIX specification
which uses a long int. The two are not necessarily the same size.
Therefore, using ftell can lead to problems if the implementation is
written on top of a POSIX compliant low-level I/O implementation, and using
ftello
is preferable whenever it is available.
If this function fails it returns (off_t) -1
. This can happen due
to missing support for file positioning or internal errors. Otherwise
the return value is the current file position.
The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification version 2.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
on a
32 bit system this function is in fact ftello64
. I.e., the
LFS interface transparently replaces the old interface.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is similar to ftello
with the only difference that
the return value is of type off64_t
. This also requires that the
stream stream was opened using either fopen64
,
freopen64
, or tmpfile64
since otherwise the underlying
file operations to position the file pointer beyond the 2^31
bytes limit might fail.
If the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
on a 32
bits machine this function is available under the name ftello
and so transparently replaces the old interface.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The fseek
function is used to change the file position of the
stream stream. The value of whence must be one of the
constants SEEK_SET
, SEEK_CUR
, or SEEK_END
, to
indicate whether the offset is relative to the beginning of the
file, the current file position, or the end of the file, respectively.
This function returns a value of zero if the operation was successful,
and a nonzero value to indicate failure. A successful call also clears
the end-of-file indicator of stream and discards any characters
that were “pushed back” by the use of ungetc
.
fseek
either flushes any buffered output before setting the file
position or else remembers it so it will be written later in its proper
place in the file.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is similar to fseek
but it corrects a problem with
fseek
in a system with POSIX types. Using a value of type
long int
for the offset is not compatible with POSIX.
fseeko
uses the correct type off_t
for the offset
parameter.
For this reason it is a good idea to prefer ftello
whenever it is
available since its functionality is (if different at all) closer the
underlying definition.
The functionality and return value is the same as for fseek
.
The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification version 2.
When the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
on a
32 bit system this function is in fact fseeko64
. I.e., the
LFS interface transparently replaces the old interface.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
This function is similar to fseeko
with the only difference that
the offset parameter is of type off64_t
. This also
requires that the stream stream was opened using either
fopen64
, freopen64
, or tmpfile64
since otherwise
the underlying file operations to position the file pointer beyond the
2^31 bytes limit might fail.
If the sources are compiled with _FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64
on a 32
bits machine this function is available under the name fseeko
and so transparently replaces the old interface.
Portability Note: In non-POSIX systems, ftell
,
ftello
, fseek
and fseeko
might work reliably only
on binary streams. See Text and Binary Streams.
The following symbolic constants are defined for use as the whence
argument to fseek
. They are also used with the lseek
function (see Input and Output Primitives) and to specify offsets for file locks
(see Control Operations on Files).
This is an integer constant which, when used as the whence
argument to the fseek
or fseeko
function, specifies that
the offset provided is relative to the beginning of the file.
This is an integer constant which, when used as the whence
argument to the fseek
or fseeko
function, specifies that
the offset provided is relative to the current file position.
This is an integer constant which, when used as the whence
argument to the fseek
or fseeko
function, specifies that
the offset provided is relative to the end of the file.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt | AC-Unsafe lock corrupt | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
The rewind
function positions the stream stream at the
beginning of the file. It is equivalent to calling fseek
or
fseeko
on the stream with an offset argument of
0L
and a whence argument of SEEK_SET
, except that
the return value is discarded and the error indicator for the stream is
reset.
These three aliases for the ‘SEEK_…’ constants exist for the sake of compatibility with older BSD systems. They are defined in two different header files: fcntl.h and sys/file.h.
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