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wordexp
All the functions, constants and data types for word expansion are declared in the header file wordexp.h.
Word expansion produces a vector of words (strings). To return this
vector, wordexp
uses a special data type, wordexp_t
, which
is a structure. You pass wordexp
the address of the structure,
and it fills in the structure’s fields to tell you about the results.
This data type holds a pointer to a word vector. More precisely, it records both the address of the word vector and its size.
we_wordc
The number of elements in the vector.
we_wordv
The address of the vector. This field has type char **
.
we_offs
The offset of the first real element of the vector, from its nominal
address in the we_wordv
field. Unlike the other fields, this
is always an input to wordexp
, rather than an output from it.
If you use a nonzero offset, then that many elements at the beginning of
the vector are left empty. (The wordexp
function fills them with
null pointers.)
The we_offs
field is meaningful only if you use the
WRDE_DOOFFS
flag. Otherwise, the offset is always zero
regardless of what is in this field, and the first real element comes at
the beginning of the vector.
Preliminary: | MT-Unsafe race:utent const:env env sig:ALRM timer locale | AS-Unsafe dlopen plugin i18n heap corrupt lock | AC-Unsafe corrupt lock fd mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Perform word expansion on the string words, putting the result in
a newly allocated vector, and store the size and address of this vector
into *word-vector-ptr
. The argument flags is a
combination of bit flags; see Flags for Word Expansion, for details of
the flags.
You shouldn’t use any of the characters ‘|&;<>’ in the string
words unless they are quoted; likewise for newline. If you use
these characters unquoted, you will get the WRDE_BADCHAR
error
code. Don’t use parentheses or braces unless they are quoted or part of
a word expansion construct. If you use quotation characters ‘'"`’,
they should come in pairs that balance.
The results of word expansion are a sequence of words. The function
wordexp
allocates a string for each resulting word, then
allocates a vector of type char **
to store the addresses of
these strings. The last element of the vector is a null pointer.
This vector is called the word vector.
To return this vector, wordexp
stores both its address and its
length (number of elements, not counting the terminating null pointer)
into *word-vector-ptr
.
If wordexp
succeeds, it returns 0. Otherwise, it returns one
of these error codes:
WRDE_BADCHAR
¶The input string words contains an unquoted invalid character such as ‘|’.
WRDE_BADVAL
¶The input string refers to an undefined shell variable, and you used the flag
WRDE_UNDEF
to forbid such references.
WRDE_CMDSUB
¶The input string uses command substitution, and you used the flag
WRDE_NOCMD
to forbid command substitution.
WRDE_NOSPACE
¶It was impossible to allocate memory to hold the result. In this case,
wordexp
can store part of the results—as much as it could
allocate room for.
WRDE_SYNTAX
¶There was a syntax error in the input string. For example, an unmatched quoting character is a syntax error. This error code is also used to signal division by zero and overflow in arithmetic expansion.
Preliminary: | MT-Safe | AS-Unsafe corrupt heap | AC-Unsafe corrupt mem | See POSIX Safety Concepts.
Free the storage used for the word-strings and vector that
*word-vector-ptr
points to. This does not free the
structure *word-vector-ptr
itself—only the other
data it points to.
Next: Flags for Word Expansion, Previous: The Stages of Word Expansion, Up: Shell-Style Word Expansion [Contents][Index]