fdopen(3C) Standard C Library Functions fdopen(3C)NAMEfdopen - associate a stream with a file descriptor
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
FILE *fdopen(int fildes, const char *mode);
DESCRIPTION
The fdopen() function associates a stream with a file descriptor
fildes.
The mode argument is a character string having one of the following
values:
r or rb Open a file for reading.
w or wb Open a file for writing.
a or ab Open a file for writing at end of file.
r+, rb+ or r+b Open a file for update (reading and
writing).
w+, wb+ or w+b Open a file for update (reading and
writing).
a+, ab+ or a+b Open a file for update (reading and
writing) at end of file.
The meaning of these flags is exactly as specified for the fopen(3C)
function, except that modes beginning with w do not cause truncation of
the file. A trailing F character can also be included in the mode argu‐
ment as described in fopen(3C) to enable extended FILE facility.
The mode of the stream must be allowed by the file access mode of the
open file. The file position indicator associated with the new stream
is set to the position indicated by the file offset associated with the
file descriptor.
The fdopen() function preserves the offset maximum previously set for
the open file description corresponding to fildes.
The error and end-of-file indicators for the stream are cleared. The
fdopen() function may cause the st_atime field of the underlying file
to be marked for update.
If fildes refers to a shared memory object, the result of the fdopen()
function is unspecified.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, fdopen() returns a pointer to a stream.
Otherwise, a null pointer is returned and errno is set to indicate the
error.
The fdopen() function may fail and not set errno if there are no free
stdio streams.
ERRORS
The fdopen() function may fail if:
EBADF The fildes argument is not a valid file descriptor.
EINVAL The mode argument is not a valid mode.
EMFILE {FOPEN_MAX} streams are currently open in the calling
process.
{STREAM_MAX} streams are currently open in the calling
process.
ENOMEM There is insufficient space to allocate a buffer.
USAGE
A process is allowed to have at least {FOPEN_MAX} stdio streams open at
a time. For 32-bit applications, however, the underlying ABIs formerly
required that no file descriptor used to access the file underlying a
stdio stream have a value greater than 255. To maintain binary compati‐
bility with earlier Solaris releases, this limit still constrains
32-bit applications.
File descriptors are obtained from calls like open(2), dup(2), creat(2)
or pipe(2), which open files but do not return streams. Streams are
necessary input for almost all of the standard I/O library functions.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │See below. │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│MT-Level │MT-Safe │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
The F character in the mode argument is Evolving. In all other respects
this function is Standard.
SEE ALSOcreat(2), dup(2), open(2), pipe(2), fclose(3C), fopen(3C),
attributes(5), standards(5)SunOS 5.10 18 Apr 2006 fdopen(3C)