Plan 9 from Bell Labs’s /usr/web/sources/contrib/nemo/sys/man/2/readf

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.TH READF 2
.SH NAME
readf, readfstr, createf, writef, writefstr, announcevol, cmdoutput, tcmdoutput \- Plan B convenience tools
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B #include <u.h>
.br
.B #include <libc.h>
.br
.B #include <b.h>
.PP
.nf
.PP
.B
void* readf(char* file, void* buf, long len, long* nout)
.PP
.B
char* readfstr(char* file)
.PP
.B
long writef(char* file, void* buf, long len)
.PP
.B
long createf(char* file, void* buf, long len, ulong perm);
.PP
.B
long writefstr(char* file, char* str)
.PP
.B
int	announcevol(int afd, char* addr, char* name, char* cnstr)
.PP
.B
long	cmdoutput(char* cmd, char* out, long sz);
.PP
.B
long	tcmdoutput(char* cmd, char* out, long sz);
.SH DESCRIPTION
The first few functions provide a convenience interface to perform entire file I/O and avoid
keeping file descriptors open for too long, which is important when using volumes
provided through
.IR bns (8).
The last functions are convenience routines used by many Plan B tools.
.PP
.I Readf
reads all the contents of
.I file
into a memory buffer and returns a pointer to  it. For streams, only a single
.I read
is made. The memory can be supplied by the caller,
by giving a non-nil
.I buf
and setting
.I len
to the size of the buffer provided. When
.I buf
is nil,
memory  for the buffer is allocated with
.IR malloc (2)
and the caller is responsible for calling
.IR free (2)
to release it.
If
.I nout
is not nil,
the number of bytes read is placed in
.BR * nout.
.PP
.I Writef
performs the opposite operation, and stores
.I len
bytes starting at
.I buf
into
.IR file .
The file must exist and have write permission.
It is legal to store zero bytes, to truncate a file.
.I Writef
returns the number of bytes stored or a negative value on errors.
.PP
.I Createf
is like
.IR writef ,
but is creates the file when it does not exist. The file
mode is set to
.IR mode .
When creating a directory, the user supplied data is ignored.
.PP
The functions
.I readfstr
and
.I writefstr
are convenience wrappers that read and write files that
do not contain null characters. They provide a simpler interface
for the common case when the file contains text. Note that
.I readfstr
allocates the memory used, and the caller is responsible for
releasing it. Also,
.I readfstr
returns a valid string for C or nil on errors.
.PP
For files too big to have its size contained in a long
integer, the functions described in
.IR read (2)
must be used instead.
.PP
The utility
.I announcevol
registers with
.IR adsrv (8)
a Plan B volume, to announce it and let other machines discover it. Besides, it notifies
the local
.IR bns (8)
program to let it know of the new local volume. The
.I afd
descriptor should be initially
.B -1
or a connection to the relevant
.IR adsrv
service. A descriptor to talk to such program is returned when the volume could
be registered. The user is expected to call
.I announcevol
again, every few seconds or minutes, and supply the descriptor being used to
register the volume. The last three parameters are the network address of the volume
being registered (where its 9P server can be reached), the global name for the file tree, and
the attributes of the tree as described in
.IR cnstr (6).
.PP
The last two routines,
.I cmdoutput
and
.IR tcmdoutput ,
run
.I cmd
as an
.IR rc (1)
command line
and place in
.I out
at most
.I sz
bytes resulting from of standard output of the command. The number of bytes read
is the result of the function. The former uses processes and the later is for use with
.IR thread (2).
.SH SOURCE
.B /sys/src/libb
.SH SEE ALSO
.IR planb (1),
.IR intro (2),
.IR read (2)
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
These functions set
.IR errstr .
.I Readf
and
.I readfstr
return
.B nil
upon errors.
.SH BUGS
The sizes should be 64 bit integers.
For streams,
.I readf
reads at most 16Kbytes each time it is called.

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