This section describes how to read directory entries from a directory stream, and how to close the stream when you are done with it. All the symbols are declared in the header file `dirent.h'.
Portability Note: On some systems readdir may not
return entries for `.' and `..', even though these are always
valid file names in any directory. See section File Name Resolution.
If there are no more entries in the directory or an error is detected,
readdir returns a null pointer. The following errno error
conditions are defined for this function:
EBADF
readdir is not thread safe. Multiple threads using
readdir on the same dirstream may overwrite the return
value. Use readdir_r when this is critical.
readdir. Like
readdir it returns the next entry from the directory. But to
prevent conflicts between simultaneously running threads the result is
not stored in statically allocated memory. Instead the argument
entry points to a place to store the result.
The return value is 0 in case the next entry was read
successfully. In this case a pointer to the result is returned in
*result. It is not required that *result is the same as
entry. If something goes wrong while executing readdir_r
the function returns a value indicating the error (as described for
readdir).
If there are no more directory entries, readdir_r's return value is
0, and *result is set to NULL.
Portability Note: On some systems readdir_r may not
return a NUL terminated string for the file name, even when there is no
d_reclen field in struct dirent and the file
name is the maximum allowed size. Modern systems all have the
d_reclen field, and on old systems multi-threading is not
critical. In any case there is no such problem with the readdir
function, so that even on systems without the d_reclen member one
could use multiple threads by using external locking.
It is also important to look at the definition of the struct
dirent type. Simply passing a pointer to an object of this type for
the second parameter of readdir_r might not be enough. Some
systems don't define the d_name element sufficiently long. In
this case the user has to provide additional space. There must be room
for at least NAME_MAX + 1 characters in the d_name array.
Code to call readdir_r could look like this:
union
{
struct dirent d;
char b[offsetof (struct dirent, d_name) + NAME_MAX + 1];
} u;
if (readdir_r (dir, &u.d, &res) == 0)
...
To support large filesystems on 32-bit machines there are LFS variants of the last two functions.
readdir64 function is just like the readdir function
except that it returns a pointer to a record of type struct
dirent64. Some of the members of this data type (notably d_ino)
might have a different size to allow large filesystems.
In all other aspects this function is equivalent to readdir.
readdir64_r function is equivalent to the readdir_r
function except that it takes parameters of base type struct
dirent64 instead of struct dirent in the second and third
position. The same precautions mentioned in the documentation of
readdir_r also apply here.
0 on success and -1 on failure.
The following errno error conditions are defined for this
function:
EBADF
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