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diff --git a/contrib/binutils/libiberty/functions.texi b/contrib/binutils/libiberty/functions.texi new file mode 100644 index 0000000..aac4424 --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/binutils/libiberty/functions.texi @@ -0,0 +1,1156 @@ +@c Automatically generated from *.c and others (the comments before +@c each entry tell you which file and where in that file). DO NOT EDIT! +@c Edit the *.c files, configure with --enable-maintainer-mode, +@c and let gather-docs build you a new copy. + +@c safe-ctype.c:24 +@defvr Extension HOST_CHARSET +This macro indicates the basic character set and encoding used by the +host: more precisely, the encoding used for character constants in +preprocessor @samp{#if} statements (the C "execution character set"). +It is defined by @file{safe-ctype.h}, and will be an integer constant +with one of the following values: + +@ftable @code +@item HOST_CHARSET_UNKNOWN +The host character set is unknown - that is, not one of the next two +possibilities. + +@item HOST_CHARSET_ASCII +The host character set is ASCII. + +@item HOST_CHARSET_EBCDIC +The host character set is some variant of EBCDIC. (Only one of the +nineteen EBCDIC varying characters is tested; exercise caution.) +@end ftable +@end defvr + +@c alloca.c:26 +@deftypefn Replacement void* alloca (size_t @var{size}) + +This function allocates memory which will be automatically reclaimed +after the procedure exits. The @libib{} implementation does not free +the memory immediately but will do so eventually during subsequent +calls to this function. Memory is allocated using @code{xmalloc} under +normal circumstances. + +The header file @file{alloca-conf.h} can be used in conjunction with the +GNU Autoconf test @code{AC_FUNC_ALLOCA} to test for and properly make +available this function. The @code{AC_FUNC_ALLOCA} test requires that +client code use a block of preprocessor code to be safe (see the Autoconf +manual for more); this header incorporates that logic and more, including +the possibility of a GCC built-in function. + +@end deftypefn + +@c asprintf.c:33 +@deftypefn Extension int asprintf (char **@var{resptr}, const char *@var{format}, ...) + +Like @code{sprintf}, but instead of passing a pointer to a buffer, you +pass a pointer to a pointer. This function will compute the size of +the buffer needed, allocate memory with @code{malloc}, and store a +pointer to the allocated memory in @code{*@var{resptr}}. The value +returned is the same as @code{sprintf} would return. If memory could +not be allocated, minus one is returned and @code{NULL} is stored in +@code{*@var{resptr}}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c atexit.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int atexit (void (*@var{f})()) + +Causes function @var{f} to be called at exit. Returns 0. + +@end deftypefn + +@c basename.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* basename (const char *@var{name}) + +Returns a pointer to the last component of pathname @var{name}. +Behavior is undefined if the pathname ends in a directory separator. + +@end deftypefn + +@c bcmp.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int bcmp (char *@var{x}, char *@var{y}, int @var{count}) + +Compares the first @var{count} bytes of two areas of memory. Returns +zero if they are the same, nonzero otherwise. Returns zero if +@var{count} is zero. A nonzero result only indicates a difference, +it does not indicate any sorting order (say, by having a positive +result mean @var{x} sorts before @var{y}). + +@end deftypefn + +@c bcopy.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental void bcopy (char *@var{in}, char *@var{out}, int @var{length}) + +Copies @var{length} bytes from memory region @var{in} to region +@var{out}. The use of @code{bcopy} is deprecated in new programs. + +@end deftypefn + +@c bsearch.c:33 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* bsearch (const void *@var{key}, const void *@var{base}, size_t @var{nmemb}, size_t @var{size}, int (*@var{compar})(const void *, const void *)) + +Performs a search over an array of @var{nmemb} elements pointed to by +@var{base} for a member that matches the object pointed to by @var{key}. +The size of each member is specified by @var{size}. The array contents +should be sorted in ascending order according to the @var{compar} +comparison function. This routine should take two arguments pointing to +the @var{key} and to an array member, in that order, and should return an +integer less than, equal to, or greater than zero if the @var{key} object +is respectively less than, matching, or greater than the array member. + +@end deftypefn + +@c argv.c:139 +@deftypefn Extension char** buildargv (char *@var{sp}) + +Given a pointer to a string, parse the string extracting fields +separated by whitespace and optionally enclosed within either single +or double quotes (which are stripped off), and build a vector of +pointers to copies of the string for each field. The input string +remains unchanged. The last element of the vector is followed by a +@code{NULL} element. + +All of the memory for the pointer array and copies of the string +is obtained from @code{malloc}. All of the memory can be returned to the +system with the single function call @code{freeargv}, which takes the +returned result of @code{buildargv}, as it's argument. + +Returns a pointer to the argument vector if successful. Returns +@code{NULL} if @var{sp} is @code{NULL} or if there is insufficient +memory to complete building the argument vector. + +If the input is a null string (as opposed to a @code{NULL} pointer), +then buildarg returns an argument vector that has one arg, a null +string. + +@end deftypefn + +@c bzero.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void bzero (char *@var{mem}, int @var{count}) + +Zeros @var{count} bytes starting at @var{mem}. Use of this function +is deprecated in favor of @code{memset}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c calloc.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* calloc (size_t @var{nelem}, size_t @var{elsize}) + +Uses @code{malloc} to allocate storage for @var{nelem} objects of +@var{elsize} bytes each, then zeros the memory. + +@end deftypefn + +@c choose-temp.c:42 +@deftypefn Extension char* choose_temp_base (void) + +Return a prefix for temporary file names or @code{NULL} if unable to +find one. The current directory is chosen if all else fails so the +program is exited if a temporary directory can't be found (@code{mktemp} +fails). The buffer for the result is obtained with @code{xmalloc}. + +This function is provided for backwards compatability only. Its use is +not recommended. + +@end deftypefn + +@c make-temp-file.c:88 +@deftypefn Replacement char* choose_tmpdir () + +Returns a pointer to a directory path suitable for creating temporary +files in. + +@end deftypefn + +@c clock.c:27 +@deftypefn Supplemental long clock (void) + +Returns an approximation of the CPU time used by the process as a +@code{clock_t}; divide this number by @samp{CLOCKS_PER_SEC} to get the +number of seconds used. + +@end deftypefn + +@c concat.c:24 +@deftypefn Extension char* concat (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}, @dots{}, @code{NULL}) + +Concatenate zero or more of strings and return the result in freshly +@code{xmalloc}ed memory. Returns @code{NULL} if insufficient memory is +available. The argument list is terminated by the first @code{NULL} +pointer encountered. Pointers to empty strings are ignored. + +@end deftypefn + +@c argv.c:65 +@deftypefn Extension char** dupargv (char **@var{vector}) + +Duplicate an argument vector. Simply scans through @var{vector}, +duplicating each argument until the terminating @code{NULL} is found. +Returns a pointer to the argument vector if successful. Returns +@code{NULL} if there is insufficient memory to complete building the +argument vector. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strerror.c:566 +@deftypefn Extension int errno_max (void) + +Returns the maximum @code{errno} value for which a corresponding +symbolic name or message is available. Note that in the case where we +use the @code{sys_errlist} supplied by the system, it is possible for +there to be more symbolic names than messages, or vice versa. In +fact, the manual page for @code{perror(3C)} explicitly warns that one +should check the size of the table (@code{sys_nerr}) before indexing +it, since new error codes may be added to the system before they are +added to the table. Thus @code{sys_nerr} might be smaller than value +implied by the largest @code{errno} value defined in @code{<errno.h>}. + +We return the maximum value that can be used to obtain a meaningful +symbolic name or message. + +@end deftypefn + +@c fdmatch.c:23 +@deftypefn Extension int fdmatch (int @var{fd1}, int @var{fd2}) + +Check to see if two open file descriptors refer to the same file. +This is useful, for example, when we have an open file descriptor for +an unnamed file, and the name of a file that we believe to correspond +to that fd. This can happen when we are exec'd with an already open +file (@code{stdout} for example) or from the SVR4 @file{/proc} calls +that return open file descriptors for mapped address spaces. All we +have to do is open the file by name and check the two file descriptors +for a match, which is done by comparing major and minor device numbers +and inode numbers. + +@end deftypefn + +@c ffs.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental int ffs (int @var{valu}) + +Find the first (least significant) bit set in @var{valu}. Bits are +numbered from right to left, starting with bit 1 (corresponding to the +value 1). If @var{valu} is zero, zero is returned. + +@end deftypefn + +@c fnmatch.txh:1 +@deftypefn Replacement int fnmatch (const char *@var{pattern}, const char *@var{string}, int @var{flags}) + +Matches @var{string} against @var{pattern}, returning zero if it +matches, @code{FNM_NOMATCH} if not. @var{pattern} may contain the +wildcards @code{?} to match any one character, @code{*} to match any +zero or more characters, or a set of alternate characters in square +brackets, like @samp{[a-gt8]}, which match one character (@code{a} +through @code{g}, or @code{t}, or @code{8}, in this example) if that one +character is in the set. A set may be inverted (i.e., match anything +except what's in the set) by giving @code{^} or @code{!} as the first +character in the set. To include those characters in the set, list them +as anything other than the first character of the set. To include a +dash in the set, list it last in the set. A backslash character makes +the following character not special, so for example you could match +against a literal asterisk with @samp{\*}. To match a literal +backslash, use @samp{\\}. + +@code{flags} controls various aspects of the matching process, and is a +boolean OR of zero or more of the following values (defined in +@code{<fnmatch.h>}): + +@table @code + +@item FNM_PATHNAME +@itemx FNM_FILE_NAME +@var{string} is assumed to be a path name. No wildcard will ever match +@code{/}. + +@item FNM_NOESCAPE +Do not interpret backslashes as quoting the following special character. + +@item FNM_PERIOD +A leading period (at the beginning of @var{string}, or if +@code{FNM_PATHNAME} after a slash) is not matched by @code{*} or +@code{?} but must be matched explicitly. + +@item FNM_LEADING_DIR +Means that @var{string} also matches @var{pattern} if some initial part +of @var{string} matches, and is followed by @code{/} and zero or more +characters. For example, @samp{foo*} would match either @samp{foobar} +or @samp{foobar/grill}. + +@item FNM_CASEFOLD +Ignores case when performing the comparison. + +@end table + +@end deftypefn + +@c argv.c:111 +@deftypefn Extension void freeargv (char **@var{vector}) + +Free an argument vector that was built using @code{buildargv}. Simply +scans through @var{vector}, freeing the memory for each argument until +the terminating @code{NULL} is found, and then frees @var{vector} +itself. + +@end deftypefn + +@c getruntime.c:82 +@deftypefn Replacement long get_run_time (void) + +Returns the time used so far, in microseconds. If possible, this is +the time used by this process, else it is the elapsed time since the +process started. + +@end deftypefn + +@c getcwd.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* getcwd (char *@var{pathname}, int @var{len}) + +Copy the absolute pathname for the current working directory into +@var{pathname}, which is assumed to point to a buffer of at least +@var{len} bytes, and return a pointer to the buffer. If the current +directory's path doesn't fit in @var{len} characters, the result is +@code{NULL} and @code{errno} is set. If @var{pathname} is a null pointer, +@code{getcwd} will obtain @var{len} bytes of space using +@code{malloc}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c getpagesize.c:5 +@deftypefn Supplemental int getpagesize (void) + +Returns the number of bytes in a page of memory. This is the +granularity of many of the system memory management routines. No +guarantee is made as to whether or not it is the same as the basic +memory management hardware page size. + +@end deftypefn + +@c getpwd.c:5 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* getpwd (void) + +Returns the current working directory. This implementation caches the +result on the assumption that the process will not call @code{chdir} +between calls to @code{getpwd}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c hex.c:30 +@deftypefn Extension void hex_init (void) + +Initializes the array mapping the current character set to +corresponding hex values. This function must be called before any +call to @code{hex_p} or @code{hex_value}. If you fail to call it, a +default ASCII-based table will normally be used on ASCII systems. + +@end deftypefn + +@c hex.c:39 +@deftypefn Extension int hex_p (int @var{c}) + +Evaluates to non-zero if the given character is a valid hex character, +or zero if it is not. Note that the value you pass will be cast to +@code{unsigned char} within the macro. + +@end deftypefn + +@c hex.c:47 +@deftypefn Extension unsigned int hex_value (int @var{c}) + +Returns the numeric equivalent of the given character when interpreted +as a hexidecimal digit. The result is undefined if you pass an +invalid hex digit. Note that the value you pass will be cast to +@code{unsigned char} within the macro. + +The @code{hex_value} macro returns @code{unsigned int}, rather than +signed @code{int}, to make it easier to use in parsing addresses from +hex dump files: a signed @code{int} would be sign-extended when +converted to a wider unsigned type --- like @code{bfd_vma}, on some +systems. + +@end deftypefn + +@c index.c:5 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* index (char *@var{s}, int @var{c}) + +Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of the character @var{c} in +the string @var{s}, or @code{NULL} if not found. The use of @code{index} is +deprecated in new programs in favor of @code{strchr}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c insque.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void insque (struct qelem *@var{elem}, struct qelem *@var{pred}) +@deftypefnx Supplemental void remque (struct qelem *@var{elem}) + +Routines to manipulate queues built from doubly linked lists. The +@code{insque} routine inserts @var{elem} in the queue immediately +after @var{pred}. The @code{remque} routine removes @var{elem} from +its containing queue. These routines expect to be passed pointers to +structures which have as their first members a forward pointer and a +back pointer, like this prototype (although no prototype is provided): + +@example +struct qelem @{ + struct qelem *q_forw; + struct qelem *q_back; + char q_data[]; +@}; +@end example + +@end deftypefn + +@c safe-ctype.c:45 +@deffn Extension ISALPHA (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISALNUM (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISBLANK (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISCNTRL (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISDIGIT (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISGRAPH (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISLOWER (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISPRINT (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISPUNCT (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISSPACE (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISUPPER (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISXDIGIT (@var{c}) + +These twelve macros are defined by @file{safe-ctype.h}. Each has the +same meaning as the corresponding macro (with name in lowercase) +defined by the standard header @file{ctype.h}. For example, +@code{ISALPHA} returns true for alphabetic characters and false for +others. However, there are two differences between these macros and +those provided by @file{ctype.h}: + +@itemize @bullet +@item These macros are guaranteed to have well-defined behavior for all +values representable by @code{signed char} and @code{unsigned char}, and +for @code{EOF}. + +@item These macros ignore the current locale; they are true for these +fixed sets of characters: +@multitable {@code{XDIGIT}} {yada yada yada yada yada yada yada yada} +@item @code{ALPHA} @tab @kbd{A-Za-z} +@item @code{ALNUM} @tab @kbd{A-Za-z0-9} +@item @code{BLANK} @tab @kbd{space tab} +@item @code{CNTRL} @tab @code{!PRINT} +@item @code{DIGIT} @tab @kbd{0-9} +@item @code{GRAPH} @tab @code{ALNUM || PUNCT} +@item @code{LOWER} @tab @kbd{a-z} +@item @code{PRINT} @tab @code{GRAPH ||} @kbd{space} +@item @code{PUNCT} @tab @kbd{`~!@@#$%^&*()_-=+[@{]@}\|;:'",<.>/?} +@item @code{SPACE} @tab @kbd{space tab \n \r \f \v} +@item @code{UPPER} @tab @kbd{A-Z} +@item @code{XDIGIT} @tab @kbd{0-9A-Fa-f} +@end multitable + +Note that, if the host character set is ASCII or a superset thereof, +all these macros will return false for all values of @code{char} outside +the range of 7-bit ASCII. In particular, both ISPRINT and ISCNTRL return +false for characters with numeric values from 128 to 255. +@end itemize +@end deffn + +@c safe-ctype.c:94 +@deffn Extension ISIDNUM (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension ISIDST (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension IS_VSPACE (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension IS_NVSPACE (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension IS_SPACE_OR_NUL (@var{c}) +@deffnx Extension IS_ISOBASIC (@var{c}) +These six macros are defined by @file{safe-ctype.h} and provide +additional character classes which are useful when doing lexical +analysis of C or similar languages. They are true for the following +sets of characters: + +@multitable {@code{SPACE_OR_NUL}} {yada yada yada yada yada yada yada yada} +@item @code{IDNUM} @tab @kbd{A-Za-z0-9_} +@item @code{IDST} @tab @kbd{A-Za-z_} +@item @code{VSPACE} @tab @kbd{\r \n} +@item @code{NVSPACE} @tab @kbd{space tab \f \v \0} +@item @code{SPACE_OR_NUL} @tab @code{VSPACE || NVSPACE} +@item @code{ISOBASIC} @tab @code{VSPACE || NVSPACE || PRINT} +@end multitable +@end deffn + +@c lbasename.c:23 +@deftypefn Replacement {const char*} lbasename (const char *@var{name}) + +Given a pointer to a string containing a typical pathname +(@samp{/usr/src/cmd/ls/ls.c} for example), returns a pointer to the +last component of the pathname (@samp{ls.c} in this case). The +returned pointer is guaranteed to lie within the original +string. This latter fact is not true of many vendor C +libraries, which return special strings or modify the passed +strings for particular input. + +In particular, the empty string returns the same empty string, +and a path ending in @code{/} returns the empty string after it. + +@end deftypefn + +@c lrealpath.c:25 +@deftypefn Replacement {const char*} lrealpath (const char *@var{name}) + +Given a pointer to a string containing a pathname, returns a canonical +version of the filename. Symlinks will be resolved, and ``.'' and ``..'' +components will be simplified. The returned value will be allocated using +@code{malloc}, or @code{NULL} will be returned on a memory allocation error. + +@end deftypefn + +@c make-relative-prefix.c:24 +@deftypefn Extension {const char*} make_relative_prefix (const char *@var{progname}, const char *@var{bin_prefix}, const char *@var{prefix}) + +Given three paths @var{progname}, @var{bin_prefix}, @var{prefix}, +return the path that is in the same position relative to +@var{progname}'s directory as @var{prefix} is relative to +@var{bin_prefix}. That is, a string starting with the directory +portion of @var{progname}, followed by a relative pathname of the +difference between @var{bin_prefix} and @var{prefix}. + +If @var{progname} does not contain any directory separators, +@code{make_relative_prefix} will search @env{PATH} to find a program +named @var{progname}. Also, if @var{progname} is a symbolic link, +the symbolic link will be resolved. + +For example, if @var{bin_prefix} is @code{/alpha/beta/gamma/gcc/delta}, +@var{prefix} is @code{/alpha/beta/gamma/omega/}, and @var{progname} is +@code{/red/green/blue/gcc}, then this function will return +@code{/red/green/blue/../../omega/}. + +The return value is normally allocated via @code{malloc}. If no +relative prefix can be found, return @code{NULL}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c make-temp-file.c:138 +@deftypefn Replacement char* make_temp_file (const char *@var{suffix}) + +Return a temporary file name (as a string) or @code{NULL} if unable to +create one. @var{suffix} is a suffix to append to the file name. The +string is @code{malloc}ed, and the temporary file has been created. + +@end deftypefn + +@c memchr.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* memchr (const void *@var{s}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{n}) + +This function searches memory starting at @code{*@var{s}} for the +character @var{c}. The search only ends with the first occurrence of +@var{c}, or after @var{length} characters; in particular, a null +character does not terminate the search. If the character @var{c} is +found within @var{length} characters of @code{*@var{s}}, a pointer +to the character is returned. If @var{c} is not found, then @code{NULL} is +returned. + +@end deftypefn + +@c memcmp.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int memcmp (const void *@var{x}, const void *@var{y}, size_t @var{count}) + +Compares the first @var{count} bytes of two areas of memory. Returns +zero if they are the same, a value less than zero if @var{x} is +lexically less than @var{y}, or a value greater than zero if @var{x} +is lexically greater than @var{y}. Note that lexical order is determined +as if comparing unsigned char arrays. + +@end deftypefn + +@c memcpy.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* memcpy (void *@var{out}, const void *@var{in}, size_t @var{length}) + +Copies @var{length} bytes from memory region @var{in} to region +@var{out}. Returns a pointer to @var{out}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c memmove.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* memmove (void *@var{from}, const void *@var{to}, size_t @var{count}) + +Copies @var{count} bytes from memory area @var{from} to memory area +@var{to}, returning a pointer to @var{to}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c mempcpy.c:23 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* mempcpy (void *@var{out}, const void *@var{in}, size_t @var{length}) + +Copies @var{length} bytes from memory region @var{in} to region +@var{out}. Returns a pointer to @var{out} + @var{length}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c memset.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental void* memset (void *@var{s}, int @var{c}, size_t @var{count}) + +Sets the first @var{count} bytes of @var{s} to the constant byte +@var{c}, returning a pointer to @var{s}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c mkstemps.c:54 +@deftypefn Replacement int mkstemps (char *@var{template}, int @var{suffix_len}) + +Generate a unique temporary file name from @var{template}. +@var{template} has the form: + +@example + @var{path}/ccXXXXXX@var{suffix} +@end example + +@var{suffix_len} tells us how long @var{suffix} is (it can be zero +length). The last six characters of @var{template} before @var{suffix} +must be @samp{XXXXXX}; they are replaced with a string that makes the +filename unique. Returns a file descriptor open on the file for +reading and writing. + +@end deftypefn + +@c pexecute.txh:1 +@deftypefn Extension int pexecute (const char *@var{program}, char * const *@var{argv}, const char *@var{this_pname}, const char *@var{temp_base}, char **@var{errmsg_fmt}, char **@var{errmsg_arg}, int flags) + +Executes a program. + +@var{program} and @var{argv} are the arguments to +@code{execv}/@code{execvp}. + +@var{this_pname} is name of the calling program (i.e., @code{argv[0]}). + +@var{temp_base} is the path name, sans suffix, of a temporary file to +use if needed. This is currently only needed for MS-DOS ports that +don't use @code{go32} (do any still exist?). Ports that don't need it +can pass @code{NULL}. + +(@code{@var{flags} & PEXECUTE_SEARCH}) is non-zero if @env{PATH} +should be searched (??? It's not clear that GCC passes this flag +correctly). (@code{@var{flags} & PEXECUTE_FIRST}) is nonzero for the +first process in chain. (@code{@var{flags} & PEXECUTE_FIRST}) is +nonzero for the last process in chain. The first/last flags could be +simplified to only mark the last of a chain of processes but that +requires the caller to always mark the last one (and not give up +early if some error occurs). It's more robust to require the caller +to mark both ends of the chain. + +The result is the pid on systems like Unix where we +@code{fork}/@code{exec} and on systems like WIN32 and OS/2 where we +use @code{spawn}. It is up to the caller to wait for the child. + +The result is the @code{WEXITSTATUS} on systems like MS-DOS where we +@code{spawn} and wait for the child here. + +Upon failure, @var{errmsg_fmt} and @var{errmsg_arg} are set to the +text of the error message with an optional argument (if not needed, +@var{errmsg_arg} is set to @code{NULL}), and @minus{}1 is returned. +@code{errno} is available to the caller to use. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strsignal.c:547 +@deftypefn Supplemental void psignal (unsigned @var{signo}, char *@var{message}) + +Print @var{message} to the standard error, followed by a colon, +followed by the description of the signal specified by @var{signo}, +followed by a newline. + +@end deftypefn + +@c putenv.c:21 +@deftypefn Supplemental int putenv (const char *@var{string}) + +Uses @code{setenv} or @code{unsetenv} to put @var{string} into +the environment or remove it. If @var{string} is of the form +@samp{name=value} the string is added; if no @samp{=} is present the +name is unset/removed. + +@end deftypefn + +@c pexecute.txh:39 +@deftypefn Extension int pwait (int @var{pid}, int *@var{status}, int @var{flags}) + +Waits for a program started by @code{pexecute} to finish. + +@var{pid} is the process id of the task to wait for. @var{status} is +the `status' argument to wait. @var{flags} is currently unused +(allows future enhancement without breaking upward compatibility). +Pass 0 for now. + +The result is the pid of the child reaped, or -1 for failure +(@code{errno} says why). + +On systems that don't support waiting for a particular child, +@var{pid} is ignored. On systems like MS-DOS that don't really +multitask @code{pwait} is just a mechanism to provide a consistent +interface for the caller. + +@end deftypefn + +@c random.c:39 +@deftypefn Supplement {long int} random (void) +@deftypefnx Supplement void srandom (unsigned int @var{seed}) +@deftypefnx Supplement void* initstate (unsigned int @var{seed}, void *@var{arg_state}, unsigned long @var{n}) +@deftypefnx Supplement void* setstate (void *@var{arg_state}) + +Random number functions. @code{random} returns a random number in the +range 0 to @code{LONG_MAX}. @code{srandom} initializes the random +number generator to some starting point determined by @var{seed} +(else, the values returned by @code{random} are always the same for each +run of the program). @code{initstate} and @code{setstate} allow fine-grained +control over the state of the random number generator. + +@end deftypefn + +@c concat.c:177 +@deftypefn Extension char* reconcat (char *@var{optr}, const char *@var{s1}, @dots{}, @code{NULL}) + +Same as @code{concat}, except that if @var{optr} is not @code{NULL} it +is freed after the string is created. This is intended to be useful +when you're extending an existing string or building up a string in a +loop: + +@example + str = reconcat (str, "pre-", str, NULL); +@end example + +@end deftypefn + +@c rename.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int rename (const char *@var{old}, const char *@var{new}) + +Renames a file from @var{old} to @var{new}. If @var{new} already +exists, it is removed. + +@end deftypefn + +@c rindex.c:5 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* rindex (const char *@var{s}, int @var{c}) + +Returns a pointer to the last occurrence of the character @var{c} in +the string @var{s}, or @code{NULL} if not found. The use of @code{rindex} is +deprecated in new programs in favor of @code{strrchr}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c setenv.c:22 +@deftypefn Supplemental int setenv (const char *@var{name}, const char *@var{value}, int @var{overwrite}) +@deftypefnx Supplemental void unsetenv (const char *@var{name}) + +@code{setenv} adds @var{name} to the environment with value +@var{value}. If the name was already present in the environment, +the new value will be stored only if @var{overwrite} is nonzero. +The companion @code{unsetenv} function removes @var{name} from the +environment. This implementation is not safe for multithreaded code. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strsignal.c:353 +@deftypefn Extension int signo_max (void) + +Returns the maximum signal value for which a corresponding symbolic +name or message is available. Note that in the case where we use the +@code{sys_siglist} supplied by the system, it is possible for there to +be more symbolic names than messages, or vice versa. In fact, the +manual page for @code{psignal(3b)} explicitly warns that one should +check the size of the table (@code{NSIG}) before indexing it, since +new signal codes may be added to the system before they are added to +the table. Thus @code{NSIG} might be smaller than value implied by +the largest signo value defined in @code{<signal.h>}. + +We return the maximum value that can be used to obtain a meaningful +symbolic name or message. + +@end deftypefn + +@c sigsetmask.c:8 +@deftypefn Supplemental int sigsetmask (int @var{set}) + +Sets the signal mask to the one provided in @var{set} and returns +the old mask (which, for libiberty's implementation, will always +be the value @code{1}). + +@end deftypefn + +@c snprintf.c:28 +@deftypefn Supplemental int snprintf (char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{n}, const char *@var{format}, ...) + +This function is similar to sprintf, but it will print at most @var{n} +characters. On error the return value is -1, otherwise it returns the +number of characters that would have been printed had @var{n} been +sufficiently large, regardless of the actual value of @var{n}. Note +some pre-C99 system libraries do not implement this correctly so users +cannot generally rely on the return value if the system version of +this function is used. + +@end deftypefn + +@c spaces.c:22 +@deftypefn Extension char* spaces (int @var{count}) + +Returns a pointer to a memory region filled with the specified +number of spaces and null terminated. The returned pointer is +valid until at least the next call. + +@end deftypefn + +@c stpcpy.c:23 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* stpcpy (char *@var{dst}, const char *@var{src}) + +Copies the string @var{src} into @var{dst}. Returns a pointer to +@var{dst} + strlen(@var{src}). + +@end deftypefn + +@c stpncpy.c:23 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* stpncpy (char *@var{dst}, const char *@var{src}, size_t @var{len}) + +Copies the string @var{src} into @var{dst}, copying exactly @var{len} +and padding with zeros if necessary. If @var{len} < strlen(@var{src}) +then return @var{dst} + @var{len}, otherwise returns @var{dst} + +strlen(@var{src}). + +@end deftypefn + +@c strcasecmp.c:15 +@deftypefn Supplemental int strcasecmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}) + +A case-insensitive @code{strcmp}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strchr.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* strchr (const char *@var{s}, int @var{c}) + +Returns a pointer to the first occurrence of the character @var{c} in +the string @var{s}, or @code{NULL} if not found. If @var{c} is itself the +null character, the results are undefined. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strdup.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* strdup (const char *@var{s}) + +Returns a pointer to a copy of @var{s} in memory obtained from +@code{malloc}, or @code{NULL} if insufficient memory was available. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strerror.c:670 +@deftypefn Replacement {const char*} strerrno (int @var{errnum}) + +Given an error number returned from a system call (typically returned +in @code{errno}), returns a pointer to a string containing the +symbolic name of that error number, as found in @code{<errno.h>}. + +If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices for +symbolic names, but no name is available for the particular error +number, then returns the string @samp{Error @var{num}}, where @var{num} +is the error number. + +If the supplied error number is not within the range of valid +indices, then returns @code{NULL}. + +The contents of the location pointed to are only guaranteed to be +valid until the next call to @code{strerrno}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strerror.c:602 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* strerror (int @var{errnoval}) + +Maps an @code{errno} number to an error message string, the contents +of which are implementation defined. On systems which have the +external variables @code{sys_nerr} and @code{sys_errlist}, these +strings will be the same as the ones used by @code{perror}. + +If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices for +the @code{sys_errlist}, but no message is available for the particular +error number, then returns the string @samp{Error @var{num}}, where +@var{num} is the error number. + +If the supplied error number is not a valid index into +@code{sys_errlist}, returns @code{NULL}. + +The returned string is only guaranteed to be valid only until the +next call to @code{strerror}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strncasecmp.c:15 +@deftypefn Supplemental int strncasecmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}) + +A case-insensitive @code{strncmp}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strncmp.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int strncmp (const char *@var{s1}, const char *@var{s2}, size_t @var{n}) + +Compares the first @var{n} bytes of two strings, returning a value as +@code{strcmp}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strrchr.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* strrchr (const char *@var{s}, int @var{c}) + +Returns a pointer to the last occurrence of the character @var{c} in +the string @var{s}, or @code{NULL} if not found. If @var{c} is itself the +null character, the results are undefined. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strsignal.c:388 +@deftypefn Supplemental {const char *} strsignal (int @var{signo}) + +Maps an signal number to an signal message string, the contents of +which are implementation defined. On systems which have the external +variable @code{sys_siglist}, these strings will be the same as the +ones used by @code{psignal()}. + +If the supplied signal number is within the valid range of indices for +the @code{sys_siglist}, but no message is available for the particular +signal number, then returns the string @samp{Signal @var{num}}, where +@var{num} is the signal number. + +If the supplied signal number is not a valid index into +@code{sys_siglist}, returns @code{NULL}. + +The returned string is only guaranteed to be valid only until the next +call to @code{strsignal}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strsignal.c:452 +@deftypefn Extension {const char*} strsigno (int @var{signo}) + +Given an signal number, returns a pointer to a string containing the +symbolic name of that signal number, as found in @code{<signal.h>}. + +If the supplied signal number is within the valid range of indices for +symbolic names, but no name is available for the particular signal +number, then returns the string @samp{Signal @var{num}}, where +@var{num} is the signal number. + +If the supplied signal number is not within the range of valid +indices, then returns @code{NULL}. + +The contents of the location pointed to are only guaranteed to be +valid until the next call to @code{strsigno}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strstr.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* strstr (const char *@var{string}, const char *@var{sub}) + +This function searches for the substring @var{sub} in the string +@var{string}, not including the terminating null characters. A pointer +to the first occurrence of @var{sub} is returned, or @code{NULL} if the +substring is absent. If @var{sub} points to a string with zero +length, the function returns @var{string}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strtod.c:27 +@deftypefn Supplemental double strtod (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{endptr}) + +This ISO C function converts the initial portion of @var{string} to a +@code{double}. If @var{endptr} is not @code{NULL}, a pointer to the +character after the last character used in the conversion is stored in +the location referenced by @var{endptr}. If no conversion is +performed, zero is returned and the value of @var{string} is stored in +the location referenced by @var{endptr}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strerror.c:730 +@deftypefn Extension int strtoerrno (const char *@var{name}) + +Given the symbolic name of a error number (e.g., @code{EACCES}), map it +to an errno value. If no translation is found, returns 0. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strtol.c:33 +@deftypefn Supplemental {long int} strtol (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{endptr}, int @var{base}) +@deftypefnx Supplemental {unsigned long int} strtoul (const char *@var{string}, char **@var{endptr}, int @var{base}) + +The @code{strtol} function converts the string in @var{string} to a +long integer value according to the given @var{base}, which must be +between 2 and 36 inclusive, or be the special value 0. If @var{base} +is 0, @code{strtol} will look for the prefixes @code{0} and @code{0x} +to indicate bases 8 and 16, respectively, else default to base 10. +When the base is 16 (either explicitly or implicitly), a prefix of +@code{0x} is allowed. The handling of @var{endptr} is as that of +@code{strtod} above. The @code{strtoul} function is the same, except +that the converted value is unsigned. + +@end deftypefn + +@c strsignal.c:507 +@deftypefn Extension int strtosigno (const char *@var{name}) + +Given the symbolic name of a signal, map it to a signal number. If no +translation is found, returns 0. + +@end deftypefn + +@c tmpnam.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental char* tmpnam (char *@var{s}) + +This function attempts to create a name for a temporary file, which +will be a valid file name yet not exist when @code{tmpnam} checks for +it. @var{s} must point to a buffer of at least @code{L_tmpnam} bytes, +or be @code{NULL}. Use of this function creates a security risk, and it must +not be used in new projects. Use @code{mkstemp} instead. + +@end deftypefn + +@c vasprintf.c:48 +@deftypefn Extension int vasprintf (char **@var{resptr}, const char *@var{format}, va_list @var{args}) + +Like @code{vsprintf}, but instead of passing a pointer to a buffer, +you pass a pointer to a pointer. This function will compute the size +of the buffer needed, allocate memory with @code{malloc}, and store a +pointer to the allocated memory in @code{*@var{resptr}}. The value +returned is the same as @code{vsprintf} would return. If memory could +not be allocated, minus one is returned and @code{NULL} is stored in +@code{*@var{resptr}}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c vfork.c:6 +@deftypefn Supplemental int vfork (void) + +Emulates @code{vfork} by calling @code{fork} and returning its value. + +@end deftypefn + +@c vprintf.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental int vprintf (const char *@var{format}, va_list @var{ap}) +@deftypefnx Supplemental int vfprintf (FILE *@var{stream}, const char *@var{format}, va_list @var{ap}) +@deftypefnx Supplemental int vsprintf (char *@var{str}, const char *@var{format}, va_list @var{ap}) + +These functions are the same as @code{printf}, @code{fprintf}, and +@code{sprintf}, respectively, except that they are called with a +@code{va_list} instead of a variable number of arguments. Note that +they do not call @code{va_end}; this is the application's +responsibility. In @libib{} they are implemented in terms of the +nonstandard but common function @code{_doprnt}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c vsnprintf.c:28 +@deftypefn Supplemental int vsnprintf (char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{n}, const char *@var{format}, va_list @var{ap}) + +This function is similar to vsprintf, but it will print at most +@var{n} characters. On error the return value is -1, otherwise it +returns the number of characters that would have been printed had +@var{n} been sufficiently large, regardless of the actual value of +@var{n}. Note some pre-C99 system libraries do not implement this +correctly so users cannot generally rely on the return value if the +system version of this function is used. + +@end deftypefn + +@c waitpid.c:3 +@deftypefn Supplemental int waitpid (int @var{pid}, int *@var{status}, int) + +This is a wrapper around the @code{wait} function. Any ``special'' +values of @var{pid} depend on your implementation of @code{wait}, as +does the return value. The third argument is unused in @libib{}. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xatexit.c:11 +@deftypefun int xatexit (void (*@var{fn}) (void)) + +Behaves as the standard @code{atexit} function, but with no limit on +the number of registered functions. Returns 0 on success, or @minus{}1 on +failure. If you use @code{xatexit} to register functions, you must use +@code{xexit} to terminate your program. + +@end deftypefun + +@c xmalloc.c:38 +@deftypefn Replacement void* xcalloc (size_t @var{nelem}, size_t @var{elsize}) + +Allocate memory without fail, and set it to zero. This routine functions +like @code{calloc}, but will behave the same as @code{xmalloc} if memory +cannot be found. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xexit.c:22 +@deftypefn Replacement void xexit (int @var{code}) + +Terminates the program. If any functions have been registered with +the @code{xatexit} replacement function, they will be called first. +Termination is handled via the system's normal @code{exit} call. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xmalloc.c:22 +@deftypefn Replacement void* xmalloc (size_t) + +Allocate memory without fail. If @code{malloc} fails, this will print +a message to @code{stderr} (using the name set by +@code{xmalloc_set_program_name}, +if any) and then call @code{xexit}. Note that it is therefore safe for +a program to contain @code{#define malloc xmalloc} in its source. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xmalloc.c:53 +@deftypefn Replacement void xmalloc_failed (size_t) + +This function is not meant to be called by client code, and is listed +here for completeness only. If any of the allocation routines fail, this +function will be called to print an error message and terminate execution. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xmalloc.c:46 +@deftypefn Replacement void xmalloc_set_program_name (const char *@var{name}) + +You can use this to set the name of the program used by +@code{xmalloc_failed} when printing a failure message. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xmemdup.c:7 +@deftypefn Replacement void* xmemdup (void *@var{input}, size_t @var{copy_size}, size_t @var{alloc_size}) + +Duplicates a region of memory without fail. First, @var{alloc_size} bytes +are allocated, then @var{copy_size} bytes from @var{input} are copied into +it, and the new memory is returned. If fewer bytes are copied than were +allocated, the remaining memory is zeroed. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xmalloc.c:32 +@deftypefn Replacement void* xrealloc (void *@var{ptr}, size_t @var{size}) +Reallocate memory without fail. This routine functions like @code{realloc}, +but will behave the same as @code{xmalloc} if memory cannot be found. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xstrdup.c:7 +@deftypefn Replacement char* xstrdup (const char *@var{s}) + +Duplicates a character string without fail, using @code{xmalloc} to +obtain memory. + +@end deftypefn + +@c xstrerror.c:7 +@deftypefn Replacement char* xstrerror (int @var{errnum}) + +Behaves exactly like the standard @code{strerror} function, but +will never return a @code{NULL} pointer. + +@end deftypefn + + |