fgetpos
, fseek
,
fseeko
, fsetpos
,
ftell
, ftello
,
rewind
—
reposition a stream
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include <stdio.h>
int
fseek
(FILE
*stream, long
offset, int
whence);
long
ftell
(FILE
*stream);
void
rewind
(FILE
*stream);
int
fgetpos
(FILE
* restrict stream, fpos_t
* restrict pos);
int
fsetpos
(FILE
*stream, const fpos_t
*pos);
#include
<sys/types.h>
int
fseeko
(FILE
*stream, off_t
offset, int
whence);
off_t
ftello
(FILE
*stream);
The fseek
() function sets the file position indicator
for the stream pointed to by stream. The new position,
measured in bytes, is obtained by adding offset bytes to
the position specified by whence. If
whence is set to SEEK_SET
,
SEEK_CUR
, or SEEK_END
, the
offset is relative to the start of the file, the current position indicator,
or end-of-file, respectively. A successful call to the
fseek
() function clears the end-of-file indicator for
the stream and undoes any effects of the
ungetc(3)
and
ungetwc(3)
functions on the same stream.
The ftell
() function obtains the current
value of the file position indicator for the stream pointed to by
stream.
The rewind
() function sets the file
position indicator for the stream pointed to by stream
to the beginning of the file. It is equivalent to:
(void)fseek(stream, 0L,
SEEK_SET)
except that the error indicator for the stream is also cleared
(see
clearerr(3)).
Since rewind
() does not return a value, an
application wishing to detect errors should clear
errno, then call rewind
(), and
if errno is non-zero, assume an error has
occurred.
The fseeko
() function is identical to
fseek
(), except it takes an
off_t argument instead of a
long. Likewise, the ftello
()
function is identical to ftell
(), except it returns
an off_t.
The fgetpos
() and
fsetpos
() functions are alternate interfaces for
retrieving and setting the current position in the file, similar to
ftell
() and fseek
(), except
that the current position is stored in an opaque object of type
fpos_t pointed to by pos. These
functions provide a portable way to seek to offsets larger than those that
can be represented by a long int. They may also store
additional state information in the fpos_t object to
facilitate seeking within files containing multibyte characters with
state-dependent encodings. Although fpos_t has
traditionally been an integral type, applications cannot assume that it is;
in particular, they must not perform arithmetic on objects of this type.
If the stream is a wide character stream (see
fwide(3)),
the position specified by the combination of offset
and whence must contain the first byte of a multibyte
sequence.
The rewind
() function returns no value.
The fgetpos
(), fseek
(),
fseeko
(), and fsetpos
()
functions return the value 0 if successful; otherwise the
value -1 is returned and the global variable
errno is set to indicate the error.
Upon successful completion, ftell
() and
ftello
() return the current offset. Otherwise, -1 is
returned and the global variable errno is set to
indicate the error.
- [
EBADF
]
- The stream argument is not a seekable stream.
- [
EINVAL
]
- The whence argument is invalid or the resulting
file-position indicator would be set to a negative value.
- [
EOVERFLOW
]
- The resulting file offset would be a value which cannot be represented
correctly in an object of type off_t for
fseeko
() and ftello
() or
long for fseek
() and
ftell
().
- [
ESPIPE
]
- The file descriptor underlying stream is associated with a pipe or FIFO or
file-position indicator value is unspecified (see
ungetc(3)).
The functions fgetpos
(),
fseek
(), fseeko
(),
fsetpos
(), ftell
(),
ftello
(), and rewind
() may
also fail and set errno for any of the errors
specified for the routines
fflush(3),
fstat(2),
lseek(2),
and
malloc(3).
The fgetpos
(), fsetpos
(),
fseek
(), ftell
(), and
rewind
() functions conform to ISO/IEC
9899:1990 (“ISO C90”).
The fseeko
() and
ftello
() functions conform to IEEE
Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”).