glibc/libio/oldfileops.c
Ulrich Drepper fe0ec73edb Update.
1997-11-13 01:07  Ulrich Drepper  <drepper@cygnus.com>

	* manual/arith.texi: Update documentation according to most recent
	ISO C 9X draft.
	Document fma, fdim, fmin, and fmax.
	* manual/math.texi: Allow multiple defitino of mul etc.

	* math/complex.h (I): Define using _Complex_U not _Imaginary_I.

	* math/libm-test.c: Add tests for fma.

	* math/math.h: Describe DECIMAL_DIG macro.  Pretty print.

	* sysdeps/alpha/fpu/bits/mathdef.h: Define INFINITY as of type float.
	Define DECIMAL_DIG.
	* sysdeps/generic/bits/mathdef.h: Likewise.
	* sysdeps/i386/bits/mathdef.h: Likewise.
	* sysdeps/m68k/fpu/bits/mathdef.h: Likewise.
	* sysdeps/powerpc/bits/mathdef.h: Likewise.
	* sysdeps/sparc/fpu/bits/mathdef.h: Likewise.

	* sysdeps/ieee754/bits/nan.h: Define NAN as of type float.
	* sysdeps/m68k/bits/nan.h. Likewise.  Remove NANF and NANL.

1997-11-12 17:50  Ulrich Drepper  <drepper@cygnus.com>

	* sunrpc/xcrypt.c: Don't process #ident preprocessor instruction.
	Reported by Philip Blundell <pb@nexus.co.uk>.

	* string/strndup.c: Use K&R like definition.

	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/getcwd.c: New file.  Use kernel information
	instead of longish search for the name.
	* sysdeps/posix/getcwd.c: Add support for use of the code as a
	backup solution.

1997-11-12 15:31  Philip Blundell  <pb@nexus.co.uk>

	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/sysdep.h (SYS_ify): Don't add
	SWI_BASE in twice.

	* sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/arm/profil-counter.h (profil_counter):
	Use correct name to access PC.

	* sysdeps/unix/arm/sysdep.S: Include <bits/errno.h> not <errnos.h>.

	* sysdeps/generic/bits/types.h: Add __ino64_t and __off64_t.
	* sysdeps/generic/bits/stat.h: Add struct stat64.

1997-11-12 16:08  Ulrich Drepper  <drepper@cygnus.com>

	* intl/loadmsgcat.c [_LIBC] (fstat): Don't define as __fstat since
	now we have a definition as _fxstat.
	* libio/fileops.c: Likewise.
	* libio/oldfileops.c: Likewise.
	Reported by Andreas Jaeger <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de>.

1997-11-12  Andreas Jaeger  <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de>

	* sysdeps/wordsize-32/inttypes.h (SIG_ATOMIC_MAX): Correct value.
	* sysdeps/wordsize-64/inttypes.h (SIG_ATOMIC_MAX): Likewise.

1997-11-11  Paul Eggert  <eggert@twinsun.com>

	Add overflow checking for 64-bit time_t and 32-bit int.

	* time/time.h (__offtime): Now returns int.

	* time/offtime.c (__offtime): Return nonzero if successful;
	check for tm_year overflow.
	(DIV): New macro.
	(LEAPS_THRU_END_OF): Handle negative years correctly.

	* time/tzset.c (__tz_convert): Return NULL if offtime cannot convert.

	* time/mktime.c (ranged_convert): New function.
	(ydhms_tm_diff): Return nonzero if TP is null.
	(__mktime_internal): Handle cases correctly even if they are near or
	past the limits of time_t values that can be broken down to struct tm.
	(print_tm, check_result, main): Diagnose localtime failures.

	* manual/time.texi: Document the fact that localtime returns 0
	if the time can't be represented.

1997-11-12 06:03  Ulrich Drepper  <drepper@cygnus.com>

	* time/strftime.c (memset_space, memset_zero): Use MEMPCPY, not
	mempcpy.  Patch by Ken'ichi Handa  <handa@etl.go.jp>.

	* manual/time.texi: Document %F and %f format for strftime.

	* manual/arith.texi: Document copysign, nextafter and nan.

1997-11-06  Andreas Jaeger  <aj@arthur.rhein-neckar.de>

	* test-installation.pl: New file. Tests for some installation
	problems.
1997-11-13 00:21:19 +00:00

720 lines
20 KiB
C

/* Copyright (C) 1993, 1995, 1997 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU IO Library.
Written by Per Bothner <bothner@cygnus.com>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at
your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this library; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
the Free Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston,
MA 02111-1307, USA.
As a special exception, if you link this library with files
compiled with a GNU compiler to produce an executable, this does
not cause the resulting executable to be covered by the GNU General
Public License. This exception does not however invalidate any
other reasons why the executable file might be covered by the GNU
General Public License. */
/* This is a compatibility file. If we don't build the libc with
versioning don't compile this file. */
#if DO_VERSIONING
#ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE
# define _POSIX_SOURCE
#endif
#include "libioP.h"
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>
#ifndef errno
extern int errno;
#endif
#ifndef __set_errno
# define __set_errno(Val) errno = (Val)
#endif
#ifdef _LIBC
# define open(Name, Flags, Prot) __open (Name, Flags, Prot)
# define close(FD) __close (FD)
# define lseek(FD, Offset, Whence) __lseek (FD, Offset, Whence)
# define read(FD, Buf, NBytes) __read (FD, Buf, NBytes)
# define write(FD, Buf, NBytes) __write (FD, Buf, NBytes)
#endif
/* An fstream can be in at most one of put mode, get mode, or putback mode.
Putback mode is a variant of get mode.
In a filebuf, there is only one current position, instead of two
separate get and put pointers. In get mode, the current position
is that of gptr(); in put mode that of pptr().
The position in the buffer that corresponds to the position
in external file system is normally _IO_read_end, except in putback
mode, when it is _IO_save_end.
If the field _fb._offset is >= 0, it gives the offset in
the file as a whole corresponding to eGptr(). (?)
PUT MODE:
If a filebuf is in put mode, then all of _IO_read_ptr, _IO_read_end,
and _IO_read_base are equal to each other. These are usually equal
to _IO_buf_base, though not necessarily if we have switched from
get mode to put mode. (The reason is to maintain the invariant
that _IO_read_end corresponds to the external file position.)
_IO_write_base is non-NULL and usually equal to _IO_base_base.
We also have _IO_write_end == _IO_buf_end, but only in fully buffered mode.
The un-flushed character are those between _IO_write_base and _IO_write_ptr.
GET MODE:
If a filebuf is in get or putback mode, eback() != egptr().
In get mode, the unread characters are between gptr() and egptr().
The OS file position corresponds to that of egptr().
PUTBACK MODE:
Putback mode is used to remember "excess" characters that have
been sputbackc'd in a separate putback buffer.
In putback mode, the get buffer points to the special putback buffer.
The unread characters are the characters between gptr() and egptr()
in the putback buffer, as well as the area between save_gptr()
and save_egptr(), which point into the original reserve buffer.
(The pointers save_gptr() and save_egptr() are the values
of gptr() and egptr() at the time putback mode was entered.)
The OS position corresponds to that of save_egptr().
LINE BUFFERED OUTPUT:
During line buffered output, _IO_write_base==base() && epptr()==base().
However, ptr() may be anywhere between base() and ebuf().
This forces a call to filebuf::overflow(int C) on every put.
If there is more space in the buffer, and C is not a '\n',
then C is inserted, and pptr() incremented.
UNBUFFERED STREAMS:
If a filebuf is unbuffered(), the _shortbuf[1] is used as the buffer.
*/
#define CLOSED_FILEBUF_FLAGS \
(_IO_IS_FILEBUF+_IO_NO_READS+_IO_NO_WRITES+_IO_TIED_PUT_GET)
void
_IO_old_file_init (fp)
_IO_FILE *fp;
{
/* POSIX.1 allows another file handle to be used to change the position
of our file descriptor. Hence we actually don't know the actual
position before we do the first fseek (and until a following fflush). */
fp->_old_offset = _IO_pos_BAD;
fp->_IO_file_flags |= CLOSED_FILEBUF_FLAGS;
_IO_link_in(fp);
fp->_fileno = -1;
}
int
_IO_old_file_close_it (fp)
_IO_FILE *fp;
{
int write_status, close_status;
if (!_IO_file_is_open (fp))
return EOF;
write_status = _IO_do_flush (fp);
_IO_unsave_markers(fp);
close_status = _IO_SYSCLOSE (fp);
/* Free buffer. */
_IO_setb (fp, NULL, NULL, 0);
_IO_setg (fp, NULL, NULL, NULL);
_IO_setp (fp, NULL, NULL);
_IO_un_link (fp);
fp->_flags = _IO_MAGIC|CLOSED_FILEBUF_FLAGS;
fp->_fileno = EOF;
fp->_old_offset = _IO_pos_BAD;
return close_status ? close_status : write_status;
}
void
_IO_old_file_finish (fp, dummy)
_IO_FILE *fp;
int dummy;
{
if (_IO_file_is_open (fp))
{
_IO_do_flush (fp);
if (!(fp->_flags & _IO_DELETE_DONT_CLOSE))
_IO_SYSCLOSE (fp);
}
_IO_default_finish (fp, 0);
}
_IO_FILE *
_IO_old_file_fopen (fp, filename, mode)
_IO_FILE *fp;
const char *filename;
const char *mode;
{
int oflags = 0, omode;
int read_write, fdesc;
int oprot = 0666;
if (_IO_file_is_open (fp))
return 0;
switch (*mode++)
{
case 'r':
omode = O_RDONLY;
read_write = _IO_NO_WRITES;
break;
case 'w':
omode = O_WRONLY;
oflags = O_CREAT|O_TRUNC;
read_write = _IO_NO_READS;
break;
case 'a':
omode = O_WRONLY;
oflags = O_CREAT|O_APPEND;
read_write = _IO_NO_READS|_IO_IS_APPENDING;
break;
default:
__set_errno (EINVAL);
return NULL;
}
if (mode[0] == '+' || (mode[0] == 'b' && mode[1] == '+'))
{
omode = O_RDWR;
read_write &= _IO_IS_APPENDING;
}
fdesc = open (filename, omode|oflags, oprot);
if (fdesc < 0)
return NULL;
fp->_fileno = fdesc;
_IO_mask_flags (fp, read_write,_IO_NO_READS+_IO_NO_WRITES+_IO_IS_APPENDING);
if (read_write & _IO_IS_APPENDING)
if (_IO_SEEKOFF (fp, (_IO_off_t)0, _IO_seek_end, _IOS_INPUT|_IOS_OUTPUT)
== _IO_pos_BAD && errno != ESPIPE)
return NULL;
_IO_link_in (fp);
return fp;
}
_IO_FILE *
_IO_old_file_attach (fp, fd)
_IO_FILE *fp;
int fd;
{
if (_IO_file_is_open (fp))
return NULL;
fp->_fileno = fd;
fp->_flags &= ~(_IO_NO_READS+_IO_NO_WRITES);
fp->_flags |= _IO_DELETE_DONT_CLOSE;
/* Get the current position of the file. */
/* We have to do that since that may be junk. */
fp->_old_offset = _IO_pos_BAD;
if (_IO_SEEKOFF (fp, (_IO_off_t)0, _IO_seek_cur, _IOS_INPUT|_IOS_OUTPUT)
== _IO_pos_BAD && errno != ESPIPE)
return NULL;
return fp;
}
_IO_FILE *
_IO_old_file_setbuf (fp, p, len)
_IO_FILE *fp;
char *p;
_IO_ssize_t len;
{
if (_IO_default_setbuf (fp, p, len) == NULL)
return NULL;
fp->_IO_write_base = fp->_IO_write_ptr = fp->_IO_write_end
= fp->_IO_buf_base;
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
return fp;
}
/* Write TO_DO bytes from DATA to FP.
Then mark FP as having empty buffers. */
int
_IO_old_do_write (fp, data, to_do)
_IO_FILE *fp;
const char *data;
_IO_size_t to_do;
{
_IO_size_t count;
if (to_do == 0)
return 0;
if (fp->_flags & _IO_IS_APPENDING)
/* On a system without a proper O_APPEND implementation,
you would need to sys_seek(0, SEEK_END) here, but is
is not needed nor desirable for Unix- or Posix-like systems.
Instead, just indicate that offset (before and after) is
unpredictable. */
fp->_old_offset = _IO_pos_BAD;
else if (fp->_IO_read_end != fp->_IO_write_base)
{
_IO_pos_t new_pos
= _IO_SYSSEEK (fp, fp->_IO_write_base - fp->_IO_read_end, 1);
if (new_pos == _IO_pos_BAD)
return EOF;
fp->_old_offset = new_pos;
}
count = _IO_SYSWRITE (fp, data, to_do);
if (fp->_cur_column)
fp->_cur_column = _IO_adjust_column (fp->_cur_column - 1, data, to_do) + 1;
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
fp->_IO_write_base = fp->_IO_write_ptr = fp->_IO_buf_base;
fp->_IO_write_end = ((fp->_flags & (_IO_LINE_BUF+_IO_UNBUFFERED))
? fp->_IO_buf_base : fp->_IO_buf_end);
return count != to_do ? EOF : 0;
}
int
_IO_old_file_underflow (fp)
_IO_FILE *fp;
{
_IO_ssize_t count;
#if 0
/* SysV does not make this test; take it out for compatibility */
if (fp->_flags & _IO_EOF_SEEN)
return (EOF);
#endif
if (fp->_flags & _IO_NO_READS)
{
__set_errno (EBADF);
return EOF;
}
if (fp->_IO_read_ptr < fp->_IO_read_end)
return *(unsigned char *) fp->_IO_read_ptr;
if (fp->_IO_buf_base == NULL)
_IO_doallocbuf (fp);
/* Flush all line buffered files before reading. */
/* FIXME This can/should be moved to genops ?? */
if (fp->_flags & (_IO_LINE_BUF|_IO_UNBUFFERED))
_IO_flush_all_linebuffered ();
_IO_switch_to_get_mode (fp);
/* This is very tricky. We have to adjust those
pointers before we call _IO_SYSREAD () since
we may longjump () out while waiting for
input. Those pointers may be screwed up. H.J. */
fp->_IO_read_base = fp->_IO_read_ptr = fp->_IO_buf_base;
fp->_IO_read_end = fp->_IO_buf_base;
fp->_IO_write_base = fp->_IO_write_ptr = fp->_IO_write_end
= fp->_IO_buf_base;
count = _IO_SYSREAD (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base,
fp->_IO_buf_end - fp->_IO_buf_base);
if (count <= 0)
{
if (count == 0)
fp->_flags |= _IO_EOF_SEEN;
else
fp->_flags |= _IO_ERR_SEEN, count = 0;
}
fp->_IO_read_end += count;
if (count == 0)
return EOF;
if (fp->_old_offset != _IO_pos_BAD)
_IO_pos_adjust (fp->_old_offset, count);
return *(unsigned char *) fp->_IO_read_ptr;
}
int
_IO_old_file_overflow (f, ch)
_IO_FILE *f;
int ch;
{
if (f->_flags & _IO_NO_WRITES) /* SET ERROR */
{
f->_flags |= _IO_ERR_SEEN;
__set_errno (EBADF);
return EOF;
}
/* If currently reading or no buffer allocated. */
if ((f->_flags & _IO_CURRENTLY_PUTTING) == 0)
{
/* Allocate a buffer if needed. */
if (f->_IO_write_base == 0)
{
_IO_doallocbuf (f);
_IO_setg (f, f->_IO_buf_base, f->_IO_buf_base, f->_IO_buf_base);
}
/* Otherwise must be currently reading.
If _IO_read_ptr (and hence also _IO_read_end) is at the buffer end,
logically slide the buffer forwards one block (by setting the
read pointers to all point at the beginning of the block). This
makes room for subsequent output.
Otherwise, set the read pointers to _IO_read_end (leaving that
alone, so it can continue to correspond to the external position). */
if (f->_IO_read_ptr == f->_IO_buf_end)
f->_IO_read_end = f->_IO_read_ptr = f->_IO_buf_base;
f->_IO_write_ptr = f->_IO_read_ptr;
f->_IO_write_base = f->_IO_write_ptr;
f->_IO_write_end = f->_IO_buf_end;
f->_IO_read_base = f->_IO_read_ptr = f->_IO_read_end;
if (f->_flags & (_IO_LINE_BUF+_IO_UNBUFFERED))
f->_IO_write_end = f->_IO_write_ptr;
f->_flags |= _IO_CURRENTLY_PUTTING;
}
if (ch == EOF)
return _IO_do_flush (f);
if (f->_IO_write_ptr == f->_IO_buf_end ) /* Buffer is really full */
if (_IO_do_flush (f) == EOF)
return EOF;
*f->_IO_write_ptr++ = ch;
if ((f->_flags & _IO_UNBUFFERED)
|| ((f->_flags & _IO_LINE_BUF) && ch == '\n'))
if (_IO_do_flush (f) == EOF)
return EOF;
return (unsigned char) ch;
}
int
_IO_old_file_sync (fp)
_IO_FILE *fp;
{
_IO_size_t delta;
int retval = 0;
_IO_cleanup_region_start ((void (*) __P ((void *))) _IO_funlockfile, fp);
_IO_flockfile (fp);
/* char* ptr = cur_ptr(); */
if (fp->_IO_write_ptr > fp->_IO_write_base)
if (_IO_do_flush(fp)) return EOF;
delta = fp->_IO_read_ptr - fp->_IO_read_end;
if (delta != 0)
{
#ifdef TODO
if (_IO_in_backup (fp))
delta -= eGptr () - Gbase ();
#endif
_IO_off_t new_pos = _IO_SYSSEEK (fp, delta, 1);
if (new_pos != (_IO_off_t) EOF)
fp->_IO_read_end = fp->_IO_read_ptr;
#ifdef ESPIPE
else if (errno == ESPIPE)
; /* Ignore error from unseekable devices. */
#endif
else
retval = EOF;
}
if (retval != EOF)
fp->_old_offset = _IO_pos_BAD;
/* FIXME: Cleanup - can this be shared? */
/* setg(base(), ptr, ptr); */
_IO_cleanup_region_end (1);
return retval;
}
_IO_fpos64_t
_IO_old_file_seekoff (fp, offset, dir, mode)
_IO_FILE *fp;
_IO_off64_t offset;
int dir;
int mode;
{
_IO_pos_t result;
_IO_off64_t delta, new_offset;
long count;
/* POSIX.1 8.2.3.7 says that after a call the fflush() the file
offset of the underlying file must be exact. */
int must_be_exact = (fp->_IO_read_base == fp->_IO_read_end
&& fp->_IO_write_base == fp->_IO_write_ptr);
if (mode == 0)
dir = _IO_seek_cur, offset = 0; /* Don't move any pointers. */
/* Flush unwritten characters.
(This may do an unneeded write if we seek within the buffer.
But to be able to switch to reading, we would need to set
egptr to ptr. That can't be done in the current design,
which assumes file_ptr() is eGptr. Anyway, since we probably
end up flushing when we close(), it doesn't make much difference.)
FIXME: simulate mem-papped files. */
if (fp->_IO_write_ptr > fp->_IO_write_base || _IO_in_put_mode (fp))
if (_IO_switch_to_get_mode (fp))
return EOF;
if (fp->_IO_buf_base == NULL)
{
_IO_doallocbuf (fp);
_IO_setp (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
}
switch (dir)
{
case _IO_seek_cur:
/* Adjust for read-ahead (bytes is buffer). */
offset -= fp->_IO_read_end - fp->_IO_read_ptr;
if (fp->_old_offset == _IO_pos_BAD)
goto dumb;
/* Make offset absolute, assuming current pointer is file_ptr(). */
offset += _IO_pos_as_off (fp->_old_offset);
dir = _IO_seek_set;
break;
case _IO_seek_set:
break;
case _IO_seek_end:
{
struct stat st;
if (_IO_SYSSTAT (fp, &st) == 0 && S_ISREG (st.st_mode))
{
offset += st.st_size;
dir = _IO_seek_set;
}
else
goto dumb;
}
}
/* At this point, dir==_IO_seek_set. */
/* If destination is within current buffer, optimize: */
if (fp->_old_offset != _IO_pos_BAD && fp->_IO_read_base != NULL
&& !_IO_in_backup (fp))
{
/* Offset relative to start of main get area. */
_IO_pos_t rel_offset = (offset - fp->_old_offset
+ (fp->_IO_read_end - fp->_IO_read_base));
if (rel_offset >= 0)
{
#if 0
if (_IO_in_backup (fp))
_IO_switch_to_main_get_area (fp);
#endif
if (rel_offset <= fp->_IO_read_end - fp->_IO_read_base)
{
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base + rel_offset,
fp->_IO_read_end);
_IO_setp (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
return offset;
}
#ifdef TODO
/* If we have streammarkers, seek forward by reading ahead. */
if (_IO_have_markers (fp))
{
int to_skip = rel_offset
- (fp->_IO_read_ptr - fp->_IO_read_base);
if (ignore (to_skip) != to_skip)
goto dumb;
return offset;
}
#endif
}
#ifdef TODO
if (rel_offset < 0 && rel_offset >= Bbase () - Bptr ())
{
if (!_IO_in_backup (fp))
_IO_switch_to_backup_area (fp);
gbump (fp->_IO_read_end + rel_offset - fp->_IO_read_ptr);
return offset;
}
#endif
}
#ifdef TODO
_IO_unsave_markers (fp);
#endif
if (fp->_flags & _IO_NO_READS)
goto dumb;
/* Try to seek to a block boundary, to improve kernel page management. */
new_offset = offset & ~(fp->_IO_buf_end - fp->_IO_buf_base - 1);
delta = offset - new_offset;
if (delta > fp->_IO_buf_end - fp->_IO_buf_base)
{
new_offset = offset;
delta = 0;
}
result = _IO_SYSSEEK (fp, new_offset, 0);
if (result < 0)
return EOF;
if (delta == 0)
count = 0;
else
{
count = _IO_SYSREAD (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base,
(must_be_exact
? delta : fp->_IO_buf_end - fp->_IO_buf_base));
if (count < delta)
{
/* We weren't allowed to read, but try to seek the remainder. */
offset = count == EOF ? delta : delta-count;
dir = _IO_seek_cur;
goto dumb;
}
}
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base + delta,
fp->_IO_buf_base + count);
_IO_setp (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
fp->_old_offset = result + count;
_IO_mask_flags (fp, 0, _IO_EOF_SEEN);
return offset;
dumb:
_IO_unsave_markers (fp);
result = _IO_SYSSEEK (fp, offset, dir);
if (result != EOF)
_IO_mask_flags (fp, 0, _IO_EOF_SEEN);
fp->_old_offset = result;
_IO_setg (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
_IO_setp (fp, fp->_IO_buf_base, fp->_IO_buf_base);
return result;
}
_IO_ssize_t
_IO_old_file_write (f, data, n)
_IO_FILE *f;
const void *data;
_IO_ssize_t n;
{
_IO_ssize_t to_do = n;
while (to_do > 0)
{
_IO_ssize_t count = write (f->_fileno, data, to_do);
if (count == EOF)
{
f->_flags |= _IO_ERR_SEEN;
break;
}
to_do -= count;
data = (void *) ((char *) data + count);
}
n -= to_do;
if (f->_old_offset >= 0)
f->_old_offset += n;
return n;
}
_IO_size_t
_IO_old_file_xsputn (f, data, n)
_IO_FILE *f;
const void *data;
_IO_size_t n;
{
register const char *s = (char *) data;
_IO_size_t to_do = n;
int must_flush = 0;
_IO_size_t count;
if (n <= 0)
return 0;
/* This is an optimized implementation.
If the amount to be written straddles a block boundary
(or the filebuf is unbuffered), use sys_write directly. */
/* First figure out how much space is available in the buffer. */
count = f->_IO_write_end - f->_IO_write_ptr; /* Space available. */
if ((f->_flags & _IO_LINE_BUF) && (f->_flags & _IO_CURRENTLY_PUTTING))
{
count = f->_IO_buf_end - f->_IO_write_ptr;
if (count >= n)
{
register const char *p;
for (p = s + n; p > s; )
{
if (*--p == '\n')
{
count = p - s + 1;
must_flush = 1;
break;
}
}
}
}
/* Then fill the buffer. */
if (count > 0)
{
if (count > to_do)
count = to_do;
if (count > 20)
{
memcpy (f->_IO_write_ptr, s, count);
s += count;
}
else
{
register char *p = f->_IO_write_ptr;
register int i = (int) count;
while (--i >= 0)
*p++ = *s++;
}
f->_IO_write_ptr += count;
to_do -= count;
}
if (to_do + must_flush > 0)
{
_IO_size_t block_size, dont_write;
/* Next flush the (full) buffer. */
if (__overflow (f, EOF) == EOF)
return n - to_do;
/* Try to maintain alignment: write a whole number of blocks.
dont_write is what gets left over. */
block_size = f->_IO_buf_end - f->_IO_buf_base;
dont_write = block_size >= 128 ? to_do % block_size : 0;
count = to_do - dont_write;
if (_IO_do_write (f, s, count) == EOF)
return n - to_do;
to_do = dont_write;
/* Now write out the remainder. Normally, this will fit in the
buffer, but it's somewhat messier for line-buffered files,
so we let _IO_default_xsputn handle the general case. */
if (dont_write)
to_do -= _IO_default_xsputn (f, s+count, dont_write);
}
return n - to_do;
}
struct _IO_jump_t _IO_old_file_jumps =
{
JUMP_INIT_DUMMY,
JUMP_INIT(finish, _IO_old_file_finish),
JUMP_INIT(overflow, _IO_old_file_overflow),
JUMP_INIT(underflow, _IO_old_file_underflow),
JUMP_INIT(uflow, _IO_default_uflow),
JUMP_INIT(pbackfail, _IO_default_pbackfail),
JUMP_INIT(xsputn, _IO_old_file_xsputn),
JUMP_INIT(xsgetn, _IO_default_xsgetn),
JUMP_INIT(seekoff, _IO_old_file_seekoff),
JUMP_INIT(seekpos, _IO_default_seekpos),
JUMP_INIT(setbuf, _IO_old_file_setbuf),
JUMP_INIT(sync, _IO_old_file_sync),
JUMP_INIT(doallocate, _IO_file_doallocate),
JUMP_INIT(read, _IO_file_read),
JUMP_INIT(write, _IO_old_file_write),
JUMP_INIT(seek, _IO_file_seek),
JUMP_INIT(close, _IO_file_close),
JUMP_INIT(stat, _IO_file_stat)
};
#endif /* DO_VERSIONING */