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BSTRING(3)  —  UNIX Programmer’s Manual

NAME

bcopy, bcmp, bzero, ffs − bit and byte string operations

SYNOPSIS

bcopy(b1, b2, length)
char ∗b1, ∗b2;
unsigned int length;

int bcmp(b1, b2, length)
char ∗b1, ∗b2;
unsigned int length;

bzero(b, length)
char ∗b;
unsigned int length;

int ffs(i)
int i;

DESCRIPTION

The functions bcopy, bcmp, and bzero operate on variable length strings of bytes.  They do not check for null bytes as the routines in string(3) do.

Bcopy copies length bytes from string b1 to the string b2.

Bcmp compares byte string b1 against byte string b2, returning zero if they are identical, non-zero otherwise.  Both strings are assumed to be length bytes long. 

Bzero places length 0 bytes in the string b1.

Ffs find the first bit set in the argument passed it and returns the index of that bit.  Bits are numbered starting at 1.  A return value of zero indicates the value passed is zero. 

BUGS

The bcmp and bcopy routines take parameters backwards from strcmp and strcpy.

4BSD

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