FOPEN(3S) — STANDARD I/O FUNCTIONS
NAME
fopen, freopen, fdopen − open a stream
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
FILE ∗fopen(filename, type)
char ∗filename, ∗type;
FILE ∗freopen(filename, type, stream)
char ∗filename, ∗type;
FILE ∗stream;
FILE ∗fdopen(fildes, type)
char ∗type;
DESCRIPTION
fopen() opens the file named by filename and associates a stream with it. If the open succeeds, fopen() returns a pointer to be used to identify the stream in subsequent operations.
filename points to a character string that contains the name of the file to be opened.
type is a character string having one of the following values:
r open for reading
w truncate or create for writing
a append: open for writing at end of file, or create for writing
r+ open for update (reading and writing)
w+ truncate or create for update
a+ append; open or create for update at EOF
freopen() opens the file named by filename and associates the stream pointed to by stream with it. The type argument is used just as in fopen. The original stream is closed, regardless of whether the open ultimately succeeds. If the open succeeds, freopen() returns the original value of stream.
freopen() is typically used to attach the preopened streams associated with stdin, stdout, and stderr to other files.
fdopen() associates a stream with the file descriptor fildes. File descriptors are obtained from calls like open, dup, creat, or pipe(2), which open files but do not return streams. Streams are necessary input for many of the Section 3S library routines. The type of the stream must agree with the mode of the open file.
When a file is opened for update, both input and output may be done on the resulting stream. However, output may not be directly followed by input without an intervening fseek() or rewind, and input may not be directly followed by output without an intervening fseek, rewind, or an input operation which encounters end-of-file.
SEE ALSO
open(2V), pipe(2), fclose(3S), fopen(3V), fseek(3S)
DIAGNOSTICS
fopen, freopen, and fdopen() return a NULL pointer on failure.
BUGS
In order to support the same number of open files that the system does, fopen() must allocate additional memory for data structures using calloc() after 64 files have been opened. This confuses some programs which use their own memory allocators.
Sun Release 4.0 — Last change: 18 November 1987