ftw(S-osr5)
ftw --
walk a file tree
Syntax
cc . . . -lc
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <ftw.h>
int ftw (path, fn, depth)
char *path;
int (*fn) ();
int depth;
Description
The ftw function recursively descends the directory hierarchy
rooted in path.
For each object in the hierarchy,
ftw calls fn,
passing it a pointer to a null-terminated
character string containing the name of the object,
a pointer to a stat structure (see
stat(S-osr5))
containing information about the object, and an integer.
Possible values of the integer, defined in the <ftw.h> header file,
are:
FTW_F-
file
FTW_D-
directory
FTW_DNR-
directory that cannot be read
FTW_NS-
object for which stat could not
successfully be executed
If the integer is FTW_DNR,
descendants of that directory are not processed.
If the integer is FTW_NS, the
stat structure contains garbage.
An example of an object that would cause
FTW_NS to be passed to
fn would be a file in a directory
with read but without execute (search) permission.
The ftw function
visits a directory before visiting any of its descendants.
The tree traversal continues until the tree is exhausted;
an invocation of fn returns a nonzero value;
or an error is detected within ftw
(such as an I/O error). If the tree is exhausted,
ftw returns zero.
If fn returns a nonzero value, ftw
stops its tree traversal and returns whatever
value was returned by fn.
If ftw detects an error
other than EACCES,
it returns -1 and sets the error type in errno.
The ftw function
uses one file descriptor for each level in the tree.
The depth argument limits the number of file descriptors used.
If depth
is zero or negative, the effect is the same as if it were 1.
depth
must not be greater than the number of file descriptors currently
available for use.
ftw runs faster if depth
is at least as large as the number of levels in the tree.
Diagnostics
The ftw funcion will fail if:
[EACCES]-
Search permission is denied for any component of pathname
or read permission is denied for pathname
[ELOOP]-
Too many symbolic links were encountered.
[ENAMETOOLONG]-
The length of the pathname argument exceeds
{PATH_MAX}.
[ENOENT]-
A component of pathname does not name an existing directory
or pathname is an empty string.
[ENOTDIR]-
A component of pathname is not a directory.
The ftw funcion may fail if:
[EINVAL]-
The value of ndirs argument is invalid.
[ENAMETOOLONG]-
Pathname resolution of a symbolic link produced an intermediate
result whos lenght exceeds {PATH_MAX}.
Notes
Because ftw
is recursive, it can terminate with a memory
fault when applied to very deep file structures.
The ftw function uses malloc
to allocate dynamic storage during its operation.
If ftw is forcibly terminated (for example, if fn or
an interrupt routine executes longjmp), ftw
does not have a chance to free that storage,
so it remains permanently allocated.
A safe way to handle interrupts is to store
the fact that an interrupt has occurred,
and arrange to have fn
return a nonzero value at its next invocation.
See also
malloc(S-osr5),
stat(S-osr5)
Standards conformance
ftw is conformant with:
X/Open Portability Guide, Issue 3, 1989
.
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 -- 02 June 2005