FSEEK(3) manual page
Table of Contents
fgetpos, fseek, fsetpos, ftell,
rewind - reposition a stream
#include <stdio.h>
int fseek(FILE *stream,
long offset, int whence);
long ftell(FILE *stream);
void rewind(FILE
*stream);
int fgetpos(FILE *stream, fpos_t *pos);
int fsetpos(FILE *stream, const fpos_t *pos);
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)
function 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)
).
The fgetpos()
and fsetpos() functions are alternate interfaces equivalent to ftell()
and fseek() (with whence set to SEEK_SET), setting and storing the current
value of the file offset into or from the object referenced by pos. On some
non-UNIX systems, an fpos_t object may be a complex object and these routines
may be the only way to portably reposition a text stream.
The
rewind() function returns no value. Upon successful completion, fgetpos(),
fseek(), fsetpos() return 0, and ftell() returns the current offset. Otherwise,
-1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
- EBADF
- The stream
specified is not a seekable stream.
- EINVAL
- The whence argument to fseek()
was not SEEK_SET, SEEK_END, or SEEK_CUR. Or: the resulting file offset would
be negative.
The functions fgetpos(), fseek(), fsetpos(), and ftell() may
also fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for the routines
fflush(3)
, fstat(2)
, lseek(2)
, and malloc(3)
.
C89, C99.
lseek(2)
, fseeko(3)
This page is part of release 3.78 of the
Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about
reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
Table of Contents