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_fsopen, _wfsopen

 

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Opens a stream with file sharing.

Syntax

FILE *_fsopen(   
   const char *filename,  
   const char *mode,  
   int shflag   
);  
FILE *_wfsopen(   
   const wchar_t *filename,  
   const wchar_t *mode,  
   int shflag   
);  

Parameters

filename
Name of the file to open.

mode
Type of access permitted.

shflag
Type of sharing allowed.

Return Value

Each of these functions returns a pointer to the stream. A null pointer value indicates an error. If filename or mode is NULL or an empty string, these functions invoke the invalid parameter handler, as described in Parameter Validation. If execution is allowed to continue, these functions return NULL and set errno to EINVAL.

For more information about these and other error codes, see _doserrno, errno, _sys_errlist, and _sys_nerr.

Remarks

The _fsopen function opens the file specified by filename as a stream and prepares the file for subsequent shared reading or writing, as defined by the mode and shflag arguments. _wfsopen is a wide-character version of _fsopen; the filename and mode arguments to _wfsopen are wide-character strings. _wfsopen and _fsopen behave identically otherwise.

The character string mode specifies the type of access requested for the file, as shown in the following table.

Term Definition
"r" Opens for reading. If the file does not exist or cannot be found, the _fsopen call fails.
"w" Opens an empty file for writing. If the given file exists, its contents are destroyed.
"a" Opens for writing at the end of the file (appending); creates the file first if it does not exist.
"r+" Opens for both reading and writing. (The file must exist.)
"w+" Opens an empty file for both reading and writing. If the given file exists, its contents are destroyed.
"a+" Opens for reading and appending; creates the file first if it does not exist.

Use the "w" and "w+" types with care, as they can destroy existing files.

When a file is opened with the "a" or "a+" access type, all write operations occur at the end of the file. The file pointer can be repositioned using fseek or rewind, but it is always moved back to the end of the file before any write operation is carried out. Thus, existing data cannot be overwritten. When the "r+", "w+", or "a+" access type is specified, both reading and writing are allowed (the file is said to be open for update). However, when switching between reading and writing, there must be an intervening fsetpos, fseek, or rewind operation. The current position can be specified for the fsetpos or fseek operation, if desired. In addition to the above values, one of the following characters can be included in mode to specify the translation mode for new lines, and for file management.

Term Definition
t Opens a file in text (translated) mode. In this mode, carriage return–line feed (CR-LF) combinations are translated into single line feeds (LF) on input and LF characters are translated to CR-LF combinations on output. Also, CTRL+Z is interpreted as an end-of-file character on input. In files opened for reading or reading/writing, _fsopen checks for a CTRL+Z at the end of the file and removes it, if possible. This is done because using fseek and ftell to move within a file that ends with a CTRL+Z might cause fseek to behave improperly near the end of the file.
b Opens a file in binary (untranslated) mode; the above translations are suppressed.
S Specifies that caching is optimized for, but not restricted to, sequential access from disk.
R Specifies that caching is optimized for, but not restricted to, random access from disk.
T Specifies a file as temporary. If possible, it is not flushed to disk.
D Specifies a file as temporary. It is deleted when the last file pointer is closed.

If t or b is not given in mode, the translation mode is defined by the default-mode variable _fmode. If t or b is prefixed to the argument, the function fails and returns NULL. For a discussion of text and binary modes, see Text and Binary Mode File I/O.

The argument shflag is a constant expression consisting of one of the following manifest constants, defined in Share.h.

Term Definition
_SH_COMPAT Sets Compatibility mode for 16-bit applications.
_SH_DENYNO Permits read and write access.
_SH_DENYRD Denies read access to the file.
_SH_DENYRW Denies read and write access to the file.
_SH_DENYWR Denies write access to the file.

Generic-Text Routine Mappings

Tchar.h routine _UNICODE and _MBCS not defined _MBCS defined _UNICODE defined
_tfsopen _fsopen _fsopen _wfsopen

Requirements

Function Required header Optional headers
_fsopen <stdio.h> <share.h>

For manifest constant for shflag parameter.
_wfsopen <stdio.h> or <wchar.h> <share.h>

For manifest constant for shflag parameter.

Example

// crt_fsopen.c  
  
#include <stdio.h>  
#include <stdlib.h>  
#include <share.h>  
  
int main( void )  
{  
   FILE *stream;  
  
   // Open output file for writing. Using _fsopen allows us to  
   // ensure that no one else writes to the file while we are  
   // writing to it.  
    //  
   if( (stream = _fsopen( "outfile", "wt", _SH_DENYWR )) != NULL )  
   {  
      fprintf( stream, "No one else in the network can write "  
                       "to this file until we are done.\n" );  
      fclose( stream );  
   }  
   // Now others can write to the file while we read it.  
   system( "type outfile" );  
}  
No one else in the network can write to this file until we are done.  

.NET Framework Equivalent

See Also

Stream I/O
fclose, _fcloseall
_fdopen, _wfdopen
ferror
_fileno
fopen, _wfopen
freopen, _wfreopen
_open, _wopen
_setmode
_sopen, _wsopen