argz_add(3) — Linux manual page

NAME | LIBRARY | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | ATTRIBUTES | STANDARDS | BUGS | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

argz_add(3)             Library Functions Manual             argz_add(3)

NAME         top

       argz_add, argz_add_sep, argz_append, argz_count, argz_create,
       argz_create_sep, argz_delete, argz_extract, argz_insert,
       argz_next, argz_replace, argz_stringify - functions to handle an
       argz list

LIBRARY         top

       Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS         top

       #include <argz.h>

       error_t argz_add(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       const char *restrict str);

       error_t argz_add_sep(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       const char *restrict str, int delim);

       error_t argz_append(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       const char *restrict buf, size_t buf_len);

       size_t argz_count(const char *argz, size_t argz_len);

       error_t argz_create(char *const argv[], char **restrict argz,
                       size_t *restrict argz_len);

       error_t argz_create_sep(const char *restrict str, int sep,
                       char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len);

       void argz_delete(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       char *restrict entry);

       void argz_extract(const char *restrict argz, size_t argz_len,
                       char **restrict argv);

       error_t argz_insert(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       char *restrict before, const char *restrict entry);

       char *argz_next(const char *restrict argz, size_t argz_len,
                       const char *restrict entry);

       error_t argz_replace(char **restrict argz, size_t *restrict argz_len,
                       const char *restrict str, const char *restrict with,
                       unsigned int *restrict replace_count);

       void argz_stringify(char *argz, size_t len, int sep);

DESCRIPTION         top

       These functions are glibc-specific.

       An argz vector is a pointer to a character buffer together with a
       length.  The intended interpretation of the character buffer is
       an array of strings, where the strings are separated by null
       bytes ('\0').  If the length is nonzero, the last byte of the
       buffer must be a null byte.

       These functions are for handling argz vectors.  The pair (NULL,0)
       is an argz vector, and, conversely, argz vectors of length 0 must
       have null pointer.  Allocation of nonempty argz vectors is done
       using malloc(3), so that free(3) can be used to dispose of them
       again.

       argz_add() adds the string str at the end of the array *argz, and
       updates *argz and *argz_len.

       argz_add_sep() is similar, but splits the string str into
       substrings separated by the delimiter delim.  For example, one
       might use this on a UNIX search path with delimiter ':'.

       argz_append() appends the argz vector (buf, buf_len) after
       (*argz, *argz_len) and updates *argz and *argz_len.  (Thus,
       *argz_len will be increased by buf_len.)

       argz_count() counts the number of strings, that is, the number of
       null bytes ('\0'), in (argz, argz_len).

       argz_create() converts a UNIX-style argument vector argv,
       terminated by (char *) 0, into an argz vector (*argz, *argz_len).

       argz_create_sep() converts the null-terminated string str into an
       argz vector (*argz, *argz_len) by breaking it up at every
       occurrence of the separator sep.

       argz_delete() removes the substring pointed to by entry from the
       argz vector (*argz, *argz_len) and updates *argz and *argz_len.

       argz_extract() is the opposite of argz_create().  It takes the
       argz vector (argz, argz_len) and fills the array starting at argv
       with pointers to the substrings, and a final NULL, making a UNIX-
       style argv vector.  The array argv must have room for
       argz_count(argz, argz_len) + 1 pointers.

       argz_insert() is the opposite of argz_delete().  It inserts the
       argument entry at position before into the argz vector
       (*argz, *argz_len) and updates *argz and *argz_len.  If before is
       NULL, then entry will inserted at the end.

       argz_next() is a function to step through the argz vector.  If
       entry is NULL, the first entry is returned.  Otherwise, the entry
       following is returned.  It returns NULL if there is no following
       entry.

       argz_replace() replaces each occurrence of str with with,
       reallocating argz as necessary.  If replace_count is non-NULL,
       *replace_count will be incremented by the number of replacements.

       argz_stringify() is the opposite of argz_create_sep().  It
       transforms the argz vector into a normal string by replacing all
       null bytes ('\0') except the last by sep.

RETURN VALUE         top

       All argz functions that do memory allocation have a return type
       of error_t (an integer type), and return 0 for success, and
       ENOMEM if an allocation error occurs.

ATTRIBUTES         top

       For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see
       attributes(7).
       ┌─────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────┬─────────┐
       │ Interface                           Attribute     Value   │
       ├─────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────┼─────────┤
       │ argz_add(), argz_add_sep(),         │ Thread safety │ MT-Safe │
       │ argz_append(), argz_count(),        │               │         │
       │ argz_create(), argz_create_sep(),   │               │         │
       │ argz_delete(), argz_extract(),      │               │         │
       │ argz_insert(), argz_next(),         │               │         │
       │ argz_replace(), argz_stringify()    │               │         │
       └─────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────┴─────────┘

STANDARDS         top

       GNU.

BUGS         top

       Argz vectors without a terminating null byte may lead to
       Segmentation Faults.

SEE ALSO         top

       envz_add(3)

COLOPHON         top

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Linux man-pages 6.9.1          2024-06-15                    argz_add(3)

Pages that refer to this page: envz_add(3)