DIRREAD(3)DIRREAD(3)

NAME
dirread, dirreadall – read directory

SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
long dirread(int fd, Dir **buf)
long dirreadall(int fd, Dir **buf)
#define      STATMAX      65535U
#define      DIRMAX       (sizeof(Dir)+STATMAX)

DESCRIPTION
The data returned by a read(3) on a directory is a set of complete directory entries in a machine-independent format, exactly equivalent to the result of a stat(3) on each file or subdirectory in the directory. Dirread decodes the directory entries into a machine-dependent form. It reads from fd and unpacks the data into an array of Dir structures whose address is returned in *buf (see stat(3) for the layout of a Dir). The array is allocated with malloc(3) each time dirread is called.
Dirreadall is like dirread, but reads in the entire directory; by contrast, dirread steps through a directory one read(3) at a time.
Directory entries have variable length. A successful read of a directory always returns an integral number of complete directory entries; dirread always returns complete Dir structures. See read(9p) for more information.
The constant STATMAX is the maximum size that a directory entry can occupy. The constant DIRMAX is an upper limit on the size necessary to hold a Dir structure and all the associated data.
Dirread and dirreadall return the number of Dir structures filled in buf. The file offset is advanced by the number of bytes actually read.

SOURCE
/usr/local/plan9/src/lib9/dirread.c

SEE ALSO
intro(3), open(3), read(3)

DIAGNOSTICS
Dirread and Dirreadall return zero for end of file and a negative value for error. In either case, *buf is set to nil so the pointer can always be freed with impunity.
These functions set errstr.

Space Glenda