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/*
* Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California.
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms are permitted
* provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
* duplicated in all such forms and that any documentation,
* and/or other materials related to such
* distribution and use acknowledge that the software was developed
* by the University of California, Berkeley. The name of the
* University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
* from this software without specific prior written permission.
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
* WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
*/
/*
FUNCTION
<<ftell>>, <<ftello>>---return position in a stream or file
INDEX
ftell
INDEX
ftello
INDEX
_ftell_r
INDEX
_ftello_r
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
long ftell(FILE *<[fp]>);
off_t ftello(FILE *<[fp]>);
long ftell( FILE *<[fp]>);
off_t ftello( FILE *<[fp]>);
DESCRIPTION
Objects of type <<FILE>> can have a ``position'' that records how much
of the file your program has already read. Many of the <<stdio>> functions
depend on this position, and many change it as a side effect.
The result of <<ftell>>/<<ftello>> is the current position for a file
identified by <[fp]>. If you record this result, you can later
use it with <<fseek>>/<<fseeko>> to return the file to this
position. The difference between <<ftell>> and <<ftello>> is that
<<ftell>> returns <<long>> and <<ftello>> returns <<off_t>>.
In the current implementation, <<ftell>>/<<ftello>> simply uses a character
count to represent the file position; this is the same number that
would be recorded by <<fgetpos>>.
RETURNS
<<ftell>>/<<ftello>> return the file position, if possible. If they cannot do
this, they return <<-1L>>. Failure occurs on streams that do not support
positioning; the global <<errno>> indicates this condition with the
value <<ESPIPE>>.
PORTABILITY
<<ftell>> is required by the ANSI C standard, but the meaning of its
result (when successful) is not specified beyond requiring that it be
acceptable as an argument to <<fseek>>. In particular, other
conforming C implementations may return a different result from
<<ftell>> than what <<fgetpos>> records.
<<ftello>> is defined by the Single Unix specification.
No supporting OS subroutines are required.
*/
#if defined(LIBC_SCCS) && !defined(lint)
static char sccsid[] = "%W% (Berkeley) %G%";
#endif /* LIBC_SCCS and not lint */
/*
* ftell: return current offset.
*/
#define _DEFAULT_SOURCE
#include <_ansi.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include "local.h"
long
ftell (
register FILE * fp)
{
_fpos_t pos;
pos = ftello ( fp);
if ((long)pos != pos)
{
pos = -1;
_REENT_ERRNO(ptr) = EOVERFLOW;
}
return (long)pos;
}
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