/*- * Copyright (c) 1990 The Regents of the University of California. * All rights reserved. * * This code is derived from software contributed to Berkeley by * Chris Torek. * * %sccs.include.redist.c% */ #if defined(LIBC_SCCS) && !defined(lint) static char sccsid[] = "@(#)freopen.c 5.4 (Berkeley) 02/01/91"; #endif /* LIBC_SCCS and not lint */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "local.h" /* * Re-direct an existing, open (probably) file to some other file. * ANSI is written such that the original file gets closed if at * all possible, no matter what. */ FILE * freopen(file, mode, fp) char *file, *mode; register FILE *fp; { register int f; int flags, isopen, oflags, sverrno, wantfd; if ((flags = __sflags(mode, &oflags)) == 0) { (void) fclose(fp); return (NULL); } if (!__sdidinit) __sinit(); /* * There are actually programs that depend on being able to "freopen" * descriptors that weren't originally open. Keep this from breaking. * Remember whether the stream was open to begin with, and which file * descriptor (if any) was associated with it. If it was attached to * a descriptor, defer closing it; freopen("/dev/stdin", "r", stdin) * should work. This is unnecessary if it was not a Unix file. */ if (fp->_flags == 0) { fp->_flags = __SEOF; /* hold on to it */ isopen = 0; wantfd = -1; } else { /* flush the stream; ANSI doesn't require this. */ if (fp->_flags & __SWR) (void) __sflush(fp); /* if close is NULL, closing is a no-op, hence pointless */ isopen = fp->_close != NULL; if ((wantfd = fp->_file) < 0 && isopen) { (void) (*fp->_close)(fp->_cookie); isopen = 0; } } /* Get a new descriptor to refer to the new file. */ f = open(file, oflags, DEFFILEMODE); if (f < 0 && isopen) { /* If out of fd's close the old one and try again. */ if (errno == ENFILE || errno == EMFILE) { (void) (*fp->_close)(fp->_cookie); isopen = 0; f = open(file, oflags, DEFFILEMODE); } } sverrno = errno; /* * Finish closing fp. Even if the open succeeded above, we cannot * keep fp->_base: it may be the wrong size. This loses the effect * of any setbuffer calls, but stdio has always done this before. */ if (isopen) (void) (*fp->_close)(fp->_cookie); if (fp->_flags & __SMBF) free((char *)fp->_bf._base); fp->_w = 0; fp->_r = 0; fp->_p = NULL; fp->_bf._base = NULL; fp->_bf._size = 0; fp->_lbfsize = 0; if (HASUB(fp)) FREEUB(fp); fp->_ub._size = 0; if (HASLB(fp)) FREELB(fp); fp->_lb._size = 0; if (f < 0) { /* did not get it after all */ fp->_flags = 0; /* set it free */ errno = sverrno; /* restore in case _close clobbered */ return (NULL); } /* * If reopening something that was open before on a real file, try * to maintain the descriptor. Various C library routines (perror) * assume stderr is always fd STDERR_FILENO, even if being freopen'd. */ if (wantfd >= 0 && f != wantfd) { if (dup2(f, wantfd) >= 0) { (void) close(f); f = wantfd; } } fp->_flags = flags; fp->_file = f; fp->_cookie = fp; fp->_read = __sread; fp->_write = __swrite; fp->_seek = __sseek; fp->_close = __sclose; return (fp); }