FTS(3) | Linux Programmer's Manual | FTS(3) |
fts, fts_open, fts_read, fts_children, fts_set, fts_close - traverse a file hierarchy
#include <sys/types.h> #include <sys/stat.h> #include <fts.h>
FTS *fts_open(char * const *path_argv, int options, int (*compar)(const FTSENT **, const FTSENT **));
FTSENT *fts_read(FTS *ftsp);
FTSENT *fts_children(FTS *ftsp, int instr);
int fts_set(FTS *ftsp, FTSENT *f, int instr);
int fts_close(FTS *ftsp);
The fts functions are provided for traversing file hierarchies. A simple overview is that the fts_open() function returns a "handle" (of type FTS *) that refers to a file hierarchy "stream". This handle is then supplied to the other fts functions. The function fts_read() returns a pointer to a structure describing one of the files in the file hierarchy. The function fts_children() returns a pointer to a linked list of structures, each of which describes one of the files contained in a directory in the hierarchy.
In general, directories are visited two distinguishable times; in preorder (before any of their descendants are visited) and in postorder (after all of their descendants have been visited). Files are visited once. It is possible to walk the hierarchy "logically" (visiting the files that symbolic links point to) or physically (visiting the symbolic links themselves), order the walk of the hierarchy or prune and/or revisit portions of the hierarchy.
Two structures (and associated types) are defined in the include file <fts.h>. The first type is FTS, the structure that represents the file hierarchy itself. The second type is FTSENT, the structure that represents a file in the file hierarchy. Normally, an FTSENT structure is returned for every file in the file hierarchy. In this manual page, "file" and "FTSENT structure" are generally interchangeable.
The FTSENT structure contains fields describing a file. The structure contains at least the following fields (there are additional fields that should be considered private to the implementation):
typedef struct _ftsent {
unsigned short fts_info; /* flags for FTSENT structure */
char *fts_accpath; /* access path */
char *fts_path; /* root path */
short fts_pathlen; /* strlen(fts_path) +
strlen(fts_name) */
char *fts_name; /* filename */
short fts_namelen; /* strlen(fts_name) */
short fts_level; /* depth (-1 to N) */
int fts_errno; /* file errno */
long fts_number; /* local numeric value */
void *fts_pointer; /* local address value */
struct _ftsent *fts_parent; /* parent directory */
struct _ftsent *fts_link; /* next file structure */
struct _ftsent *fts_cycle; /* cycle structure */
struct stat *fts_statp; /* stat(2) information */ } FTSENT;
These fields are defined as follows:
A single buffer is used for all of the paths of all of the files in the file hierarchy. Therefore, the fts_path and fts_accpath fields are guaranteed to be null-terminated only for the file most recently returned by fts_read(). To use these fields to reference any files represented by other FTSENT structures will require that the path buffer be modified using the information contained in that FTSENT structure's fts_pathlen field. Any such modifications should be undone before further calls to fts_read() are attempted. The fts_name field is always null-terminated.
The fts_open() function takes a pointer to an array of character pointers naming one or more paths which make up a logical file hierarchy to be traversed. The array must be terminated by a null pointer.
There are a number of options, at least one of which (either FTS_LOGICAL or FTS_PHYSICAL) must be specified. The options are selected by ORing the following values:
The argument compar() specifies a user-defined function which may be used to order the traversal of the hierarchy. It takes two pointers to pointers to FTSENT structures as arguments and should return a negative value, zero, or a positive value to indicate if the file referenced by its first argument comes before, in any order with respect to, or after, the file referenced by its second argument. The fts_accpath, fts_path, and fts_pathlen fields of the FTSENT structures may never be used in this comparison. If the fts_info field is set to FTS_NS or FTS_NSOK, the fts_statp field may not either. If the compar() argument is NULL, the directory traversal order is in the order listed in path_argv for the root paths, and in the order listed in the directory for everything else.
The fts_read() function returns a pointer to an FTSENT structure describing a file in the hierarchy. Directories (that are readable and do not cause cycles) are visited at least twice, once in preorder and once in postorder. All other files are visited at least once. (Hard links between directories that do not cause cycles or symbolic links to symbolic links may cause files to be visited more than once, or directories more than twice.)
If all the members of the hierarchy have been returned, fts_read() returns NULL and sets the external variable errno to 0. If an error unrelated to a file in the hierarchy occurs, fts_read() returns NULL and sets errno appropriately. If an error related to a returned file occurs, a pointer to an FTSENT structure is returned, and errno may or may not have been set (see fts_info).
The FTSENT structures returned by fts_read() may be overwritten after a call to fts_close() on the same file hierarchy stream, or, after a call to fts_read() on the same file hierarchy stream unless they represent a file of type directory, in which case they will not be overwritten until after a call to fts_read() after the FTSENT structure has been returned by the function fts_read() in postorder.
The fts_children() function returns a pointer to an FTSENT structure describing the first entry in a NULL-terminated linked list of the files in the directory represented by the FTSENT structure most recently returned by fts_read(). The list is linked through the fts_link field of the FTSENT structure, and is ordered by the user-specified comparison function, if any. Repeated calls to fts_children() will re-create this linked list.
As a special case, if fts_read() has not yet been called for a hierarchy, fts_children() will return a pointer to the files in the logical directory specified to fts_open(), that is, the arguments specified to fts_open(). Otherwise, if the FTSENT structure most recently returned by fts_read() is not a directory being visited in preorder, or the directory does not contain any files, fts_children() returns NULL and sets errno to zero. If an error occurs, fts_children() returns NULL and sets errno appropriately.
The FTSENT structures returned by fts_children() may be overwritten after a call to fts_children(), fts_close(), or fts_read() on the same file hierarchy stream.
The instr argument is either zero or the following value:
The function fts_set() allows the user application to determine further processing for the file f of the stream ftsp. The fts_set() function returns 0 on success, and -1 if an error occurs.
The instr argument is either 0 (meaning "do nothing") or one of the following values:
The fts_close() function closes the file hierarchy stream referred to by ftsp and restores the current directory to the directory from which fts_open() was called to open ftsp. The fts_close() function returns 0 on success, and -1 if an error occurs.
The function fts_open() may fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for open(2) and malloc(3).
The function fts_close() may fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for chdir(2) and close(2).
The functions fts_read() and fts_children() may fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for chdir(2), malloc(3), opendir(3), readdir(3), and stat(2).
In addition, fts_children(), fts_open(), and fts_set() may fail and set errno as follows:
These functions are available in Linux since glibc2.
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).
Interface | Attribute | Value |
fts_open (), fts_set (), fts_close () | Thread safety | MT-Safe |
fts_read (), fts_children () | Thread safety | MT-Unsafe |
4.4BSD.
In versions of glibc before 2.23, all of the APIs described in this man page are not safe when compiling a program using the LFS APIs (e.g., when compiling with -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64).
This page is part of release 5.10 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
2020-04-11 | Linux |