write(S)
write, writev --
write to a file
Syntax
cc . . . -lc
#include <unistd.h>
ssize_t write(int fildes, const void *buf, size_t nbyte);
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/uio.h>
ssize_t writev(int fildes, const struct iovec *iov, int iovcnt);
Description
write-
write to a file
writev-
write to a file using multiple buffers
write attempts to write nbyte bytes from the
buffer pointed to by buf to the file associated with
fildes. If nbyte is 0 and the file is a regular
file, write returns 0 and has no other results. If the
value of nbyte is greater than {SSIZE_MAX} the
result is undefined. fildes is a file descriptor
obtained from a
creat(S),
open(S),
dup(S),
fcntl(S),
pipe(S),
or
ioctl(S)
system call.
writev performs the same action as write, but
gathers the output data from the iovcnt buffers specified
by the members of the iov array: iov[0],
iov[1],
...
iov[iovcnt-1]. The iovcnt is valid
only if greater than 0 and less than or equal to
{IOV_MAX}.
For writev, the iovec structure contains the
following members:
void * iov_base;
size_t iov_len;
Each iovec entry specifies the base address and length of
an area in memory from which data should be
written. writev always writes a complete area before
proceeding to the next.
On devices capable of seeking, the writing of data proceeds from the
position in the file indicated by the file pointer. On return from
write,
the file pointer is incremented by the number of bytes actually written.
On a regular file, if the incremented file pointer is greater than the
length of the file, the length of the file is set to the new file
pointer.
On devices incapable of seeking, writing always takes place starting
at the current position. The value of a file pointer associated with
such a device is undefined.
If the O_APPEND flag of the file status flags is set, the
file pointer is set to the end of the file before each
write.
For regular files, if the O_SYNC flag of the file status
flags is set, write does not return until both the file
data and file status are delivered to the underlying hardware. This
function is for special applications that require extra reliability
at the cost of performance. For block special files, if
O_SYNC is set, write does not return until the
data has been delivered to the underlying hardware.
A write to a regular file is blocked if mandatory
file/record locking is set (see
chmod(S))
and there is a record lock owned by another process on the segment
of the file to be written:
-
If O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK is set,
write returns -1 and sets errno to
EAGAIN.
-
If O_NDELAY and O_NONBLOCK are clear,
write sleeps until all blocking locks are removed or the
write is terminated by a signal.
Note that O_NDELAY is only provided for backward
compatibility and N_NONBLOCK should be used for new
applications.
If a write requests that more bytes be written than there
is room for -- for example, if the write would exceed the process
file size limit (see
getrlimit(S)
and
ulimit(S))
the system file size limit, or the free space on the device --
only as many bytes as there is room for will be written. For
example, suppose there is space for 20 bytes more in a file before
reaching a limit. A write of 512-bytes returns 20. The
next write of a non-zero number of bytes gives a failure
return (except as noted for pipes and FIFO below).
Write requests to a pipe or FIFO are handled the same as a
regular file with the following exceptions:
-
There is no file offset associated with a pipe. Therefore each write
request appends to the end of the pipe.
-
Write requests of {PIPE_BUF} bytes or less are guaranteed
not to be interleaved with data from other processes doing writes on
the same pipe. Writes of greater than {PIPE_BUF} bytes may
have data interleaved, on arbitrary boundaries, with writes by other
processes, whether the O_NONBLOCK or O_NDELAY
flags are set.
-
If O_NONBLOCK and O_NDELAY are clear, a write
request may cause the process to block, but on normal completion it
returns nbyte.
-
If O_NONBLOCK is set, write requests are handled
in the following way: the write does not block the
process; write requests for {PIPE_BUF} or fewer bytes
either succeed completely and return nbyte, or return -1
and set errno to EAGAIN. A write
request for greater than {PIPE_BUF} bytes either transfers
what it can and returns the number of bytes written, or transfers no
data and returns -1 with errno set to
EAGAIN. Also, if a request is greater than
{PIPE_BUF} bytes and all data previously written to the
pipe has been read, write transfers at least
{PIPE_BUF} bytes.
-
If O_NDELAY is set, write requests are handled
in the following way: the write does not block the
process; write requests for {PIPE_BUF} or fewer bytes
either succeed completely and return nbyte,
or return 0. A write request for greater than
{PIPE_BUF} bytes either transfers what it can and returns
the number of bytes written, or transfers no data and returns
0. Also, if a request is greater than {PIPE_BUF}
bytes and all data previously written to the pipe has been read,
write transfers at least {PIPE_BUF} bytes.
When attempting to write to a file descriptor (other than a pipe or
FIFO) that supports nonblocking writes and cannot accept
the data immediately:
-
If O_NONBLOCK and O_NDELAY are clear,
write blocks until the data can be accepted.
-
If O_NONBLOCK or O_NDELAY is set,
write does not block the process.
If some data can be written without blocking the process,
write writes what it can and returns the number of bytes
written. Otherwise, if O_NONBLOCK is set, it returns -1
and sets errno to EAGAIN or if
O_NDELAY is set, it returns 0.
For STREAMS files (see
Intro(S))
the operation of write is determined by the values of the
minimum and maximum nbyte range (``packet size'') accepted
by the stream. These values are contained in the topmost stream
module. Unless the user pushes the topmost module (see
I_PUSH in
streamio(M)),
these values cannot be set or tested from user level. If
nbyte falls within the packet size range, nbyte
bytes are written. If nbyte does not fall within the range
and the minimum packet size value is 0, write breaks the
buffer into maximum packet size segments prior to sending the data
downstream (the last segment may be smaller than the maximum packet
size). If nbyte does not fall within the range and the
minimum value is non-zero, write fails and sets
errno to ERANGE. Writing a zero-length buffer
(nbyte is 0) to a STREAMS device sends a
zero-length message with 0 returned. However, writing a zero-length
buffer to a pipe or FIFO sends no message and 0 is
returned. The user program may issue the I_SWROPT
ioctl to enable zero-length messages to be sent across the
pipe or FIFO (see
streamio(M)).
When writing to a stream, data messages are created with a priority
band of 0. When writing to a stream that is not a pipe or
FIFO:
-
If O_NDELAY and O_NONBLOCK are not set, and the
stream cannot accept data (the stream write queue is full because of
internal flow control conditions), write blocks until data
can be accepted.
-
If O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK is set and the stream
cannot accept data, write returns -1 and sets
errno to EAGAIN.
-
If O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK is set and part of the
buffer has already been written when a condition occurs in which the
stream cannot accept additional data, write terminates and
returns the number of bytes written.
Return values
On success, write and writev return the number
of bytes written and mark for update the st_ctime
and
st_mtime
fields of the file. On failure, write
and writev return -1 and set errno to identify
the error.
Diagnostics
In the following conditions, write and writev
fail and set errno to:
[EAGAIN]-
Mandatory file/record locking is set, O_NDELAY or
O_NONBLOCK is set, and there is a blocking record lock.
[EAGAIN]-
Total amount of system memory available when reading via raw
I/O is temporarily insufficient.
[EAGAIN]-
An attempt is made to write to a stream that cannot accept data with
the O_NDELAY or O_NONBLOCK flag set.
[EAGAIN]-
If a write to a pipe or FIFO of
{PIPE_BUF} bytes or less is requested and less than
nbytes of free space is available.
[EBADF]-
fildes is not a valid file descriptor open for writing.
[EDEADLK]-
The write was going to go to sleep and cause a deadlock to
occur.
[EFAULT]-
buf points outside the process's allocated address space.
[EFBIG]-
An attempt is made to write a file that exceeds the process's file
size limit or the maximum file size (see
getrlimit(S)
and
ulimit(S)).
[EINTR]-
A signal was caught during the write system call.
[EINTR] and [SIGXFSZ] signal-
A write was attempted that would exceed the maximum file size limit.
[EINVAL]-
An attempt is made to write to a stream linked below a multiplexor.
[EIO]-
The process is in the background and is attempting to write to its
controlling terminal whose TOSTOP flag is set; the process
is neither ignoring nor blocking SIGTTOU signals, and the
process group of the process is orphaned.
[ENOLCK]-
The system record lock table was full, so the write could
not go to sleep until the blocking record lock was removed.
[ENOLINK]-
fildes is on a remote machine and the link to that machine
is no longer active.
[ENOSR]-
An attempt is made to write to a stream with insufficient
STREAMS memory resources available in the system.
[ENOSPC]-
During a write to an ordinary file, there is no free space
left on the device.
[ENXIO]-
The device associated with the file descriptor is a block-special or
character-special file and the file-pointer value is out of range.
[EPIPE] and [SIGPIPE] signal-
An attempt is made to write to a pipe that is not open for reading
by any process.
[EPIPE]-
An attempt is made to write to a FIFO that is not open for
reading by any process.
[EPIPE]-
An attempt is made to write to a pipe that has only one end open.
[ERANGE]-
An attempt is made to write to a stream with nbyte outside
specified minimum and maximum write range, and the minimum value is
non-zero.
[ENOLCK]-
Enforced record locking was enabled and {LOCK_MAX} regions
are already locked in the system.
In addition, in the following conditions writev fails and
sets errno to:
[EINVAL]-
iovcnt was less than or equal to 0, or greater than
{IOV_MAX}.
[EINVAL-
An
iov_len
value in the iov array was negative.
[EINVAL]-
The sum of the
iov_len
values in the iov array
overflowed a 32-bit integer.
A write to a STREAMS file can fail if an error
message has been received at the stream head. In this case,
errno is set to the value included in the error message.
After carrier loss, M_HANGUP is set, and a subsequent
write will return -1 with errno set to EIO. To
write after disconnecting and reconnecting the line, set the
CLOCAL flag to tell the driver to ignore the state of the
line and the driver will not send M_HANGUP to the stream
head. If CLOCAL is not set, and hangup occurs, the
application is responsible for re-establishing the connection.
Files
/lib/libc.a-
linking library
See also
creat(S),
dup(S),
fcntl(S),
getrlimit(S),
Intro(S),
lseek(S),
open(S),
pipe(S),
read(S),
types(FP),
ulimit(S)
Standards conformance
write is conformant with:
AT&T SVID Issue 3;
X/Open CAE Specification C202, System Interfaces and Headers,
Issue 4, 1992;
Intel386 Binary Compatibility Specification, Edition 2 (iBCSe2)
;
IEEE POSIX Std 1003.1-1990 System Application Program Interface (API) [C Language] (ISO/IEC 9945-1)
;
and
NIST FIPS 151-1
.
writev is conformant with:
AT&T SVID Issue 3,
X/Open CAE Specification C202, System Interfaces and Headers,
Issue 4, 1992
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003