fpathconf man page on MirBSD

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PATHCONF(2)		   BSD Programmer's Manual		   PATHCONF(2)

NAME
     pathconf, fpathconf - get configurable pathname variables

SYNOPSIS
     #include <unistd.h>

     long
     pathconf(const char *path, int name);

     long
     fpathconf(int fd, int name);

DESCRIPTION
     The pathconf() and fpathconf() functions provide a method for applica-
     tions to determine the current value of a configurable system limit or
     option variable associated with a pathname or file descriptor.

     For pathconf, the path argument is the name of a file or directory. For
     fpathconf, the fd argument is an open file descriptor. The name argument
     specifies the system variable to be queried. Symbolic constants for each
     name value are found in the include file <unistd.h>.

     The available values are as follows:

     _PC_LINK_MAX
	     The maximum file link count.

     _PC_MAX_CANON
	     The maximum number of bytes in a terminal canonical input line.

     _PC_MAX_INPUT
	     The maximum number of bytes for which space is available in a
	     terminal input queue.

     _PC_NAME_MAX
	     The maximum number of bytes in a file name.

     _PC_PATH_MAX
	     The maximum number of bytes in a pathname.

     _PC_PIPE_BUF
	     The maximum number of bytes which will be written atomically to a
	     pipe.

     _PC_CHOWN_RESTRICTED
	     Return 1 if appropriate privileges are required for the chown(2)
	     system call, otherwise 0.

     _PC_NO_TRUNC
	     Return 1 if file names longer than KERN_NAME_MAX are truncated.

     _PC_VDISABLE
	     Returns the terminal character disabling value.

RETURN VALUES
     If the call to pathconf or fpathconf is not successful, -1 is returned
     and errno is set appropriately. Otherwise, if the variable is associated
     with functionality that does not have a limit in the system, -1 is re-
     turned and errno is not modified. Otherwise, the current variable value
     is returned.

ERRORS
     If any of the following conditions occur, the pathconf and fpathconf
     functions shall return -1 and set errno to the corresponding value.
     [EINVAL]	   The value of the name argument is invalid.

     [EINVAL]	   The implementation does not support an association of the
		   variable name with the associated file.

     pathconf() will fail if:

     [ENOTDIR]	     A component of the path prefix is not a directory.

     [ENAMETOOLONG]  A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or an
		     entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.

     [ENOENT]	     The named file does not exist.

     [EACCES]	     Search permission is denied for a component of the path
		     prefix.

     [ELOOP]	     Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating
		     the pathname.

     [EIO]	     An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to
		     the file system.

     fpathconf() will fail if:

     [EBADF]   fd is not a valid open file descriptor.

     [EIO]     An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file
	       system.

SEE ALSO
     sysconf(3), sysctl(3)

HISTORY
     The pathconf and fpathconf functions first appeared in 4.4BSD.

MirOS BSD #10-current		 June 4, 1993				     1
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