gd_flags(3) GETDATA gd_flags(3)NAMEgd_flags — alter GetData operational flags
SYNOPSIS
#include <getdata.h>
unsigned long gd_flags(DIRFILE *dirfile, unsigned long set, unsigned
long reset);
DESCRIPTION
The gd_flags() function modifies the operational flags of the
dirfile(5) database specified by dirfile, and returns the new value of
the flags register.
The flags which may be queried or modified with this interface are a
subset of the open flags (see gd_cbopen(3)). These are:
GD_PRETTY_PRINT
When dirfile metadata are flushed to disk (either explicitly via
gd_metaflush(3), gd_rewrite_fragment(3), or gd_flush(3) or im‐
plicitly by closing the dirfile), an attempt will be made to
create a nicer looking format specification (from a human-read‐
able standpoint). What this explicitly means is not part of the
API, and any particular behaviour should not be relied on. If
the dirfile has been opened read-only, this flag is ignored.
GD_VERBOSE
Specifies that whenever an error is triggered by the library
when working on this dirfile, the corresponding error string,
which can be retrieved by calling gd_error_string(3), should be
written on the caller's standard error stream (stderr(3)) by
GetData. The error string may be prefixed by a string specified
by the caller; see gd_verbose_prefix(3). Without this flag,
GetData writes nothing to standard error. (GetData never writes
to standard output.)
Flags which appear only in set will be turned on (enabled); flags which
appear only in reset will be turned off (disabled); flags which appear
in both set and reset will be toggled. Flags which appear in neither
of these are left unchanged. Accordingly, to simply query the current
flags, both set and reset should be zero, and to explicitly specify all
the flags, ignoring their old values, the new flags register should be
given in set, and it's bitwise complement in reset.
RETURN VALUE
The gd_flags() function returns a bitwise or'd collection those of the
above flags which are enabled after performing the modifications speci‐
fied (if any). This function does not fail.
SEE ALSOdirfile(5), gd_cbopen(3), gd_verbose_prefix(3), stderr(3).
Version 0.8.0 1 April 2012 gd_flags(3)