setstate man page on Archlinux

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RANDOM(3)		   Linux Programmer's Manual		     RANDOM(3)

NAME
       random, srandom, initstate, setstate - random number generator

SYNOPSIS
       #include <stdlib.h>

       long int random(void);

       void srandom(unsigned int seed);

       char *initstate(unsigned int seed, char *state, size_t n);
       char *setstate(char *state);

   Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):

       random(), srandom(), initstate(), setstate():
	   _SVID_SOURCE || _BSD_SOURCE || _XOPEN_SOURCE >= 500 ||
	   _XOPEN_SOURCE && _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED

DESCRIPTION
       The random() function uses a nonlinear additive feedback random	number
       generator  employing a default table of size 31 long integers to return
       successive pseudo-random numbers in the range from 0 to RAND_MAX.   The
       period  of  this	 random	 number generator is very large, approximately
       16 * ((2^31) - 1).

       The srandom() function sets its argument as the seed for a new sequence
       of  pseudo-random integers to be returned by random().  These sequences
       are repeatable by calling srandom() with the same seed  value.	If  no
       seed  value  is provided, the random() function is automatically seeded
       with a value of 1.

       The initstate() function allows a state array state to  be  initialized
       for  use	 by  random().	The size of the state array n is used by init‐
       state() to decide how sophisticated a random number generator it should
       use—the	larger the state array, the better the random numbers will be.
       seed is the seed for the initialization,	 which	specifies  a  starting
       point  for  the	random number sequence, and provides for restarting at
       the same point.

       The setstate() function changes the state array used  by	 the  random()
       function.   The	state array state is used for random number generation
       until the next call to initstate() or  setstate().   state  must	 first
       have  been initialized using initstate() or be the result of a previous
       call of setstate().

RETURN VALUE
       The random() function returns a value  between  0  and  RAND_MAX.   The
       srandom() function returns no value.

       The initstate() function returns a pointer to the previous state array.
       On error, errno is set to indicate the cause.

       On success, setstate() returns a pointer to the previous	 state	array.
       On  error, it returns NULL, with errno set to indicate the cause of the
       error.

ERRORS
       EINVAL The state argument given to setstate() was NULL.

       EINVAL A state array of less than 8 bytes was specified to initstate().

ATTRIBUTES
   Multithreading (see pthreads(7))
       The random(), srandom(),	 initstate(),  and  setstate()	functions  are
       thread-safe.

CONFORMING TO
       4.3BSD, POSIX.1-2001.

NOTES
       Current	"optimal"  values for the size of the state array n are 8, 32,
       64, 128, and 256 bytes; other amounts will be rounded down to the near‐
       est known amount.  Using less than 8 bytes will cause an error.

       This  function  should  not be used in cases where multiple threads use
       random() and the behavior should be reproducible.  Use random_r(3)  for
       that purpose.

       Random-number  generation  is a complex topic.  Numerical Recipes in C:
       The Art of Scientific Computing (William H. Press, Brian	 P.  Flannery,
       Saul  A.	 Teukolsky, William T. Vetterling; New York: Cambridge Univer‐
       sity Press, 2007, 3rd ed.)  provides an excellent discussion of practi‐
       cal random-number generation issues in Chapter 7 (Random Numbers).

       For  a  more  theoretical  discussion  which also covers many practical
       issues in depth, see Chapter 3 (Random Numbers) in  Donald  E.  Knuth's
       The  Art	 of Computer Programming, volume 2 (Seminumerical Algorithms),
       2nd ed.; Reading,  Massachusetts:  Addison-Wesley  Publishing  Company,
       1981.

BUGS
       According  to  POSIX,  initstate() should return NULL on error.	In the
       glibc implementation, errno is (as specified) set  on  error,  but  the
       function does not return NULL.

SEE ALSO
       drand48(3), rand(3), random_r(3), srand(3)

COLOPHON
       This  page  is  part of release 3.65 of the Linux man-pages project.  A
       description of the project, and information about reporting  bugs,  can
       be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.

GNU				  2014-03-25			     RANDOM(3)
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