OpenCores
URL https://opencores.org/ocsvn/openrisc/openrisc/trunk

Subversion Repositories openrisc

[/] [openrisc/] [trunk/] [gnu-old/] [newlib-1.17.0/] [newlib/] [libc/] [libc.texinfo] - Blame information for rev 855

Go to most recent revision | Details | Compare with Previous | View Log

Line No. Rev Author Line
1 148 jeremybenn
\input texinfo.tex
2
@setfilename libc.info
3
@syncodeindex fn cp
4
 
5
@ifinfo
6
@format
7
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
8
* libc::                        The ANSI C library.
9
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
10
@end format
11
@end ifinfo
12
 
13
@ifinfo
14
This file documents the ANSI C library.
15
 
16
Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994-2008 Red Hat, Inc.
17
 
18
@file{libc} includes software developed by the
19
University of California, Berkeley and its contributors.
20
 
21
libc includes software developed by Martin Jackson, Graham Haley
22
and Steve Chamberlain of Tadpole Technology and released to Cygnus.
23
 
24
libc uses floating-point conversion software developed at AT&T, which
25
includes this copyright information:
26
 
27
 The author of this software is David M. Gay.
28
 
29
 Copyright (c) 1991 by AT&T.
30
 
31
 Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
32
 purpose without fee is hereby granted, provided that this entire notice
33
 is included in all copies of any software which is or includes a copy
34
 or modification of this software and in all copies of the supporting
35
 documentation for such software.
36
 
37
 THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
38
 WARRANTY.  IN PARTICULAR, NEITHER THE AUTHOR NOR AT&T MAKES ANY
39
 REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE MERCHANTABILITY
40
 OF THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
41
 
42
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
43
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
44
are preserved on all copies.
45
 
46
@ignore
47
Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
48
results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
49
notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
50
(this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
51
 
52
@end ignore
53
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
54
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, subject to the terms
55
of the GNU General Public License, which includes the provision that the
56
entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
57
permission notice identical to this one.
58
 
59
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
60
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
61
@end ifinfo
62
@iftex
63
@c @smallbook
64
@c @cropmarks
65
@finalout
66
@setchapternewpage odd
67
@settitle Red Hat newlib C Library, Full
68
@titlepage
69
@title The Red Hat newlib C Library
70
@subtitle Full Configuration
71
@sp 1
72
@subtitle @code{libc} 1.17.0
73
@subtitle December 2008
74
@author {Steve Chamberlain}
75
@author {Roland Pesch}
76
@author {Red Hat Support}
77
@author {Jeff Johnston}
78
@page
79
 
80
@tex
81
{\parskip=0pt
82
sac@@cygnus.com, pesch@@cygnus.com, jjohnstn@@redhat.com\hfill {\it The Red Hat newlib C Library}\par
83
Copyright \copyright{} 1992, 1993, 1994-2004 Red Hat Inc.
84
}
85
\global\parindent=0pt % Steve likes it this way
86
@end tex
87
 
88
@file{libc} includes software developed by the
89
University of California, Berkeley and its contributors.
90
 
91
@file{libc} includes software developed by Martin Jackson, Graham Haley
92
and Steve Chamberlain of Tadpole Technology and released to Cygnus.
93
 
94
@file{libc} uses floating-point conversion software developed at AT&T,
95
which includes this copyright information:
96
 
97
@cartouche
98
@quotation
99
The author of this software is David M. Gay.
100
 
101
Copyright (c) 1991 by AT&T.
102
 
103
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any
104
purpose without fee is hereby granted, provided that this entire notice
105
is included in all copies of any software which is or includes a copy
106
or modification of this software and in all copies of the supporting
107
documentation for such software.
108
 
109
THIS SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
110
WARRANTY.  IN PARTICULAR, NEITHER THE AUTHOR NOR AT&T MAKES ANY
111
REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF ANY KIND CONCERNING THE MERCHANTABILITY
112
OF THIS SOFTWARE OR ITS FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
113
@end quotation
114
@end cartouche
115
 
116
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
117
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
118
are preserved on all copies.
119
 
120
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
121
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, subject to the terms
122
of the GNU General Public License, which includes the provision that the
123
entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
124
permission notice identical to this one.
125
 
126
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
127
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions.
128
@end titlepage
129
@end iftex
130
 
131
@ifnottex
132
@node Top
133
@top The Red Hat newlib C Library
134
 
135
@c The menu contents depend on the configuration, so we include them
136
@c as a separate file
137
 
138
@c switch to set SIGNALS on or off, according to whether config picks up
139
@c signal subdirectory:
140
@include sigset.texi
141
@include extra.texi
142
@include stdio64.texi
143
@include iconvset.texi
144
 
145
@menu
146
* Introduction::
147
* Stdlib::
148
* Ctype::
149
* Stdio::
150
@ifset STDIO64
151
* Stdio64::
152
@end ifset
153
 
154
* Strings::
155
* Wchar strings::
156
@ifset SIGNALS
157
* Signals::
158
@end ifset
159
 
160
* Timefns::
161
* Locale::
162
* Reentrancy::
163
 
164
* Misc::
165
* Syscalls::
166
* Arglists::
167
@ifset ICONV
168
* Iconv::
169
@end ifset
170
 
171
* Library Index::
172
@end menu
173
@end ifnottex
174
 
175
@node Introduction
176
@chapter Introduction
177
 
178
This reference manual describes the functions provided by the Red Hat
179
``newlib'' version of the standard ANSI C library.  This document is not
180
intended as an overview or a tutorial for the C library.  Each library
181
function is listed with a synopsis of its use, a brief description,
182
return values (including error handling), and portability issues.
183
 
184
Some of the library functions depend on support from the underlying
185
operating system and may not be available on every platform.  For
186
embedded systems in particular, many of these underlying operating
187
system services may not be available or may not be fully functional.
188
The specific operating system subroutines required for a particular
189
library function are listed in the ``Portability'' section of the
190
function description.  @xref{Syscalls}, for a description of the
191
relevant operating system calls.
192
 
193
@include targetdep.tex
194
 
195
@node Arglists
196
@chapter Variable Argument Lists
197
 
198
The @code{printf} family of functions is defined to accept a variable
199
number of arguments, rather than a fixed argument list.  You can define
200
your own functions with a variable argument list, by using macro
201
definitions from either @file{stdarg.h} (for compatibility with ANSI C)
202
or from @file{varargs.h} (for compatibility with a popular convention
203
prior to ANSI C).
204
 
205
@menu
206
* Stdarg::
207
* Varargs::
208
@end menu
209
 
210
@node Stdarg
211
@section ANSI-standard macros, @file{stdarg.h}
212
 
213
In ANSI C, a function has a variable number of arguments when its
214
parameter list ends in an ellipsis (@code{...}).  The parameter list
215
must also include at least one explicitly named argument; that argument
216
is used to initialize the variable list data structure.
217
 
218
ANSI C defines three macros (@code{va_start}, @code{va_arg}, and
219
@code{va_end}) to operate on variable argument lists.  @file{stdarg.h}
220
also defines a special type to represent variable argument lists: this
221
type is called @code{va_list}.
222
 
223
@menu
224
* va_start::
225
* va_arg::
226
* va_end::
227
@end menu
228
 
229
@page
230
@node va_start
231
@subsection Initialize variable argument list
232
@findex va_start
233
@strong{Synopsis}
234
@example
235
#include <stdarg.h>
236
void va_start(va_list @var{ap}, @var{rightmost});
237
@end example
238
 
239
@strong{Description}@*
240
Use @code{va_start} to initialize the variable argument list @var{ap},
241
so that @code{va_arg} can extract values from it.  @var{rightmost} is
242
the name of the last explicit argument in the parameter list (the
243
argument immediately preceding the ellipsis @samp{...} that flags
244
variable arguments in an ANSI C function header).  You can only use
245
@code{va_start} in a function declared using this ellipsis notation
246
(not, for example, in one of its subfunctions).
247
 
248
@strong{Returns}@*
249
@code{va_start} does not return a result.
250
 
251
@strong{Portability}@*
252
ANSI C requires @code{va_start}.
253
 
254
@page
255
@node va_arg
256
@subsection Extract a value from argument list
257
@findex va_arg
258
@strong{Synopsis}
259
@example
260
#include <stdarg.h>
261
@var{type} va_arg(va_list @var{ap}, @var{type});
262
@end example
263
 
264
@strong{Description}@*
265
@code{va_arg} returns the next unprocessed value from a variable
266
argument list @var{ap} (which you must previously create with
267
@var{va_start}).  Specify the type for the value as the second parameter
268
to the macro, @var{type}.
269
 
270
You may pass a @code{va_list} object @var{ap} to a subfunction, and use
271
@code{va_arg} from the subfunction rather than from the function
272
actually declared with an ellipsis in the header; however, in that case
273
you may @emph{only} use @code{va_arg} from the subfunction.  ANSI C does
274
not permit extracting successive values from a single variable-argument
275
list from different levels of the calling stack.
276
 
277
There is no mechanism for testing whether there is actually a next
278
argument available; you might instead pass an argument count (or some
279
other data that implies an argument count) as one of the fixed arguments
280
in your function call.
281
 
282
@strong{Returns}@*
283
@code{va_arg} returns the next argument, an object of type @var{type}.
284
 
285
@strong{Portability}@*
286
ANSI C requires @code{va_arg}.
287
 
288
@page
289
@node va_end
290
@subsection Abandon a variable argument list
291
@findex va_end
292
@strong{Synopsis}
293
@example
294
#include <stdarg.h>
295
void va_end(va_list @var{ap});
296
@end example
297
 
298
@strong{Description}@*
299
Use @code{va_end} to declare that your program will not use the variable
300
argument list @var{ap} any further.
301
 
302
@strong{Returns}@*
303
@code{va_end} does not return a result.
304
 
305
@strong{Portability}@*
306
ANSI C requires @code{va_end}.
307
 
308
@node Varargs
309
@section Traditional macros, @file{varargs.h}
310
 
311
If your C compiler predates ANSI C, you may still be able to use
312
variable argument lists using the macros from the @file{varargs.h}
313
header file.  These macros resemble their ANSI counterparts, but have
314
important differences in usage.   In particular, since traditional C has
315
no declaration mechanism for variable argument lists, two additional
316
macros are provided simply for the purpose of defining functions with
317
variable argument lists.
318
 
319
As with @file{stdarg.h}, the type @code{va_list} is used to hold a data
320
structure representing a variable argument list.
321
 
322
@menu
323
* va_alist::
324
* va_start-trad::
325
* va_arg-trad::
326
* va_end-trad::
327
@end menu
328
 
329
@page
330
@node va_alist
331
@subsection Declare variable arguments
332
@findex va_alist
333
@findex va_dcl
334
@strong{Synopsis}
335
@example
336
#include <varargs.h>
337
@var{function}(va_alist)
338
va_dcl
339
@end example
340
 
341
@strong{Description}@*
342
To use the @file{varargs.h} version of variable argument lists, you must
343
declare your function with a call to the macro @code{va_alist} as its
344
argument list, and use @code{va_dcl} as the declaration.  @emph{Do not
345
use a semicolon after @code{va_dcl}.}
346
 
347
@strong{Returns}@*
348
These macros cannot be used in a context where a return is syntactically
349
possible.
350
 
351
@strong{Portability}@*
352
@var{va_alist} and @var{va_dcl} were the most widespread method of
353
declaring variable argument lists prior to ANSI C.
354
 
355
@page
356
@node va_start-trad
357
@subsection Initialize variable argument list
358
@findex va_start
359
@strong{Synopsis}
360
@example
361
#include <varargs.h>
362
va_list @var{ap};
363
va_start(@var{ap});
364
@end example
365
 
366
@strong{Description}@*
367
With the @file{varargs.h} macros, use @code{va_start} to initialize a
368
data structure @var{ap} to permit manipulating a variable argument list.
369
@var{ap} must have the type @var{va_alist}.
370
 
371
@strong{Returns}@*
372
@code{va_start} does not return a result.
373
 
374
@strong{Portability}@*
375
@code{va_start} is also defined as a macro in ANSI C, but the
376
definitions are incompatible; the ANSI version has another parameter
377
besides @var{ap}.
378
 
379
@page
380
@node va_arg-trad
381
@subsection Extract a value from argument list
382
@findex va_arg
383
@strong{Synopsis}
384
@example
385
#include <varargs.h>
386
@var{type} va_arg(va_list @var{ap}, @var{type});
387
@end example
388
 
389
@strong{Description}@*
390
@code{va_arg} returns the next unprocessed value from a variable
391
argument list @var{ap} (which you must previously create with
392
@var{va_start}).  Specify the type for the value as the second parameter
393
to the macro, @var{type}.
394
 
395
@strong{Returns}@*
396
@code{va_arg} returns the next argument, an object of type @var{type}.
397
 
398
@strong{Portability}@*
399
The @code{va_arg} defined in @file{varargs.h} has the same syntax and
400
usage as the ANSI C version from @file{stdarg.h}.
401
 
402
@page
403
@node va_end-trad
404
@subsection Abandon a variable argument list
405
@findex va_end
406
@strong{Synopsis}
407
@example
408
#include <varargs.h>
409
va_end(va_list @var{ap});
410
@end example
411
 
412
@strong{Description}@*
413
Use @code{va_end} to declare that your program will not use the variable
414
argument list @var{ap} any further.
415
 
416
@strong{Returns}@*
417
@code{va_end} does not return a result.
418
 
419
@strong{Portability}@*
420
The @code{va_end} defined in @file{varargs.h} has the same syntax and
421
usage as the ANSI C version from @file{stdarg.h}.
422
 
423
@node Library Index
424
@unnumbered Index
425
@printindex cp
426
 
427
@tex
428
% I think something like @colophon should be in texinfo.  In the
429
% meantime:
430
\long\def\colophon{\hbox to0pt{}\vfill
431
\centerline{The body of this manual is set in}
432
\centerline{\fontname\tenrm,}
433
\centerline{with headings in {\bf\fontname\tenbf}}
434
\centerline{and examples in {\tt\fontname\tentt}.}
435
\centerline{{\it\fontname\tenit\/} and}
436
\centerline{{\sl\fontname\tensl\/}}
437
\centerline{are used for emphasis.}\vfill}
438
\page\colophon
439
% Blame: pesch@cygnus.com, 28mar91.
440
@end tex
441
 
442
@contents
443
@bye
444
 
445
 

powered by: WebSVN 2.1.0

© copyright 1999-2024 OpenCores.org, equivalent to Oliscience, all rights reserved. OpenCores®, registered trademark.