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GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 4.8

i386

envz_entry(3)


ENVZ_ADD

ENVZ_ADD

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUE
EXAMPLE
NOTES
SEE ALSO

NAME

envz_add, envz_entry, envz_get, envz_merge, envz_remove, envz_strip − environment string support

SYNOPSIS

#include <envz.h>

error_t
envz_add(char **
envz, size_t *envz_len,
const char *
name, const char *value);

char *
envz_entry(const char *
envz, size_t *envz_len, const char *name);

char *
envz_get(const char *
envz, size_t *envz_len, const char *name);

error_t
envz_merge(char **
envz, size_t *envz_len,
const char *
envz2, size_t envz2_len, int override);

void
envz_remove(char **
envz, size_t *envz_len, const char *name);

void
envz_strip(char **
envz, size_t *envz_len);

DESCRIPTION

These functions are glibc-specific.

An argz vector is a pointer to a character buffer together with a length, see argz_add(3). An envz vector is a special argz vector, namely one where the strings have the form "name=value". Everything after the first ’=’ is considered to be the value. If there is no ’=’, the value is taken to be NULL. (While the value in case of a trailing ’=’ is the empty string "".)

These functions are for handling envz vectors.

envz_add() adds the string "name=value" (in case value is non-NULL) or "name" (in case value is NULL) to the envz vector (*envz,*envz_len) and updates *envz and *envz_len. If an entry with the same name existed, it is removed.

envz_entry() looks for name in the envz vector (envz,envz_len) and returns the entry if found, or NULL if not.

envz_get() looks for name in the envz vector (envz,envz_len) and returns the value if found, or NULL if not. (Note that the value can also be NULL, namely when there is an entry for name without ’=’ sign.)

envz_merge() adds each entry in envz2 to *envz, as if with envz_add(). If override is true, then values in envz2 will supersede those with the same name in *envz, otherwise not.

envz_remove() removes the entry for name from (*envz,*envz_len) if there was one.

envz_strip removes all entries with value NULL.

RETURN VALUE

All envz functions that do memory allocation have a return type of error_t, and return 0 for success, and ENOMEM if an allocation error occurs.

EXAMPLE

#include <stdio.h>
#include <envz.h>
int
main(int argc, char *argv[], char *envp[]) {

int i, e_len = 0;

char *str;

for (i=0; envp[i] != NULL; i++)

e_len += strlen(envp[i]) + 1;

str = envz_entry(*envp, e_len, "HOME");

printf("%s\n", str);

str = envz_get(*envp, e_len, "HOME");

printf("%s\n", str);

return 0;

}

NOTES

These functions are a GNU extension. Handle with care.

SEE ALSO

argz(3)



envz_entry(3)