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The open()
function, as defined in the Open Group in Standard for Information Technology—Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX®), Base Specifications, Issue 6 [Open Group 20047 [IEEE Std 1003.1:2013], is available on many platforms and provides finer control than fopen()
. In particular, open()
accepts the O_CREAT
and O_EXCL
flags. When used together, these flags instruct the open()
function to fail if the file specified by file_name
already exists.
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For code that operates on FILE
pointers and not file descriptors, the POSIX fdopen()
function can be used to associate an open stream with the file descriptor returned by open()
, as shown in this compliant solution [Open Group 2004IEEE Std 1003.1:2013]:
Code Block | ||||
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char *file_name; int new_file_mode; FILE *fp; int fd; /* Initialize file_name and new_file_mode */ fd = open(file_name, O_CREAT | O_EXCL | O_WRONLY, new_file_mode); if (fd == -1) { /* Handle error */ } fp = fdopen(fd, "w"); if (fp == NULL) { /* Handle error */ } |
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[Callaghan 1995] | IETF RFC 1813 NFS Version 3 Protocol Specification | ||
[IEEE Std 1003.1:2013] | System Interfaces: open | ||
[ISO/IEC 9899:2011] | Subclause 7.21.5.3, "The fopen Function"Subclause K.3.5.2.1, "The fopen_s Function" | ||
[Loosemore 2007] | Section 12.3, "Opening Streams" | [Open Group 2004] | |
[Seacord 2013] | Chapter 8, "File I/O" |
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