getpwent_r, fgetpwent_r - get passwd file entry reentrantly
Standard C library (libc
, -lc
)
#include <pwd.h>
int getpwent_r(struct passwd *restrict pwbuf,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct passwd **restrict pwbufp);
int fgetpwent_r(FILE *restrict stream, struct passwd *restrict pwbuf,
char buf[restrict .buflen], size_t buflen,
struct passwd **restrict pwbufp);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
getpwent_r(),
Since glibc 2.19:
_DEFAULT_SOURCE
glibc 2.19 and earlier:
_BSD_SOURCE || _SVID_SOURCE
fgetpwent_r():
Since glibc 2.19:
_DEFAULT_SOURCE
glibc 2.19 and earlier:
_SVID_SOURCE
The functions getpwent_r() and
fgetpwent_r() are the reentrant versions of
getpwent(3) and fgetpwent(3). The
former reads the next passwd entry from the stream initialized by
setpwent(3). The latter reads the next passwd entry
from stream
.
The passwd
structure is defined in <pwd.h>
as
follows:
struct passwd {
char *pw_name; /* username */
char *pw_passwd; /* user password */
uid_t pw_uid; /* user ID */
gid_t pw_gid; /* group ID */
char *pw_gecos; /* user information */
char *pw_dir; /* home directory */
char *pw_shell; /* shell program */
};
For more information about the fields of this structure, see passwd(5).
The nonreentrant functions return a pointer to static storage, where
this static storage contains further pointers to user name, password,
gecos field, home directory and shell. The reentrant functions described
here return all of that in caller-provided buffers. First of all there
is the buffer pwbuf
that can hold a struct passwd
. And
next the buffer buf
of size buflen
that can hold
additional strings. The result of these functions, the struct
passwd read from the stream, is stored in the provided buffer
*pwbuf
, and a pointer to this struct passwd
is
returned in *pwbufp
.
On success, these functions return 0 and *pwbufp
is a
pointer to the struct passwd
. On error, these functions return
an error value and *pwbufp
is NULL.
#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <pwd.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#define BUFLEN 4096
int
main(void)
{
struct passwd pw;
struct passwd *pwp;
char buf[BUFLEN];
int i;
setpwent();
while (1) {
i = getpwent_r(&pw, buf, sizeof(buf), &pwp);
if (i)
break;
printf("%s (%jd)\tHOME %s\tSHELL %s\n", pwp->pw_name,
(intmax_t) pwp->pw_uid, pwp->pw_dir, pwp->pw_shell);
}
endpwent();
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
No more entries.
Insufficient buffer space supplied. Try again with larger buffer.
For an explanation of the terms used in this section, see attributes(7).
Interface | Attribute | Value |
Thread safety | MT-Unsafe race:pwent locale |
|
Thread safety | MT-Safe |
In the above table, pwent
in race:pwent
signifies
that if any of the functions setpwent(),
getpwent(), endpwent(), or
getpwent_r() are used in parallel in different threads
of a program, then data races could occur.
None.
These functions are done in a style resembling the POSIX version of functions like getpwnam_r(3).
The function getpwent_r() is not really reentrant since it shares the reading position in the stream with all other threads.