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author | Andreas Jaeger <aj@suse.de> | 2001-02-08 09:28:59 +0000 |
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committer | Andreas Jaeger <aj@suse.de> | 2001-02-08 09:28:59 +0000 |
commit | f6af7428dbe58c559f20e2972a0c12b67e07760f (patch) | |
tree | a2b7b7b63c738d98f5204d60ea6bba73f92d3d5d /manual | |
parent | b317de546432289bfd673187737147ea3e411f95 (diff) | |
download | glibc-f6af7428dbe58c559f20e2972a0c12b67e07760f.zip glibc-f6af7428dbe58c559f20e2972a0c12b67e07760f.tar.gz glibc-f6af7428dbe58c559f20e2972a0c12b67e07760f.tar.bz2 |
Update.
2001-02-08 Andreas Jaeger <aj@suse.de>
* manual/stdio.texi (Closing Streams): Fix typos.
Diffstat (limited to 'manual')
-rw-r--r-- | manual/stdio.texi | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/manual/stdio.texi b/manual/stdio.texi index 80d70a1..e8101c7 100644 --- a/manual/stdio.texi +++ b/manual/stdio.texi @@ -372,7 +372,7 @@ see @ref{Stream Buffering}. In some situations it is useful to know whether a given stream is available for reading or writing. This information is normally not -available and would have have to be remembered separately. Solaris +available and would have to be remembered separately. Solaris introduced a few functions to get this information from the stream descriptor and these functions are also available in the GNU C library. @@ -388,7 +388,7 @@ This function is declared in @file{stdio_ext.h}. @comment stdio_ext.h @comment GNU -@deftypefun int __fwritaable (FILE *@var{stream}) +@deftypefun int __fwritable (FILE *@var{stream}) The @code{__fwritable} function determines whether the stream @var{stream} was opened to allow writing. In this case the return value is nonzero. For read-only streams the function returns zero. @@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ is nonzero. For read-only streams the function returns zero. This function is declared in @file{stdio_ext.h}. @end deftypefun -For a slightly different kind of problems there are two more functions. +For slightly different kind of problems there are two more functions. They provide even finer-grained information. @comment stdio_ext.h @@ -432,7 +432,7 @@ are used in single-threaded applications. But the programmer must be aware of a the possible complications. It is important to know about these also if the program one writes never use threads since the design and implementation of many stream functions is heavily influenced by the -requierements added by multi-threaded programming. +requirements added by multi-threaded programming. The POSIX standard requires that by default the stream operations are atomic. I.e., issueing two stream operations for the same stream in two @@ -455,7 +455,7 @@ perform the stream locking in the application code. @comment POSIX @deftypefun void flockfile (FILE *@var{stream}) The @code{flockfile} function acquires the internal locking object -associated with the stream @var{stream}. This ensure that no other +associated with the stream @var{stream}. This ensures that no other thread can explicitly through @code{flockfile}/@code{ftrylockfile} or implicit through a call of a stream function lock the stream. The thread will block until the lock is acquired. An explicit call to @@ -465,7 +465,7 @@ thread will block until the lock is acquired. An explicit call to @comment stdio.h @comment POSIX @deftypefun int ftrylockfile (FILE *@var{stream}) -The@code{ftrylockfile} function tries to acquire the internal locking +The @code{ftrylockfile} function tries to acquire the internal locking object associated with the stream @var{stream} just like @code{flockfile}. But unlike @code{flockfile} this function does not block if the lock is not available. @code{ftrylockfile} returns zero if @@ -530,7 +530,7 @@ if the @code{ftrylockfile} function succeeded in locking the stream. It is therefore always wrong to ignore the result of @code{ftrylockfile}. And it makes no sense since otherwise one would use @code{flockfile}. The result of code like that above is that either @code{funlockfile} -tries to free a stream hasn't been locked by the current thread or it +tries to free a stream that hasn't been locked by the current thread or it frees the stream prematurely. The code should look like this: @smallexample @@ -546,7 +546,7 @@ foo (FILE *fp) @end smallexample Now that we covered why it is necessary to have these locking it is -necessary to talk about siuations when locking is unwanted and what can +necessary to talk about situations when locking is unwanted and what can be done. The locking operations (explicit or implicit) don't come for free. Even if a lock is not taken the cost is not zero. The operations which have to be performed require memory operations which are save in @@ -564,7 +564,7 @@ standard defines quite a few of those and the GNU library adds a few more. These variants of the functions behave just like the functions with the name without the suffix except that they are not locking the stream. Using these functions is very desirable since they are -potentially very much faster. This is not only because the locking +potentially much faster. This is not only because the locking operation itself is avoided. More importantly, functions like @code{putc} and @code{getc} are very simple and tradionally (before the introduction of threads) were implemented as macros which are very fast |