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1 @c -*-texinfo-*-
2 @c This is part of the GNU Guile Reference Manual.
3 @c Copyright (C) 1996, 1997, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007,
4 @c 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 @c See the file guile.texi for copying conditions.
6
7 @node POSIX
8 @section @acronym{POSIX} System Calls and Networking
9 @cindex POSIX
10
11 @menu
12 * Conventions:: Conventions employed by the POSIX interface.
13 * Ports and File Descriptors:: Scheme ``ports'' and Unix file descriptors
14 have different representations.
15 * File System:: stat, chown, chmod, etc.
16 * User Information:: Retrieving a user's GECOS (/etc/passwd) entry.
17 * Time:: gettimeofday, localtime, strftime, etc.
18 * Runtime Environment:: Accessing and modifying Guile's environment.
19 * Processes:: getuid, getpid, etc.
20 * Signals:: sigaction, kill, pause, alarm, setitimer, etc.
21 * Terminals and Ptys:: ttyname, tcsetpgrp, etc.
22 * Pipes:: Communicating data between processes.
23 * Networking:: gethostbyaddr, getnetent, socket, bind, listen.
24 * System Identification:: Obtaining information about the system.
25 * Locales:: setlocale, etc.
26 * Encryption::
27 @end menu
28
29 @node Conventions
30 @subsection @acronym{POSIX} Interface Conventions
31
32 These interfaces provide access to operating system facilities.
33 They provide a simple wrapping around the underlying C interfaces
34 to make usage from Scheme more convenient. They are also used
35 to implement the Guile port of scsh (@pxref{The Scheme shell (scsh)}).
36
37 Generally there is a single procedure for each corresponding Unix
38 facility. There are some exceptions, such as procedures implemented for
39 speed and convenience in Scheme with no primitive Unix equivalent,
40 e.g.@: @code{copy-file}.
41
42 The interfaces are intended as far as possible to be portable across
43 different versions of Unix. In some cases procedures which can't be
44 implemented on particular systems may become no-ops, or perform limited
45 actions. In other cases they may throw errors.
46
47 General naming conventions are as follows:
48
49 @itemize @bullet
50 @item
51 The Scheme name is often identical to the name of the underlying Unix
52 facility.
53 @item
54 Underscores in Unix procedure names are converted to hyphens.
55 @item
56 Procedures which destructively modify Scheme data have exclamation
57 marks appended, e.g., @code{recv!}.
58 @item
59 Predicates (returning only @code{#t} or @code{#f}) have question marks
60 appended, e.g., @code{access?}.
61 @item
62 Some names are changed to avoid conflict with dissimilar interfaces
63 defined by scsh, e.g., @code{primitive-fork}.
64 @item
65 Unix preprocessor names such as @code{EPERM} or @code{R_OK} are converted
66 to Scheme variables of the same name (underscores are not replaced
67 with hyphens).
68 @end itemize
69
70 Unexpected conditions are generally handled by raising exceptions.
71 There are a few procedures which return a special value if they don't
72 succeed, e.g., @code{getenv} returns @code{#f} if it the requested
73 string is not found in the environment. These cases are noted in
74 the documentation.
75
76 For ways to deal with exceptions, see @ref{Exceptions}.
77
78 @cindex @code{errno}
79 Errors which the C library would report by returning a null pointer or
80 through some other means are reported by raising a @code{system-error}
81 exception with @code{scm-error} (@pxref{Error Reporting}). The
82 @var{data} parameter is a list containing the Unix @code{errno} value
83 (an integer). For example,
84
85 @example
86 (define (my-handler key func fmt fmtargs data)
87 (display key) (newline)
88 (display func) (newline)
89 (apply format #t fmt fmtargs) (newline)
90 (display data) (newline))
91
92 (catch 'system-error
93 (lambda () (dup2 -123 -456))
94 my-handler)
95
96 @print{}
97 system-error
98 dup2
99 Bad file descriptor
100 (9)
101 @end example
102
103
104 @sp 1
105 @defun system-error-errno arglist
106 @cindex @code{errno}
107 Return the @code{errno} value from a list which is the arguments to an
108 exception handler. If the exception is not a @code{system-error},
109 then the return is @code{#f}. For example,
110
111 @example
112 (catch
113 'system-error
114 (lambda ()
115 (mkdir "/this-ought-to-fail-if-I'm-not-root"))
116 (lambda stuff
117 (let ((errno (system-error-errno stuff)))
118 (cond
119 ((= errno EACCES)
120 (display "You're not allowed to do that."))
121 ((= errno EEXIST)
122 (display "Already exists."))
123 (#t
124 (display (strerror errno))))
125 (newline))))
126 @end example
127 @end defun
128
129
130 @node Ports and File Descriptors
131 @subsection Ports and File Descriptors
132 @cindex file descriptor
133
134 Conventions generally follow those of scsh, @ref{The Scheme shell (scsh)}.
135
136 File ports are implemented using low-level operating system I/O
137 facilities, with optional buffering to improve efficiency; see
138 @ref{File Ports}.
139
140 Note that some procedures (e.g., @code{recv!}) will accept ports as
141 arguments, but will actually operate directly on the file descriptor
142 underlying the port. Any port buffering is ignored, including the
143 buffer which implements @code{peek-char} and @code{unread-char}.
144
145 The @code{force-output} and @code{drain-input} procedures can be used
146 to clear the buffers.
147
148 Each open file port has an associated operating system file descriptor.
149 File descriptors are generally not useful in Scheme programs; however
150 they may be needed when interfacing with foreign code and the Unix
151 environment.
152
153 A file descriptor can be extracted from a port and a new port can be
154 created from a file descriptor. However a file descriptor is just an
155 integer and the garbage collector doesn't recognize it as a reference
156 to the port. If all other references to the port were dropped, then
157 it's likely that the garbage collector would free the port, with the
158 side-effect of closing the file descriptor prematurely.
159
160 To assist the programmer in avoiding this problem, each port has an
161 associated @dfn{revealed count} which can be used to keep track of how many
162 times the underlying file descriptor has been stored in other places.
163 If a port's revealed count is greater than zero, the file descriptor
164 will not be closed when the port is garbage collected. A programmer
165 can therefore ensure that the revealed count will be greater than
166 zero if the file descriptor is needed elsewhere.
167
168 For the simple case where a file descriptor is ``imported'' once to become
169 a port, it does not matter if the file descriptor is closed when the
170 port is garbage collected. There is no need to maintain a revealed
171 count. Likewise when ``exporting'' a file descriptor to the external
172 environment, setting the revealed count is not required provided the
173 port is kept open (i.e., is pointed to by a live Scheme binding) while
174 the file descriptor is in use.
175
176 To correspond with traditional Unix behaviour, three file descriptors
177 (0, 1, and 2) are automatically imported when a program starts up and
178 assigned to the initial values of the current/standard input, output,
179 and error ports, respectively. The revealed count for each is
180 initially set to one, so that dropping references to one of these
181 ports will not result in its garbage collection: it could be retrieved
182 with @code{fdopen} or @code{fdes->ports}.
183
184 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} port-revealed port
185 @deffnx {C Function} scm_port_revealed (port)
186 Return the revealed count for @var{port}.
187 @end deffn
188
189 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} set-port-revealed! port rcount
190 @deffnx {C Function} scm_set_port_revealed_x (port, rcount)
191 Sets the revealed count for a @var{port} to @var{rcount}.
192 The return value is unspecified.
193 @end deffn
194
195 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fileno port
196 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fileno (port)
197 Return the integer file descriptor underlying @var{port}. Does
198 not change its revealed count.
199 @end deffn
200
201 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} port->fdes port
202 Returns the integer file descriptor underlying @var{port}. As a
203 side effect the revealed count of @var{port} is incremented.
204 @end deffn
205
206 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fdopen fdes modes
207 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fdopen (fdes, modes)
208 Return a new port based on the file descriptor @var{fdes}. Modes are
209 given by the string @var{modes}. The revealed count of the port is
210 initialized to zero. The @var{modes} string is the same as that
211 accepted by @code{open-file} (@pxref{File Ports, open-file}).
212 @end deffn
213
214 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fdes->ports fdes
215 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fdes_to_ports (fdes)
216 Return a list of existing ports which have @var{fdes} as an
217 underlying file descriptor, without changing their revealed
218 counts.
219 @end deffn
220
221 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fdes->inport fdes
222 Returns an existing input port which has @var{fdes} as its underlying file
223 descriptor, if one exists, and increments its revealed count.
224 Otherwise, returns a new input port with a revealed count of 1.
225 @end deffn
226
227 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fdes->outport fdes
228 Returns an existing output port which has @var{fdes} as its underlying file
229 descriptor, if one exists, and increments its revealed count.
230 Otherwise, returns a new output port with a revealed count of 1.
231 @end deffn
232
233 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-move->fdes port fdes
234 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_move_to_fdes (port, fdes)
235 Moves the underlying file descriptor for @var{port} to the integer
236 value @var{fdes} without changing the revealed count of @var{port}.
237 Any other ports already using this descriptor will be automatically
238 shifted to new descriptors and their revealed counts reset to zero.
239 The return value is @code{#f} if the file descriptor already had the
240 required value or @code{#t} if it was moved.
241 @end deffn
242
243 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} move->fdes port fdes
244 Moves the underlying file descriptor for @var{port} to the integer
245 value @var{fdes} and sets its revealed count to one. Any other ports
246 already using this descriptor will be automatically
247 shifted to new descriptors and their revealed counts reset to zero.
248 The return value is unspecified.
249 @end deffn
250
251 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} release-port-handle port
252 Decrements the revealed count for a port.
253 @end deffn
254
255 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fsync port_or_fd
256 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fsync (port_or_fd)
257 Copies any unwritten data for the specified output file descriptor to disk.
258 If @var{port_or_fd} is a port, its buffer is flushed before the underlying
259 file descriptor is fsync'd.
260 The return value is unspecified.
261 @end deffn
262
263 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open path flags [mode]
264 @deffnx {C Function} scm_open (path, flags, mode)
265 Open the file named by @var{path} for reading and/or writing.
266 @var{flags} is an integer specifying how the file should be opened.
267 @var{mode} is an integer specifying the permission bits of the file,
268 if it needs to be created, before the umask (@pxref{Processes}) is
269 applied. The default is 666 (Unix itself has no default).
270
271 @var{flags} can be constructed by combining variables using @code{logior}.
272 Basic flags are:
273
274 @defvar O_RDONLY
275 Open the file read-only.
276 @end defvar
277 @defvar O_WRONLY
278 Open the file write-only.
279 @end defvar
280 @defvar O_RDWR
281 Open the file read/write.
282 @end defvar
283 @defvar O_APPEND
284 Append to the file instead of truncating.
285 @end defvar
286 @defvar O_CREAT
287 Create the file if it does not already exist.
288 @end defvar
289
290 @xref{File Status Flags,,,libc,The GNU C Library Reference Manual},
291 for additional flags.
292 @end deffn
293
294 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-fdes path flags [mode]
295 @deffnx {C Function} scm_open_fdes (path, flags, mode)
296 Similar to @code{open} but return a file descriptor instead of
297 a port.
298 @end deffn
299
300 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} close fd_or_port
301 @deffnx {C Function} scm_close (fd_or_port)
302 Similar to @code{close-port} (@pxref{Closing, close-port}),
303 but also works on file descriptors. A side
304 effect of closing a file descriptor is that any ports using that file
305 descriptor are moved to a different file descriptor and have
306 their revealed counts set to zero.
307 @end deffn
308
309 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} close-fdes fd
310 @deffnx {C Function} scm_close_fdes (fd)
311 A simple wrapper for the @code{close} system call. Close file
312 descriptor @var{fd}, which must be an integer. Unlike @code{close},
313 the file descriptor will be closed even if a port is using it. The
314 return value is unspecified.
315 @end deffn
316
317 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} unread-char char [port]
318 @deffnx {C Function} scm_unread_char (char, port)
319 Place @var{char} in @var{port} so that it will be read by the next
320 read operation on that port. If called multiple times, the unread
321 characters will be read again in ``last-in, first-out'' order (i.e.@:
322 a stack). If @var{port} is not supplied, the current input port is
323 used.
324 @end deffn
325
326 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} unread-string str port
327 Place the string @var{str} in @var{port} so that its characters will be
328 read in subsequent read operations. If called multiple times, the
329 unread characters will be read again in last-in first-out order. If
330 @var{port} is not supplied, the current-input-port is used.
331 @end deffn
332
333 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} pipe
334 @deffnx {C Function} scm_pipe ()
335 @cindex pipe
336 Return a newly created pipe: a pair of ports which are linked
337 together on the local machine. The @acronym{CAR} is the input
338 port and the @acronym{CDR} is the output port. Data written (and
339 flushed) to the output port can be read from the input port.
340 Pipes are commonly used for communication with a newly forked
341 child process. The need to flush the output port can be
342 avoided by making it unbuffered using @code{setvbuf}.
343
344 @defvar PIPE_BUF
345 A write of up to @code{PIPE_BUF} many bytes to a pipe is atomic,
346 meaning when done it goes into the pipe instantaneously and as a
347 contiguous block (@pxref{Pipe Atomicity,, Atomicity of Pipe I/O, libc,
348 The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
349 @end defvar
350
351 Note that the output port is likely to block if too much data has been
352 written but not yet read from the input port. Typically the capacity
353 is @code{PIPE_BUF} bytes.
354 @end deffn
355
356 The next group of procedures perform a @code{dup2}
357 system call, if @var{newfd} (an
358 integer) is supplied, otherwise a @code{dup}. The file descriptor to be
359 duplicated can be supplied as an integer or contained in a port. The
360 type of value returned varies depending on which procedure is used.
361
362 All procedures also have the side effect when performing @code{dup2} that any
363 ports using @var{newfd} are moved to a different file descriptor and have
364 their revealed counts set to zero.
365
366 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup->fdes fd_or_port [fd]
367 @deffnx {C Function} scm_dup_to_fdes (fd_or_port, fd)
368 Return a new integer file descriptor referring to the open file
369 designated by @var{fd_or_port}, which must be either an open
370 file port or a file descriptor.
371 @end deffn
372
373 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup->inport port/fd [newfd]
374 Returns a new input port using the new file descriptor.
375 @end deffn
376
377 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup->outport port/fd [newfd]
378 Returns a new output port using the new file descriptor.
379 @end deffn
380
381 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup port/fd [newfd]
382 Returns a new port if @var{port/fd} is a port, with the same mode as the
383 supplied port, otherwise returns an integer file descriptor.
384 @end deffn
385
386 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup->port port/fd mode [newfd]
387 Returns a new port using the new file descriptor. @var{mode} supplies a
388 mode string for the port (@pxref{File Ports, open-file}).
389 @end deffn
390
391 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} duplicate-port port modes
392 Returns a new port which is opened on a duplicate of the file
393 descriptor underlying @var{port}, with mode string @var{modes}
394 as for @ref{File Ports, open-file}. The two ports
395 will share a file position and file status flags.
396
397 Unexpected behaviour can result if both ports are subsequently used
398 and the original and/or duplicate ports are buffered.
399 The mode string can include @code{0} to obtain an unbuffered duplicate
400 port.
401
402 This procedure is equivalent to @code{(dup->port @var{port} @var{modes})}.
403 @end deffn
404
405 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} redirect-port old_port new_port
406 @deffnx {C Function} scm_redirect_port (old_port, new_port)
407 This procedure takes two ports and duplicates the underlying file
408 descriptor from @var{old_port} into @var{new_port}. The
409 current file descriptor in @var{new_port} will be closed.
410 After the redirection the two ports will share a file position
411 and file status flags.
412
413 The return value is unspecified.
414
415 Unexpected behaviour can result if both ports are subsequently used
416 and the original and/or duplicate ports are buffered.
417
418 This procedure does not have any side effects on other ports or
419 revealed counts.
420 @end deffn
421
422 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dup2 oldfd newfd
423 @deffnx {C Function} scm_dup2 (oldfd, newfd)
424 A simple wrapper for the @code{dup2} system call.
425 Copies the file descriptor @var{oldfd} to descriptor
426 number @var{newfd}, replacing the previous meaning
427 of @var{newfd}. Both @var{oldfd} and @var{newfd} must
428 be integers.
429 Unlike for @code{dup->fdes} or @code{primitive-move->fdes}, no attempt
430 is made to move away ports which are using @var{newfd}.
431 The return value is unspecified.
432 @end deffn
433
434 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} port-mode port
435 Return the port modes associated with the open port @var{port}.
436 These will not necessarily be identical to the modes used when
437 the port was opened, since modes such as ``append'' which are
438 used only during port creation are not retained.
439 @end deffn
440
441 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} port-for-each proc
442 @deffnx {C Function} scm_port_for_each (SCM proc)
443 @deffnx {C Function} scm_c_port_for_each (void (*proc)(void *, SCM), void *data)
444 Apply @var{proc} to each port in the Guile port table
445 (FIXME: what is the Guile port table?)
446 in turn. The return value is unspecified. More specifically,
447 @var{proc} is applied exactly once to every port that exists in the
448 system at the time @code{port-for-each} is invoked. Changes to the
449 port table while @code{port-for-each} is running have no effect as far
450 as @code{port-for-each} is concerned.
451
452 The C function @code{scm_port_for_each} takes a Scheme procedure
453 encoded as a @code{SCM} value, while @code{scm_c_port_for_each} takes
454 a pointer to a C function and passes along a arbitrary @var{data}
455 cookie.
456 @end deffn
457
458 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setvbuf port mode [size]
459 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setvbuf (port, mode, size)
460 @cindex port buffering
461 Set the buffering mode for @var{port}. @var{mode} can be:
462
463 @defvar _IONBF
464 non-buffered
465 @end defvar
466 @defvar _IOLBF
467 line buffered
468 @end defvar
469 @defvar _IOFBF
470 block buffered, using a newly allocated buffer of @var{size} bytes.
471 If @var{size} is omitted, a default size will be used.
472 @end defvar
473 @end deffn
474
475 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} fcntl port/fd cmd [value]
476 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fcntl (object, cmd, value)
477 Apply @var{cmd} on @var{port/fd}, either a port or file descriptor.
478 The @var{value} argument is used by the @code{SET} commands described
479 below, it's an integer value.
480
481 Values for @var{cmd} are:
482
483 @defvar F_DUPFD
484 Duplicate the file descriptor, the same as @code{dup->fdes} above
485 does.
486 @end defvar
487
488 @defvar F_GETFD
489 @defvarx F_SETFD
490 Get or set flags associated with the file descriptor. The only flag
491 is the following,
492
493 @defvar FD_CLOEXEC
494 ``Close on exec'', meaning the file descriptor will be closed on an
495 @code{exec} call (a successful such call). For example to set that
496 flag,
497
498 @example
499 (fcntl port F_SETFD FD_CLOEXEC)
500 @end example
501
502 Or better, set it but leave any other possible future flags unchanged,
503
504 @example
505 (fcntl port F_SETFD (logior FD_CLOEXEC
506 (fcntl port F_GETFD)))
507 @end example
508 @end defvar
509 @end defvar
510
511 @defvar F_GETFL
512 @defvarx F_SETFL
513 Get or set flags associated with the open file. These flags are
514 @code{O_RDONLY} etc described under @code{open} above.
515
516 A common use is to set @code{O_NONBLOCK} on a network socket. The
517 following sets that flag, and leaves other flags unchanged.
518
519 @example
520 (fcntl sock F_SETFL (logior O_NONBLOCK
521 (fcntl sock F_GETFL)))
522 @end example
523 @end defvar
524
525 @defvar F_GETOWN
526 @defvarx F_SETOWN
527 Get or set the process ID of a socket's owner, for @code{SIGIO} signals.
528 @end defvar
529 @end deffn
530
531 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} flock file operation
532 @deffnx {C Function} scm_flock (file, operation)
533 @cindex file locking
534 Apply or remove an advisory lock on an open file.
535 @var{operation} specifies the action to be done:
536
537 @defvar LOCK_SH
538 Shared lock. More than one process may hold a shared lock
539 for a given file at a given time.
540 @end defvar
541 @defvar LOCK_EX
542 Exclusive lock. Only one process may hold an exclusive lock
543 for a given file at a given time.
544 @end defvar
545 @defvar LOCK_UN
546 Unlock the file.
547 @end defvar
548 @defvar LOCK_NB
549 Don't block when locking. This is combined with one of the other
550 operations using @code{logior} (@pxref{Bitwise Operations}). If
551 @code{flock} would block an @code{EWOULDBLOCK} error is thrown
552 (@pxref{Conventions}).
553 @end defvar
554
555 The return value is not specified. @var{file} may be an open
556 file descriptor or an open file descriptor port.
557
558 Note that @code{flock} does not lock files across NFS.
559 @end deffn
560
561 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} select reads writes excepts [secs [usecs]]
562 @deffnx {C Function} scm_select (reads, writes, excepts, secs, usecs)
563 This procedure has a variety of uses: waiting for the ability
564 to provide input, accept output, or the existence of
565 exceptional conditions on a collection of ports or file
566 descriptors, or waiting for a timeout to occur.
567 It also returns if interrupted by a signal.
568
569 @var{reads}, @var{writes} and @var{excepts} can be lists or
570 vectors, with each member a port or a file descriptor.
571 The value returned is a list of three corresponding
572 lists or vectors containing only the members which meet the
573 specified requirement. The ability of port buffers to
574 provide input or accept output is taken into account.
575 Ordering of the input lists or vectors is not preserved.
576
577 The optional arguments @var{secs} and @var{usecs} specify the
578 timeout. Either @var{secs} can be specified alone, as
579 either an integer or a real number, or both @var{secs} and
580 @var{usecs} can be specified as integers, in which case
581 @var{usecs} is an additional timeout expressed in
582 microseconds. If @var{secs} is omitted or is @code{#f} then
583 select will wait for as long as it takes for one of the other
584 conditions to be satisfied.
585
586 The scsh version of @code{select} differs as follows:
587 Only vectors are accepted for the first three arguments.
588 The @var{usecs} argument is not supported.
589 Multiple values are returned instead of a list.
590 Duplicates in the input vectors appear only once in output.
591 An additional @code{select!} interface is provided.
592 @end deffn
593
594 @node File System
595 @subsection File System
596 @cindex file system
597
598 These procedures allow querying and setting file system attributes
599 (such as owner,
600 permissions, sizes and types of files); deleting, copying, renaming and
601 linking files; creating and removing directories and querying their
602 contents; syncing the file system and creating special files.
603
604 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} access? path how
605 @deffnx {C Function} scm_access (path, how)
606 Test accessibility of a file under the real UID and GID of the calling
607 process. The return is @code{#t} if @var{path} exists and the
608 permissions requested by @var{how} are all allowed, or @code{#f} if
609 not.
610
611 @var{how} is an integer which is one of the following values, or a
612 bitwise-OR (@code{logior}) of multiple values.
613
614 @defvar R_OK
615 Test for read permission.
616 @end defvar
617 @defvar W_OK
618 Test for write permission.
619 @end defvar
620 @defvar X_OK
621 Test for execute permission.
622 @end defvar
623 @defvar F_OK
624 Test for existence of the file. This is implied by each of the other
625 tests, so there's no need to combine it with them.
626 @end defvar
627
628 It's important to note that @code{access?} does not simply indicate
629 what will happen on attempting to read or write a file. In normal
630 circumstances it does, but in a set-UID or set-GID program it doesn't
631 because @code{access?} tests the real ID, whereas an open or execute
632 attempt uses the effective ID.
633
634 A program which will never run set-UID/GID can ignore the difference
635 between real and effective IDs, but for maximum generality, especially
636 in library functions, it's best not to use @code{access?} to predict
637 the result of an open or execute, instead simply attempt that and
638 catch any exception.
639
640 The main use for @code{access?} is to let a set-UID/GID program
641 determine what the invoking user would have been allowed to do,
642 without the greater (or perhaps lesser) privileges afforded by the
643 effective ID. For more on this, see @ref{Testing File Access,,, libc,
644 The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
645 @end deffn
646
647 @findex fstat
648 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat object
649 @deffnx {C Function} scm_stat (object)
650 Return an object containing various information about the file
651 determined by @var{object}. @var{object} can be a string containing
652 a file name or a port or integer file descriptor which is open
653 on a file (in which case @code{fstat} is used as the underlying
654 system call).
655
656 The object returned by @code{stat} can be passed as a single
657 parameter to the following procedures, all of which return
658 integers:
659
660 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:dev st
661 The device number containing the file.
662 @end deffn
663 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:ino st
664 The file serial number, which distinguishes this file from all
665 other files on the same device.
666 @end deffn
667 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:mode st
668 The mode of the file. This is an integer which incorporates file type
669 information and file permission bits. See also @code{stat:type} and
670 @code{stat:perms} below.
671 @end deffn
672 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:nlink st
673 The number of hard links to the file.
674 @end deffn
675 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:uid st
676 The user ID of the file's owner.
677 @end deffn
678 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:gid st
679 The group ID of the file.
680 @end deffn
681 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:rdev st
682 Device ID; this entry is defined only for character or block special
683 files. On some systems this field is not available at all, in which
684 case @code{stat:rdev} returns @code{#f}.
685 @end deffn
686 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:size st
687 The size of a regular file in bytes.
688 @end deffn
689 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:atime st
690 The last access time for the file, in seconds.
691 @end deffn
692 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:mtime st
693 The last modification time for the file, in seconds.
694 @end deffn
695 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:ctime st
696 The last modification time for the attributes of the file, in seconds.
697 @end deffn
698 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:atimensec st
699 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} stat:mtimensec st
700 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} stat:ctimensec st
701 The fractional part of a file's access, modification, or attribute modification
702 time, in nanoseconds. Nanosecond timestamps are only available on some operating
703 systems and file systems. If Guile cannot retrieve nanosecond-level timestamps
704 for a file, these fields will be set to 0.
705 @end deffn
706 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:blksize st
707 The optimal block size for reading or writing the file, in bytes. On
708 some systems this field is not available, in which case
709 @code{stat:blksize} returns a sensible suggested block size.
710 @end deffn
711 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:blocks st
712 The amount of disk space that the file occupies measured in units of
713 512 byte blocks. On some systems this field is not available, in
714 which case @code{stat:blocks} returns @code{#f}.
715 @end deffn
716
717 In addition, the following procedures return the information
718 from @code{stat:mode} in a more convenient form:
719
720 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:type st
721 A symbol representing the type of file. Possible values are
722 @samp{regular}, @samp{directory}, @samp{symlink},
723 @samp{block-special}, @samp{char-special}, @samp{fifo}, @samp{socket},
724 and @samp{unknown}.
725 @end deffn
726 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} stat:perms st
727 An integer representing the access permission bits.
728 @end deffn
729 @end deffn
730
731 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} lstat path
732 @deffnx {C Function} scm_lstat (path)
733 Similar to @code{stat}, but does not follow symbolic links, i.e.,
734 it will return information about a symbolic link itself, not the
735 file it points to. @var{path} must be a string.
736 @end deffn
737
738 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} readlink path
739 @deffnx {C Function} scm_readlink (path)
740 Return the value of the symbolic link named by @var{path} (a
741 string), i.e., the file that the link points to.
742 @end deffn
743
744 @findex fchown
745 @findex lchown
746 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} chown object owner group
747 @deffnx {C Function} scm_chown (object, owner, group)
748 Change the ownership and group of the file referred to by @var{object}
749 to the integer values @var{owner} and @var{group}. @var{object} can
750 be a string containing a file name or, if the platform supports
751 @code{fchown} (@pxref{File Owner,,,libc,The GNU C Library Reference
752 Manual}), a port or integer file descriptor which is open on the file.
753 The return value is unspecified.
754
755 If @var{object} is a symbolic link, either the
756 ownership of the link or the ownership of the referenced file will be
757 changed depending on the operating system (lchown is
758 unsupported at present). If @var{owner} or @var{group} is specified
759 as @code{-1}, then that ID is not changed.
760 @end deffn
761
762 @findex fchmod
763 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} chmod object mode
764 @deffnx {C Function} scm_chmod (object, mode)
765 Changes the permissions of the file referred to by @var{object}.
766 @var{object} can be a string containing a file name or a port or integer file
767 descriptor which is open on a file (in which case @code{fchmod} is used
768 as the underlying system call).
769 @var{mode} specifies
770 the new permissions as a decimal number, e.g., @code{(chmod "foo" #o755)}.
771 The return value is unspecified.
772 @end deffn
773
774 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utime pathname [actime [modtime [actimens [modtimens [flags]]]]]
775 @deffnx {C Function} scm_utime (pathname, actime, modtime, actimens, modtimens, flags)
776 @code{utime} sets the access and modification times for the
777 file named by @var{pathname}. If @var{actime} or @var{modtime} is
778 not supplied, then the current time is used. @var{actime} and
779 @var{modtime} must be integer time values as returned by the
780 @code{current-time} procedure.
781
782 The optional @var{actimens} and @var{modtimens} are nanoseconds
783 to add @var{actime} and @var{modtime}. Nanosecond precision is
784 only supported on some combinations of file systems and operating
785 systems.
786 @lisp
787 (utime "foo" (- (current-time) 3600))
788 @end lisp
789 will set the access time to one hour in the past and the
790 modification time to the current time.
791 @end deffn
792
793 @findex unlink
794 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} delete-file str
795 @deffnx {C Function} scm_delete_file (str)
796 Deletes (or ``unlinks'') the file whose path is specified by
797 @var{str}.
798 @end deffn
799
800 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} copy-file oldfile newfile
801 @deffnx {C Function} scm_copy_file (oldfile, newfile)
802 Copy the file specified by @var{oldfile} to @var{newfile}.
803 The return value is unspecified.
804 @end deffn
805
806 @findex rename
807 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} rename-file oldname newname
808 @deffnx {C Function} scm_rename (oldname, newname)
809 Renames the file specified by @var{oldname} to @var{newname}.
810 The return value is unspecified.
811 @end deffn
812
813 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} link oldpath newpath
814 @deffnx {C Function} scm_link (oldpath, newpath)
815 Creates a new name @var{newpath} in the file system for the
816 file named by @var{oldpath}. If @var{oldpath} is a symbolic
817 link, the link may or may not be followed depending on the
818 system.
819 @end deffn
820
821 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} symlink oldpath newpath
822 @deffnx {C Function} scm_symlink (oldpath, newpath)
823 Create a symbolic link named @var{newpath} with the value (i.e., pointing to)
824 @var{oldpath}. The return value is unspecified.
825 @end deffn
826
827 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mkdir path [mode]
828 @deffnx {C Function} scm_mkdir (path, mode)
829 Create a new directory named by @var{path}. If @var{mode} is omitted
830 then the permissions of the directory file are set using the current
831 umask (@pxref{Processes}). Otherwise they are set to the decimal
832 value specified with @var{mode}. The return value is unspecified.
833 @end deffn
834
835 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} rmdir path
836 @deffnx {C Function} scm_rmdir (path)
837 Remove the existing directory named by @var{path}. The directory must
838 be empty for this to succeed. The return value is unspecified.
839 @end deffn
840
841 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} opendir dirname
842 @deffnx {C Function} scm_opendir (dirname)
843 @cindex directory contents
844 Open the directory specified by @var{dirname} and return a directory
845 stream.
846
847 Before using this and the procedures below, make sure to see the
848 higher-level procedures for directory traversal that are available
849 (@pxref{File Tree Walk}).
850 @end deffn
851
852 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} directory-stream? object
853 @deffnx {C Function} scm_directory_stream_p (object)
854 Return a boolean indicating whether @var{object} is a directory
855 stream as returned by @code{opendir}.
856 @end deffn
857
858 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} readdir stream
859 @deffnx {C Function} scm_readdir (stream)
860 Return (as a string) the next directory entry from the directory stream
861 @var{stream}. If there is no remaining entry to be read then the
862 end of file object is returned.
863 @end deffn
864
865 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} rewinddir stream
866 @deffnx {C Function} scm_rewinddir (stream)
867 Reset the directory port @var{stream} so that the next call to
868 @code{readdir} will return the first directory entry.
869 @end deffn
870
871 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} closedir stream
872 @deffnx {C Function} scm_closedir (stream)
873 Close the directory stream @var{stream}.
874 The return value is unspecified.
875 @end deffn
876
877 Here is an example showing how to display all the entries in a
878 directory:
879
880 @lisp
881 (define dir (opendir "/usr/lib"))
882 (do ((entry (readdir dir) (readdir dir)))
883 ((eof-object? entry))
884 (display entry)(newline))
885 (closedir dir)
886 @end lisp
887
888 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sync
889 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sync ()
890 Flush the operating system disk buffers.
891 The return value is unspecified.
892 @end deffn
893
894 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mknod path type perms dev
895 @deffnx {C Function} scm_mknod (path, type, perms, dev)
896 @cindex device file
897 Creates a new special file, such as a file corresponding to a device.
898 @var{path} specifies the name of the file. @var{type} should be one
899 of the following symbols: @samp{regular}, @samp{directory},
900 @samp{symlink}, @samp{block-special}, @samp{char-special},
901 @samp{fifo}, or @samp{socket}. @var{perms} (an integer) specifies the
902 file permissions. @var{dev} (an integer) specifies which device the
903 special file refers to. Its exact interpretation depends on the kind
904 of special file being created.
905
906 E.g.,
907 @lisp
908 (mknod "/dev/fd0" 'block-special #o660 (+ (* 2 256) 2))
909 @end lisp
910
911 The return value is unspecified.
912 @end deffn
913
914 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tmpnam
915 @deffnx {C Function} scm_tmpnam ()
916 @cindex temporary file
917 Return an auto-generated name of a temporary file, a file which
918 doesn't already exist. The name includes a path, it's usually in
919 @file{/tmp} but that's system dependent.
920
921 Care must be taken when using @code{tmpnam}. In between choosing the
922 name and creating the file another program might use that name, or an
923 attacker might even make it a symlink pointing at something important
924 and causing you to overwrite that.
925
926 The safe way is to create the file using @code{open} with
927 @code{O_EXCL} to avoid any overwriting. A loop can try again with
928 another name if the file exists (error @code{EEXIST}).
929 @code{mkstemp!} below does that.
930 @end deffn
931
932 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mkstemp! tmpl
933 @deffnx {C Function} scm_mkstemp (tmpl)
934 @cindex temporary file
935 Create a new unique file in the file system and return a new buffered
936 port open for reading and writing to the file.
937
938 @var{tmpl} is a string specifying where the file should be created: it
939 must end with @samp{XXXXXX} and those @samp{X}s will be changed in the
940 string to return the name of the file. (@code{port-filename} on the
941 port also gives the name.)
942
943 POSIX doesn't specify the permissions mode of the file, on GNU and
944 most systems it's @code{#o600}. An application can use @code{chmod}
945 to relax that if desired. For example @code{#o666} less @code{umask},
946 which is usual for ordinary file creation,
947
948 @example
949 (let ((port (mkstemp! (string-copy "/tmp/myfile-XXXXXX"))))
950 (chmod port (logand #o666 (lognot (umask))))
951 ...)
952 @end example
953 @end deffn
954
955 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tmpfile
956 @deffnx {C Function} scm_tmpfile ()
957 Return an input/output port to a unique temporary file
958 named using the path prefix @code{P_tmpdir} defined in
959 @file{stdio.h}.
960 The file is automatically deleted when the port is closed
961 or the program terminates.
962 @end deffn
963
964 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} dirname filename
965 @deffnx {C Function} scm_dirname (filename)
966 Return the directory name component of the file name
967 @var{filename}. If @var{filename} does not contain a directory
968 component, @code{.} is returned.
969 @end deffn
970
971 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} basename filename [suffix]
972 @deffnx {C Function} scm_basename (filename, suffix)
973 Return the base name of the file name @var{filename}. The
974 base name is the file name without any directory components.
975 If @var{suffix} is provided, and is equal to the end of
976 @var{basename}, it is removed also.
977
978 @lisp
979 (basename "/tmp/test.xml" ".xml")
980 @result{} "test"
981 @end lisp
982 @end deffn
983
984 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} file-exists? filename
985 Return @code{#t} if the file named @var{filename} exists, @code{#f} if
986 not.
987 @end deffn
988
989
990 @node User Information
991 @subsection User Information
992 @cindex user information
993 @cindex password file
994 @cindex group file
995
996 The facilities in this section provide an interface to the user and
997 group database.
998 They should be used with care since they are not reentrant.
999
1000 The following functions accept an object representing user information
1001 and return a selected component:
1002
1003 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:name pw
1004 The name of the userid.
1005 @end deffn
1006 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:passwd pw
1007 The encrypted passwd.
1008 @end deffn
1009 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:uid pw
1010 The user id number.
1011 @end deffn
1012 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:gid pw
1013 The group id number.
1014 @end deffn
1015 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:gecos pw
1016 The full name.
1017 @end deffn
1018 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:dir pw
1019 The home directory.
1020 @end deffn
1021 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} passwd:shell pw
1022 The login shell.
1023 @end deffn
1024 @sp 1
1025
1026 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpwuid uid
1027 Look up an integer userid in the user database.
1028 @end deffn
1029
1030 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpwnam name
1031 Look up a user name string in the user database.
1032 @end deffn
1033
1034 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setpwent
1035 Initializes a stream used by @code{getpwent} to read from the user database.
1036 The next use of @code{getpwent} will return the first entry. The
1037 return value is unspecified.
1038 @end deffn
1039
1040 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpwent
1041 Read the next entry in the user database stream. The return is a
1042 passwd user object as above, or @code{#f} when no more entries.
1043 @end deffn
1044
1045 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endpwent
1046 Closes the stream used by @code{getpwent}. The return value is unspecified.
1047 @end deffn
1048
1049 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setpw [arg]
1050 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setpwent (arg)
1051 If called with a true argument, initialize or reset the password data
1052 stream. Otherwise, close the stream. The @code{setpwent} and
1053 @code{endpwent} procedures are implemented on top of this.
1054 @end deffn
1055
1056 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpw [user]
1057 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpwuid (user)
1058 Look up an entry in the user database. @var{user} can be an integer,
1059 a string, or omitted, giving the behaviour of getpwuid, getpwnam
1060 or getpwent respectively.
1061 @end deffn
1062
1063 The following functions accept an object representing group information
1064 and return a selected component:
1065
1066 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} group:name gr
1067 The group name.
1068 @end deffn
1069 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} group:passwd gr
1070 The encrypted group password.
1071 @end deffn
1072 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} group:gid gr
1073 The group id number.
1074 @end deffn
1075 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} group:mem gr
1076 A list of userids which have this group as a supplementary group.
1077 @end deffn
1078 @sp 1
1079
1080 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgrgid gid
1081 Look up an integer group id in the group database.
1082 @end deffn
1083
1084 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgrnam name
1085 Look up a group name in the group database.
1086 @end deffn
1087
1088 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setgrent
1089 Initializes a stream used by @code{getgrent} to read from the group database.
1090 The next use of @code{getgrent} will return the first entry.
1091 The return value is unspecified.
1092 @end deffn
1093
1094 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgrent
1095 Return the next entry in the group database, using the stream set by
1096 @code{setgrent}.
1097 @end deffn
1098
1099 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endgrent
1100 Closes the stream used by @code{getgrent}.
1101 The return value is unspecified.
1102 @end deffn
1103
1104 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setgr [arg]
1105 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setgrent (arg)
1106 If called with a true argument, initialize or reset the group data
1107 stream. Otherwise, close the stream. The @code{setgrent} and
1108 @code{endgrent} procedures are implemented on top of this.
1109 @end deffn
1110
1111 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgr [group]
1112 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getgrgid (group)
1113 Look up an entry in the group database. @var{group} can be an integer,
1114 a string, or omitted, giving the behaviour of getgrgid, getgrnam
1115 or getgrent respectively.
1116 @end deffn
1117
1118 In addition to the accessor procedures for the user database, the
1119 following shortcut procedure is also available.
1120
1121 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getlogin
1122 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getlogin ()
1123 Return a string containing the name of the user logged in on
1124 the controlling terminal of the process, or @code{#f} if this
1125 information cannot be obtained.
1126 @end deffn
1127
1128
1129 @node Time
1130 @subsection Time
1131 @cindex time
1132
1133 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} current-time
1134 @deffnx {C Function} scm_current_time ()
1135 Return the number of seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 @acronym{UTC},
1136 excluding leap seconds.
1137 @end deffn
1138
1139 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gettimeofday
1140 @deffnx {C Function} scm_gettimeofday ()
1141 Return a pair containing the number of seconds and microseconds
1142 since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 @acronym{UTC}, excluding leap seconds. Note:
1143 whether true microsecond resolution is available depends on the
1144 operating system.
1145 @end deffn
1146
1147 The following procedures either accept an object representing a broken down
1148 time and return a selected component, or accept an object representing
1149 a broken down time and a value and set the component to the value.
1150 The numbers in parentheses give the usual range.
1151
1152 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:sec tm
1153 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:sec tm val
1154 Seconds (0-59).
1155 @end deffn
1156 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:min tm
1157 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:min tm val
1158 Minutes (0-59).
1159 @end deffn
1160 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:hour tm
1161 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:hour tm val
1162 Hours (0-23).
1163 @end deffn
1164 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:mday tm
1165 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:mday tm val
1166 Day of the month (1-31).
1167 @end deffn
1168 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:mon tm
1169 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:mon tm val
1170 Month (0-11).
1171 @end deffn
1172 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:year tm
1173 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:year tm val
1174 Year (70-), the year minus 1900.
1175 @end deffn
1176 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:wday tm
1177 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:wday tm val
1178 Day of the week (0-6) with Sunday represented as 0.
1179 @end deffn
1180 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:yday tm
1181 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:yday tm val
1182 Day of the year (0-364, 365 in leap years).
1183 @end deffn
1184 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:isdst tm
1185 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:isdst tm val
1186 Daylight saving indicator (0 for ``no'', greater than 0 for ``yes'', less than
1187 0 for ``unknown'').
1188 @end deffn
1189 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:gmtoff tm
1190 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:gmtoff tm val
1191 Time zone offset in seconds west of @acronym{UTC} (-46800 to 43200).
1192 For example on East coast USA (zone @samp{EST+5}) this would be 18000
1193 (ie.@: @m{5\times60\times60,5*60*60}) in winter, or 14400
1194 (ie.@: @m{4\times60\times60,4*60*60}) during daylight savings.
1195
1196 Note @code{tm:gmtoff} is not the same as @code{tm_gmtoff} in the C
1197 @code{tm} structure. @code{tm_gmtoff} is seconds east and hence the
1198 negative of the value here.
1199 @end deffn
1200 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tm:zone tm
1201 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-tm:zone tm val
1202 Time zone label (a string), not necessarily unique.
1203 @end deffn
1204 @sp 1
1205
1206 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} localtime time [zone]
1207 @deffnx {C Function} scm_localtime (time, zone)
1208 @cindex local time
1209 Return an object representing the broken down components of
1210 @var{time}, an integer like the one returned by
1211 @code{current-time}. The time zone for the calculation is
1212 optionally specified by @var{zone} (a string), otherwise the
1213 @env{TZ} environment variable or the system default is used.
1214 @end deffn
1215
1216 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gmtime time
1217 @deffnx {C Function} scm_gmtime (time)
1218 Return an object representing the broken down components of
1219 @var{time}, an integer like the one returned by
1220 @code{current-time}. The values are calculated for @acronym{UTC}.
1221 @end deffn
1222
1223 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} mktime sbd-time [zone]
1224 @deffnx {C Function} scm_mktime (sbd_time, zone)
1225 For a broken down time object @var{sbd-time}, return a pair the
1226 @code{car} of which is an integer time like @code{current-time}, and
1227 the @code{cdr} of which is a new broken down time with normalized
1228 fields.
1229
1230 @var{zone} is a timezone string, or the default is the @env{TZ}
1231 environment variable or the system default (@pxref{TZ Variable,,
1232 Specifying the Time Zone with @env{TZ}, libc, GNU C Library Reference
1233 Manual}). @var{sbd-time} is taken to be in that @var{zone}.
1234
1235 The following fields of @var{sbd-time} are used: @code{tm:year},
1236 @code{tm:mon}, @code{tm:mday}, @code{tm:hour}, @code{tm:min},
1237 @code{tm:sec}, @code{tm:isdst}. The values can be outside their usual
1238 ranges. For example @code{tm:hour} normally goes up to 23, but a
1239 value say 33 would mean 9 the following day.
1240
1241 @code{tm:isdst} in @var{sbd-time} says whether the time given is with
1242 daylight savings or not. This is ignored if @var{zone} doesn't have
1243 any daylight savings adjustment amount.
1244
1245 The broken down time in the return normalizes the values of
1246 @var{sbd-time} by bringing them into their usual ranges, and using the
1247 actual daylight savings rule for that time in @var{zone} (which may
1248 differ from what @var{sbd-time} had). The easiest way to think of
1249 this is that @var{sbd-time} plus @var{zone} converts to the integer
1250 UTC time, then a @code{localtime} is applied to get the normal
1251 presentation of that time, in @var{zone}.
1252 @end deffn
1253
1254 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tzset
1255 @deffnx {C Function} scm_tzset ()
1256 Initialize the timezone from the @env{TZ} environment variable
1257 or the system default. It's not usually necessary to call this procedure
1258 since it's done automatically by other procedures that depend on the
1259 timezone.
1260 @end deffn
1261
1262 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} strftime format tm
1263 @deffnx {C Function} scm_strftime (format, tm)
1264 @cindex time formatting
1265 Return a string which is broken-down time structure @var{tm} formatted
1266 according to the given @var{format} string.
1267
1268 @var{format} contains field specifications introduced by a @samp{%}
1269 character. See @ref{Formatting Calendar Time,,, libc, The GNU C
1270 Library Reference Manual}, or @samp{man 3 strftime}, for the available
1271 formatting.
1272
1273 @lisp
1274 (strftime "%c" (localtime (current-time)))
1275 @result{} "Mon Mar 11 20:17:43 2002"
1276 @end lisp
1277
1278 If @code{setlocale} has been called (@pxref{Locales}), month and day
1279 names are from the current locale and in the locale character set.
1280 @end deffn
1281
1282 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} strptime format string
1283 @deffnx {C Function} scm_strptime (format, string)
1284 @cindex time parsing
1285 Performs the reverse action to @code{strftime}, parsing
1286 @var{string} according to the specification supplied in
1287 @var{format}. The interpretation of month and day names is
1288 dependent on the current locale. The value returned is a pair.
1289 The @acronym{CAR} has an object with time components
1290 in the form returned by @code{localtime} or @code{gmtime},
1291 but the time zone components
1292 are not usefully set.
1293 The @acronym{CDR} reports the number of characters from @var{string}
1294 which were used for the conversion.
1295 @end deffn
1296
1297 @defvar internal-time-units-per-second
1298 The value of this variable is the number of time units per second
1299 reported by the following procedures.
1300 @end defvar
1301
1302 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} times
1303 @deffnx {C Function} scm_times ()
1304 Return an object with information about real and processor
1305 time. The following procedures accept such an object as an
1306 argument and return a selected component:
1307
1308 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tms:clock tms
1309 The current real time, expressed as time units relative to an
1310 arbitrary base.
1311 @end deffn
1312 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tms:utime tms
1313 The CPU time units used by the calling process.
1314 @end deffn
1315 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tms:stime tms
1316 The CPU time units used by the system on behalf of the calling
1317 process.
1318 @end deffn
1319 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tms:cutime tms
1320 The CPU time units used by terminated child processes of the
1321 calling process, whose status has been collected (e.g., using
1322 @code{waitpid}).
1323 @end deffn
1324 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tms:cstime tms
1325 Similarly, the CPU times units used by the system on behalf of
1326 terminated child processes.
1327 @end deffn
1328 @end deffn
1329
1330 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} get-internal-real-time
1331 @deffnx {C Function} scm_get_internal_real_time ()
1332 Return the number of time units since the interpreter was
1333 started.
1334 @end deffn
1335
1336 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} get-internal-run-time
1337 @deffnx {C Function} scm_get_internal_run_time ()
1338 Return the number of time units of processor time used by the
1339 interpreter. Both @emph{system} and @emph{user} time are
1340 included but subprocesses are not.
1341 @end deffn
1342
1343 @node Runtime Environment
1344 @subsection Runtime Environment
1345
1346 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} program-arguments
1347 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} command-line
1348 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} set-program-arguments
1349 @deffnx {C Function} scm_program_arguments ()
1350 @deffnx {C Function} scm_set_program_arguments_scm (lst)
1351 @cindex command line
1352 @cindex program arguments
1353 Get the command line arguments passed to Guile, or set new arguments.
1354
1355 The arguments are a list of strings, the first of which is the invoked
1356 program name. This is just @nicode{"guile"} (or the executable path)
1357 when run interactively, or it's the script name when running a script
1358 with @option{-s} (@pxref{Invoking Guile}).
1359
1360 @example
1361 guile -L /my/extra/dir -s foo.scm abc def
1362
1363 (program-arguments) @result{} ("foo.scm" "abc" "def")
1364 @end example
1365
1366 @code{set-program-arguments} allows a library module or similar to
1367 modify the arguments, for example to strip options it recognises,
1368 leaving the rest for the mainline.
1369
1370 The argument list is held in a fluid, which means it's separate for
1371 each thread. Neither the list nor the strings within it are copied at
1372 any point and normally should not be mutated.
1373
1374 The two names @code{program-arguments} and @code{command-line} are an
1375 historical accident, they both do exactly the same thing. The name
1376 @code{scm_set_program_arguments_scm} has an extra @code{_scm} on the
1377 end to avoid clashing with the C function below.
1378 @end deffn
1379
1380 @deftypefn {C Function} void scm_set_program_arguments (int argc, char **argv, char *first)
1381 @cindex command line
1382 @cindex program arguments
1383 Set the list of command line arguments for @code{program-arguments}
1384 and @code{command-line} above.
1385
1386 @var{argv} is an array of null-terminated strings, as in a C
1387 @code{main} function. @var{argc} is the number of strings in
1388 @var{argv}, or if it's negative then a @code{NULL} in @var{argv} marks
1389 its end.
1390
1391 @var{first} is an extra string put at the start of the arguments, or
1392 @code{NULL} for no such extra. This is a convenient way to pass the
1393 program name after advancing @var{argv} to strip option arguments.
1394 Eg.@:
1395
1396 @example
1397 @{
1398 char *progname = argv[0];
1399 for (argv++; argv[0] != NULL && argv[0][0] == '-'; argv++)
1400 @{
1401 /* munch option ... */
1402 @}
1403 /* remaining args for scheme level use */
1404 scm_set_program_arguments (-1, argv, progname);
1405 @}
1406 @end example
1407
1408 This sort of thing is often done at startup under
1409 @code{scm_boot_guile} with options handled at the C level removed.
1410 The given strings are all copied, so the C data is not accessed again
1411 once @code{scm_set_program_arguments} returns.
1412 @end deftypefn
1413
1414 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getenv name
1415 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getenv (name)
1416 @cindex environment
1417 Looks up the string @var{name} in the current environment. The return
1418 value is @code{#f} unless a string of the form @code{NAME=VALUE} is
1419 found, in which case the string @code{VALUE} is returned.
1420 @end deffn
1421
1422 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setenv name value
1423 Modifies the environment of the current process, which is
1424 also the default environment inherited by child processes.
1425
1426 If @var{value} is @code{#f}, then @var{name} is removed from the
1427 environment. Otherwise, the string @var{name}=@var{value} is added
1428 to the environment, replacing any existing string with name matching
1429 @var{name}.
1430
1431 The return value is unspecified.
1432 @end deffn
1433
1434 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} unsetenv name
1435 Remove variable @var{name} from the environment. The
1436 name can not contain a @samp{=} character.
1437 @end deffn
1438
1439 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} environ [env]
1440 @deffnx {C Function} scm_environ (env)
1441 If @var{env} is omitted, return the current environment (in the
1442 Unix sense) as a list of strings. Otherwise set the current
1443 environment, which is also the default environment for child
1444 processes, to the supplied list of strings. Each member of
1445 @var{env} should be of the form @var{name}=@var{value} and values of
1446 @var{name} should not be duplicated. If @var{env} is supplied
1447 then the return value is unspecified.
1448 @end deffn
1449
1450 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} putenv str
1451 @deffnx {C Function} scm_putenv (str)
1452 Modifies the environment of the current process, which is
1453 also the default environment inherited by child processes.
1454
1455 If @var{str} is of the form @code{NAME=VALUE} then it will be written
1456 directly into the environment, replacing any existing environment string
1457 with
1458 name matching @code{NAME}. If @var{str} does not contain an equal
1459 sign, then any existing string with name matching @var{str} will
1460 be removed.
1461
1462 The return value is unspecified.
1463 @end deffn
1464
1465
1466 @node Processes
1467 @subsection Processes
1468 @cindex processes
1469 @cindex child processes
1470
1471 @findex cd
1472 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} chdir str
1473 @deffnx {C Function} scm_chdir (str)
1474 @cindex current directory
1475 Change the current working directory to @var{str}.
1476 The return value is unspecified.
1477 @end deffn
1478
1479 @findex pwd
1480 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getcwd
1481 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getcwd ()
1482 Return the name of the current working directory.
1483 @end deffn
1484
1485 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} umask [mode]
1486 @deffnx {C Function} scm_umask (mode)
1487 If @var{mode} is omitted, returns a decimal number representing the
1488 current file creation mask. Otherwise the file creation mask is set
1489 to @var{mode} and the previous value is returned. @xref{Setting
1490 Permissions,,Assigning File Permissions,libc,The GNU C Library
1491 Reference Manual}, for more on how to use umasks.
1492
1493 E.g., @code{(umask #o022)} sets the mask to octal 22/decimal 18.
1494 @end deffn
1495
1496 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} chroot path
1497 @deffnx {C Function} scm_chroot (path)
1498 Change the root directory to that specified in @var{path}.
1499 This directory will be used for path names beginning with
1500 @file{/}. The root directory is inherited by all children
1501 of the current process. Only the superuser may change the
1502 root directory.
1503 @end deffn
1504
1505 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpid
1506 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpid ()
1507 Return an integer representing the current process ID.
1508 @end deffn
1509
1510 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgroups
1511 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getgroups ()
1512 Return a vector of integers representing the current
1513 supplementary group IDs.
1514 @end deffn
1515
1516 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getppid
1517 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getppid ()
1518 Return an integer representing the process ID of the parent
1519 process.
1520 @end deffn
1521
1522 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getuid
1523 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getuid ()
1524 Return an integer representing the current real user ID.
1525 @end deffn
1526
1527 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getgid
1528 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getgid ()
1529 Return an integer representing the current real group ID.
1530 @end deffn
1531
1532 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} geteuid
1533 @deffnx {C Function} scm_geteuid ()
1534 Return an integer representing the current effective user ID.
1535 If the system does not support effective IDs, then the real ID
1536 is returned. @code{(provided? 'EIDs)} reports whether the
1537 system supports effective IDs.
1538 @end deffn
1539
1540 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getegid
1541 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getegid ()
1542 Return an integer representing the current effective group ID.
1543 If the system does not support effective IDs, then the real ID
1544 is returned. @code{(provided? 'EIDs)} reports whether the
1545 system supports effective IDs.
1546 @end deffn
1547
1548 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setgroups vec
1549 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setgroups (vec)
1550 Set the current set of supplementary group IDs to the integers in the
1551 given vector @var{vec}. The return value is unspecified.
1552
1553 Generally only the superuser can set the process group IDs
1554 (@pxref{Setting Groups, Setting the Group IDs,, libc, The GNU C
1555 Library Reference Manual}).
1556 @end deffn
1557
1558 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setuid id
1559 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setuid (id)
1560 Sets both the real and effective user IDs to the integer @var{id}, provided
1561 the process has appropriate privileges.
1562 The return value is unspecified.
1563 @end deffn
1564
1565 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setgid id
1566 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setgid (id)
1567 Sets both the real and effective group IDs to the integer @var{id}, provided
1568 the process has appropriate privileges.
1569 The return value is unspecified.
1570 @end deffn
1571
1572 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} seteuid id
1573 @deffnx {C Function} scm_seteuid (id)
1574 Sets the effective user ID to the integer @var{id}, provided the process
1575 has appropriate privileges. If effective IDs are not supported, the
1576 real ID is set instead---@code{(provided? 'EIDs)} reports whether the
1577 system supports effective IDs.
1578 The return value is unspecified.
1579 @end deffn
1580
1581 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setegid id
1582 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setegid (id)
1583 Sets the effective group ID to the integer @var{id}, provided the process
1584 has appropriate privileges. If effective IDs are not supported, the
1585 real ID is set instead---@code{(provided? 'EIDs)} reports whether the
1586 system supports effective IDs.
1587 The return value is unspecified.
1588 @end deffn
1589
1590 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpgrp
1591 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpgrp ()
1592 Return an integer representing the current process group ID.
1593 This is the @acronym{POSIX} definition, not @acronym{BSD}.
1594 @end deffn
1595
1596 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setpgid pid pgid
1597 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setpgid (pid, pgid)
1598 Move the process @var{pid} into the process group @var{pgid}. @var{pid} or
1599 @var{pgid} must be integers: they can be zero to indicate the ID of the
1600 current process.
1601 Fails on systems that do not support job control.
1602 The return value is unspecified.
1603 @end deffn
1604
1605 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setsid
1606 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setsid ()
1607 Creates a new session. The current process becomes the session leader
1608 and is put in a new process group. The process will be detached
1609 from its controlling terminal if it has one.
1610 The return value is an integer representing the new process group ID.
1611 @end deffn
1612
1613 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getsid pid
1614 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getsid (pid)
1615 Returns the session ID of process @var{pid}. (The session
1616 ID of a process is the process group ID of its session leader.)
1617 @end deffn
1618
1619 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} waitpid pid [options]
1620 @deffnx {C Function} scm_waitpid (pid, options)
1621 This procedure collects status information from a child process which
1622 has terminated or (optionally) stopped. Normally it will
1623 suspend the calling process until this can be done. If more than one
1624 child process is eligible then one will be chosen by the operating system.
1625
1626 The value of @var{pid} determines the behaviour:
1627
1628 @table @asis
1629 @item @var{pid} greater than 0
1630 Request status information from the specified child process.
1631 @item @var{pid} equal to -1 or @code{WAIT_ANY}
1632 @vindex WAIT_ANY
1633 Request status information for any child process.
1634 @item @var{pid} equal to 0 or @code{WAIT_MYPGRP}
1635 @vindex WAIT_MYPGRP
1636 Request status information for any child process in the current process
1637 group.
1638 @item @var{pid} less than -1
1639 Request status information for any child process whose process group ID
1640 is @minus{}@var{pid}.
1641 @end table
1642
1643 The @var{options} argument, if supplied, should be the bitwise OR of the
1644 values of zero or more of the following variables:
1645
1646 @defvar WNOHANG
1647 Return immediately even if there are no child processes to be collected.
1648 @end defvar
1649
1650 @defvar WUNTRACED
1651 Report status information for stopped processes as well as terminated
1652 processes.
1653 @end defvar
1654
1655 The return value is a pair containing:
1656
1657 @enumerate
1658 @item
1659 The process ID of the child process, or 0 if @code{WNOHANG} was
1660 specified and no process was collected.
1661 @item
1662 The integer status value.
1663 @end enumerate
1664 @end deffn
1665
1666 The following three
1667 functions can be used to decode the process status code returned
1668 by @code{waitpid}.
1669
1670 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} status:exit-val status
1671 @deffnx {C Function} scm_status_exit_val (status)
1672 Return the exit status value, as would be set if a process
1673 ended normally through a call to @code{exit} or @code{_exit},
1674 if any, otherwise @code{#f}.
1675 @end deffn
1676
1677 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} status:term-sig status
1678 @deffnx {C Function} scm_status_term_sig (status)
1679 Return the signal number which terminated the process, if any,
1680 otherwise @code{#f}.
1681 @end deffn
1682
1683 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} status:stop-sig status
1684 @deffnx {C Function} scm_status_stop_sig (status)
1685 Return the signal number which stopped the process, if any,
1686 otherwise @code{#f}.
1687 @end deffn
1688
1689 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} system [cmd]
1690 @deffnx {C Function} scm_system (cmd)
1691 Execute @var{cmd} using the operating system's ``command
1692 processor''. Under Unix this is usually the default shell
1693 @code{sh}. The value returned is @var{cmd}'s exit status as
1694 returned by @code{waitpid}, which can be interpreted using the
1695 functions above.
1696
1697 If @code{system} is called without arguments, return a boolean
1698 indicating whether the command processor is available.
1699 @end deffn
1700
1701 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} system* arg1 arg2 @dots{}
1702 @deffnx {C Function} scm_system_star (args)
1703 Execute the command indicated by @var{arg1} @var{arg2} @enddots{}. The
1704 first element must be a string indicating the command to be executed,
1705 and the remaining items must be strings representing each of the
1706 arguments to that command.
1707
1708 This function returns the exit status of the command as provided by
1709 @code{waitpid}. This value can be handled with @code{status:exit-val}
1710 and the related functions.
1711
1712 @code{system*} is similar to @code{system}, but accepts only one
1713 string per-argument, and performs no shell interpretation. The
1714 command is executed using fork and execlp. Accordingly this function
1715 may be safer than @code{system} in situations where shell
1716 interpretation is not required.
1717
1718 Example: (system* "echo" "foo" "bar")
1719 @end deffn
1720
1721 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-exit [status]
1722 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} primitive-_exit [status]
1723 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive_exit (status)
1724 @deffnx {C Function} scm_primitive__exit (status)
1725 Terminate the current process without unwinding the Scheme stack. The
1726 exit status is @var{status} if supplied, otherwise zero.
1727
1728 @code{primitive-exit} uses the C @code{exit} function and hence runs
1729 usual C level cleanups (flush output streams, call @code{atexit}
1730 functions, etc, see @ref{Normal Termination,,, libc, The GNU C Library
1731 Reference Manual})).
1732
1733 @code{primitive-_exit} is the @code{_exit} system call
1734 (@pxref{Termination Internals,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
1735 Manual}). This terminates the program immediately, with neither
1736 Scheme-level nor C-level cleanups.
1737
1738 The typical use for @code{primitive-_exit} is from a child process
1739 created with @code{primitive-fork}. For example in a Gdk program the
1740 child process inherits the X server connection and a C-level
1741 @code{atexit} cleanup which will close that connection. But closing
1742 in the child would upset the protocol in the parent, so
1743 @code{primitive-_exit} should be used to exit without that.
1744 @end deffn
1745
1746 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} execl filename arg @dots{}
1747 @deffnx {C Function} scm_execl (filename, args)
1748 Executes the file named by @var{filename} as a new process image.
1749 The remaining arguments are supplied to the process; from a C program
1750 they are accessible as the @code{argv} argument to @code{main}.
1751 Conventionally the first @var{arg} is the same as @var{filename}.
1752 All arguments must be strings.
1753
1754 If @var{arg} is missing, @var{filename} is executed with a null
1755 argument list, which may have system-dependent side-effects.
1756
1757 This procedure is currently implemented using the @code{execv} system
1758 call, but we call it @code{execl} because of its Scheme calling interface.
1759 @end deffn
1760
1761 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} execlp filename arg @dots{}
1762 @deffnx {C Function} scm_execlp (filename, args)
1763 Similar to @code{execl}, however if
1764 @var{filename} does not contain a slash
1765 then the file to execute will be located by searching the
1766 directories listed in the @code{PATH} environment variable.
1767
1768 This procedure is currently implemented using the @code{execvp} system
1769 call, but we call it @code{execlp} because of its Scheme calling interface.
1770 @end deffn
1771
1772 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} execle filename env arg @dots{}
1773 @deffnx {C Function} scm_execle (filename, env, args)
1774 Similar to @code{execl}, but the environment of the new process is
1775 specified by @var{env}, which must be a list of strings as returned by the
1776 @code{environ} procedure.
1777
1778 This procedure is currently implemented using the @code{execve} system
1779 call, but we call it @code{execle} because of its Scheme calling interface.
1780 @end deffn
1781
1782 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} primitive-fork
1783 @deffnx {C Function} scm_fork ()
1784 Creates a new ``child'' process by duplicating the current ``parent'' process.
1785 In the child the return value is 0. In the parent the return value is
1786 the integer process ID of the child.
1787
1788 Note that it is unsafe to fork a process that has multiple threads
1789 running, as only the thread that calls @code{primitive-fork} will
1790 persist in the child. Any resources that other threads held, such as
1791 locked mutexes or open file descriptors, are lost. Indeed,
1792 @acronym{POSIX} specifies that only async-signal-safe procedures are
1793 safe to call after a multithreaded fork, which is a very limited set.
1794 Guile issues a warning if it detects a fork from a multi-threaded
1795 program.
1796
1797 If you are going to @code{exec} soon after forking, the procedures in
1798 @code{(ice-9 popen)} may be useful to you, as they fork and exec within
1799 an async-signal-safe function carefully written to ensure robust program
1800 behavior, even in the presence of threads. @xref{Pipes}, for more.
1801
1802 This procedure has been renamed from @code{fork} to avoid a naming conflict
1803 with the scsh fork.
1804 @end deffn
1805
1806 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} nice incr
1807 @deffnx {C Function} scm_nice (incr)
1808 @cindex process priority
1809 Increment the priority of the current process by @var{incr}. A higher
1810 priority value means that the process runs less often.
1811 The return value is unspecified.
1812 @end deffn
1813
1814 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setpriority which who prio
1815 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setpriority (which, who, prio)
1816 @vindex PRIO_PROCESS
1817 @vindex PRIO_PGRP
1818 @vindex PRIO_USER
1819 Set the scheduling priority of the process, process group
1820 or user, as indicated by @var{which} and @var{who}. @var{which}
1821 is one of the variables @code{PRIO_PROCESS}, @code{PRIO_PGRP}
1822 or @code{PRIO_USER}, and @var{who} is interpreted relative to
1823 @var{which} (a process identifier for @code{PRIO_PROCESS},
1824 process group identifier for @code{PRIO_PGRP}, and a user
1825 identifier for @code{PRIO_USER}. A zero value of @var{who}
1826 denotes the current process, process group, or user.
1827 @var{prio} is a value in the range [@minus{}20,20]. The default
1828 priority is 0; lower priorities (in numerical terms) cause more
1829 favorable scheduling. Sets the priority of all of the specified
1830 processes. Only the super-user may lower priorities. The return
1831 value is not specified.
1832 @end deffn
1833
1834 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpriority which who
1835 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpriority (which, who)
1836 @vindex PRIO_PROCESS
1837 @vindex PRIO_PGRP
1838 @vindex PRIO_USER
1839 Return the scheduling priority of the process, process group
1840 or user, as indicated by @var{which} and @var{who}. @var{which}
1841 is one of the variables @code{PRIO_PROCESS}, @code{PRIO_PGRP}
1842 or @code{PRIO_USER}, and @var{who} should be interpreted depending on
1843 @var{which} (a process identifier for @code{PRIO_PROCESS},
1844 process group identifier for @code{PRIO_PGRP}, and a user
1845 identifier for @code{PRIO_USER}). A zero value of @var{who}
1846 denotes the current process, process group, or user. Return
1847 the highest priority (lowest numerical value) of any of the
1848 specified processes.
1849 @end deffn
1850
1851 @cindex affinity, CPU
1852
1853 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getaffinity pid
1854 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getaffinity (pid)
1855 Return a bitvector representing the CPU affinity mask for
1856 process @var{pid}. Each CPU the process has affinity with
1857 has its corresponding bit set in the returned bitvector.
1858 The number of bits set is a good estimate of how many CPUs
1859 Guile can use without stepping on other processes' toes.
1860
1861 Currently this procedure is only defined on GNU variants
1862 (@pxref{CPU Affinity, @code{sched_getaffinity},, libc, The
1863 GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
1864 @end deffn
1865
1866 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setaffinity pid mask
1867 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setaffinity (pid, mask)
1868 Install the CPU affinity mask @var{mask}, a bitvector, for
1869 the process or thread with ID @var{pid}. The return value
1870 is unspecified.
1871
1872 Currently this procedure is only defined on GNU variants
1873 (@pxref{CPU Affinity, @code{sched_setaffinity},, libc, The
1874 GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
1875 @end deffn
1876
1877 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} total-processor-count
1878 @deffnx {C Function} scm_total_processor_count ()
1879 Return the total number of processors of the machine, which
1880 is guaranteed to be at least 1. A ``processor'' here is a
1881 thread execution unit, which can be either:
1882
1883 @itemize
1884 @item an execution core in a (possibly multi-core) chip, in a
1885 (possibly multi- chip) module, in a single computer, or
1886 @item a thread execution unit inside a core in the case of
1887 @dfn{hyper-threaded} CPUs.
1888 @end itemize
1889
1890 Which of the two definitions is used, is unspecified.
1891 @end deffn
1892
1893 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} current-processor-count
1894 @deffnx {C Function} scm_current_processor_count ()
1895 Like @code{total-processor-count}, but return the number of
1896 processors available to the current process. See
1897 @code{setaffinity} and @code{getaffinity} for more
1898 information.
1899 @end deffn
1900
1901
1902 @node Signals
1903 @subsection Signals
1904 @cindex signal
1905
1906 The following procedures raise, handle and wait for signals.
1907
1908 Scheme code signal handlers are run via a system async (@pxref{System
1909 asyncs}), so they're called in the handler's thread at the next safe
1910 opportunity. Generally this is after any currently executing
1911 primitive procedure finishes (which could be a long time for
1912 primitives that wait for an external event).
1913
1914 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} kill pid sig
1915 @deffnx {C Function} scm_kill (pid, sig)
1916 Sends a signal to the specified process or group of processes.
1917
1918 @var{pid} specifies the processes to which the signal is sent:
1919
1920 @table @asis
1921 @item @var{pid} greater than 0
1922 The process whose identifier is @var{pid}.
1923 @item @var{pid} equal to 0
1924 All processes in the current process group.
1925 @item @var{pid} less than -1
1926 The process group whose identifier is -@var{pid}
1927 @item @var{pid} equal to -1
1928 If the process is privileged, all processes except for some special
1929 system processes. Otherwise, all processes with the current effective
1930 user ID.
1931 @end table
1932
1933 @var{sig} should be specified using a variable corresponding to
1934 the Unix symbolic name, e.g.,
1935
1936 @defvar SIGHUP
1937 Hang-up signal.
1938 @end defvar
1939
1940 @defvar SIGINT
1941 Interrupt signal.
1942 @end defvar
1943
1944 A full list of signals on the GNU system may be found in @ref{Standard
1945 Signals,,,libc,The GNU C Library Reference Manual}.
1946 @end deffn
1947
1948 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} raise sig
1949 @deffnx {C Function} scm_raise (sig)
1950 Sends a specified signal @var{sig} to the current process, where
1951 @var{sig} is as described for the @code{kill} procedure.
1952 @end deffn
1953
1954 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sigaction signum [handler [flags [thread]]]
1955 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sigaction (signum, handler, flags)
1956 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sigaction_for_thread (signum, handler, flags, thread)
1957 Install or report the signal handler for a specified signal.
1958
1959 @var{signum} is the signal number, which can be specified using the value
1960 of variables such as @code{SIGINT}.
1961
1962 If @var{handler} is omitted, @code{sigaction} returns a pair: the
1963 @acronym{CAR} is the current signal hander, which will be either an
1964 integer with the value @code{SIG_DFL} (default action) or
1965 @code{SIG_IGN} (ignore), or the Scheme procedure which handles the
1966 signal, or @code{#f} if a non-Scheme procedure handles the signal.
1967 The @acronym{CDR} contains the current @code{sigaction} flags for the
1968 handler.
1969
1970 If @var{handler} is provided, it is installed as the new handler for
1971 @var{signum}. @var{handler} can be a Scheme procedure taking one
1972 argument, or the value of @code{SIG_DFL} (default action) or
1973 @code{SIG_IGN} (ignore), or @code{#f} to restore whatever signal handler
1974 was installed before @code{sigaction} was first used. When a scheme
1975 procedure has been specified, that procedure will run in the given
1976 @var{thread}. When no thread has been given, the thread that made this
1977 call to @code{sigaction} is used.
1978
1979 @var{flags} is a @code{logior} (@pxref{Bitwise Operations}) of the
1980 following (where provided by the system), or @code{0} for none.
1981
1982 @defvar SA_NOCLDSTOP
1983 By default, @code{SIGCHLD} is signalled when a child process stops
1984 (ie.@: receives @code{SIGSTOP}), and when a child process terminates.
1985 With the @code{SA_NOCLDSTOP} flag, @code{SIGCHLD} is only signalled
1986 for termination, not stopping.
1987
1988 @code{SA_NOCLDSTOP} has no effect on signals other than
1989 @code{SIGCHLD}.
1990 @end defvar
1991
1992 @defvar SA_RESTART
1993 If a signal occurs while in a system call, deliver the signal then
1994 restart the system call (as opposed to returning an @code{EINTR} error
1995 from that call).
1996 @end defvar
1997
1998 The return value is a pair with information about the old handler as
1999 described above.
2000
2001 This interface does not provide access to the ``signal blocking''
2002 facility. Maybe this is not needed, since the thread support may
2003 provide solutions to the problem of consistent access to data
2004 structures.
2005 @end deffn
2006
2007 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} restore-signals
2008 @deffnx {C Function} scm_restore_signals ()
2009 Return all signal handlers to the values they had before any call to
2010 @code{sigaction} was made. The return value is unspecified.
2011 @end deffn
2012
2013 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} alarm i
2014 @deffnx {C Function} scm_alarm (i)
2015 Set a timer to raise a @code{SIGALRM} signal after the specified
2016 number of seconds (an integer). It's advisable to install a signal
2017 handler for
2018 @code{SIGALRM} beforehand, since the default action is to terminate
2019 the process.
2020
2021 The return value indicates the time remaining for the previous alarm,
2022 if any. The new value replaces the previous alarm. If there was
2023 no previous alarm, the return value is zero.
2024 @end deffn
2025
2026 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} pause
2027 @deffnx {C Function} scm_pause ()
2028 Pause the current process (thread?) until a signal arrives whose
2029 action is to either terminate the current process or invoke a
2030 handler procedure. The return value is unspecified.
2031 @end deffn
2032
2033 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sleep secs
2034 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} usleep usecs
2035 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sleep (secs)
2036 @deffnx {C Function} scm_usleep (usecs)
2037 Wait the given period @var{secs} seconds or @var{usecs} microseconds
2038 (both integers). If a signal arrives the wait stops and the return
2039 value is the time remaining, in seconds or microseconds respectively.
2040 If the period elapses with no signal the return is zero.
2041
2042 On most systems the process scheduler is not microsecond accurate and
2043 the actual period slept by @code{usleep} might be rounded to a system
2044 clock tick boundary, which might be 10 milliseconds for instance.
2045
2046 See @code{scm_std_sleep} and @code{scm_std_usleep} for equivalents at
2047 the C level (@pxref{Blocking}).
2048 @end deffn
2049
2050 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getitimer which_timer
2051 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} setitimer which_timer interval_seconds interval_microseconds periodic_seconds periodic_microseconds
2052 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getitimer (which_timer)
2053 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setitimer (which_timer, interval_seconds, interval_microseconds, periodic_seconds, periodic_microseconds)
2054 Get or set the periods programmed in certain system timers. These
2055 timers have a current interval value which counts down and on reaching
2056 zero raises a signal. An optional periodic value can be set to
2057 restart from there each time, for periodic operation.
2058 @var{which_timer} is one of the following values
2059
2060 @defvar ITIMER_REAL
2061 A real-time timer, counting down elapsed real time. At zero it raises
2062 @code{SIGALRM}. This is like @code{alarm} above, but with a higher
2063 resolution period.
2064 @end defvar
2065
2066 @defvar ITIMER_VIRTUAL
2067 A virtual-time timer, counting down while the current process is
2068 actually using CPU. At zero it raises @code{SIGVTALRM}.
2069 @end defvar
2070
2071 @defvar ITIMER_PROF
2072 A profiling timer, counting down while the process is running (like
2073 @code{ITIMER_VIRTUAL}) and also while system calls are running on the
2074 process's behalf. At zero it raises a @code{SIGPROF}.
2075
2076 This timer is intended for profiling where a program is spending its
2077 time (by looking where it is when the timer goes off).
2078 @end defvar
2079
2080 @code{getitimer} returns the current timer value and its programmed
2081 restart value, as a list containing two pairs. Each pair is a time in
2082 seconds and microseconds: @code{((@var{interval_secs}
2083 . @var{interval_usecs}) (@var{periodic_secs}
2084 . @var{periodic_usecs}))}.
2085
2086 @code{setitimer} sets the timer values similarly, in seconds and
2087 microseconds (which must be integers). The periodic value can be zero
2088 to have the timer run down just once. The return value is the timer's
2089 previous setting, in the same form as @code{getitimer} returns.
2090
2091 @example
2092 (setitimer ITIMER_REAL
2093 5 500000 ;; first SIGALRM in 5.5 seconds time
2094 2 0) ;; then repeat every 2 seconds
2095 @end example
2096
2097 Although the timers are programmed in microseconds, the actual
2098 accuracy might not be that high.
2099 @end deffn
2100
2101
2102 @node Terminals and Ptys
2103 @subsection Terminals and Ptys
2104
2105 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} isatty? port
2106 @deffnx {C Function} scm_isatty_p (port)
2107 @cindex terminal
2108 Return @code{#t} if @var{port} is using a serial non--file
2109 device, otherwise @code{#f}.
2110 @end deffn
2111
2112 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} ttyname port
2113 @deffnx {C Function} scm_ttyname (port)
2114 @cindex terminal
2115 Return a string with the name of the serial terminal device
2116 underlying @var{port}.
2117 @end deffn
2118
2119 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} ctermid
2120 @deffnx {C Function} scm_ctermid ()
2121 @cindex terminal
2122 Return a string containing the file name of the controlling
2123 terminal for the current process.
2124 @end deffn
2125
2126 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tcgetpgrp port
2127 @deffnx {C Function} scm_tcgetpgrp (port)
2128 @cindex process group
2129 Return the process group ID of the foreground process group
2130 associated with the terminal open on the file descriptor
2131 underlying @var{port}.
2132
2133 If there is no foreground process group, the return value is a
2134 number greater than 1 that does not match the process group ID
2135 of any existing process group. This can happen if all of the
2136 processes in the job that was formerly the foreground job have
2137 terminated, and no other job has yet been moved into the
2138 foreground.
2139 @end deffn
2140
2141 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} tcsetpgrp port pgid
2142 @deffnx {C Function} scm_tcsetpgrp (port, pgid)
2143 @cindex process group
2144 Set the foreground process group ID for the terminal used by the file
2145 descriptor underlying @var{port} to the integer @var{pgid}.
2146 The calling process
2147 must be a member of the same session as @var{pgid} and must have the same
2148 controlling terminal. The return value is unspecified.
2149 @end deffn
2150
2151 @node Pipes
2152 @subsection Pipes
2153 @cindex pipe
2154
2155 The following procedures are similar to the @code{popen} and
2156 @code{pclose} system routines. The code is in a separate ``popen''
2157 module:
2158
2159 @lisp
2160 (use-modules (ice-9 popen))
2161 @end lisp
2162
2163 @findex popen
2164 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-pipe command mode
2165 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} open-pipe* mode prog [args...]
2166 Execute a command in a subprocess, with a pipe to it or from it, or
2167 with pipes in both directions.
2168
2169 @code{open-pipe} runs the shell @var{command} using @samp{/bin/sh -c}.
2170 @code{open-pipe*} executes @var{prog} directly, with the optional
2171 @var{args} arguments (all strings).
2172
2173 @var{mode} should be one of the following values. @code{OPEN_READ} is
2174 an input pipe, ie.@: to read from the subprocess. @code{OPEN_WRITE}
2175 is an output pipe, ie.@: to write to it.
2176
2177 @defvar OPEN_READ
2178 @defvarx OPEN_WRITE
2179 @defvarx OPEN_BOTH
2180 @end defvar
2181
2182 For an input pipe, the child's standard output is the pipe and
2183 standard input is inherited from @code{current-input-port}. For an
2184 output pipe, the child's standard input is the pipe and standard
2185 output is inherited from @code{current-output-port}. In all cases
2186 cases the child's standard error is inherited from
2187 @code{current-error-port} (@pxref{Default Ports}).
2188
2189 If those @code{current-X-ports} are not files of some kind, and hence
2190 don't have file descriptors for the child, then @file{/dev/null} is
2191 used instead.
2192
2193 Care should be taken with @code{OPEN_BOTH}, a deadlock will occur if
2194 both parent and child are writing, and waiting until the write
2195 completes before doing any reading. Each direction has
2196 @code{PIPE_BUF} bytes of buffering (@pxref{Ports and File
2197 Descriptors}), which will be enough for small writes, but not for say
2198 putting a big file through a filter.
2199 @end deffn
2200
2201 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-input-pipe command
2202 Equivalent to @code{open-pipe} with mode @code{OPEN_READ}.
2203
2204 @lisp
2205 (let* ((port (open-input-pipe "date --utc"))
2206 (str (read-line port)))
2207 (close-pipe port)
2208 str)
2209 @result{} "Mon Mar 11 20:10:44 UTC 2002"
2210 @end lisp
2211 @end deffn
2212
2213 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-output-pipe command
2214 Equivalent to @code{open-pipe} with mode @code{OPEN_WRITE}.
2215
2216 @lisp
2217 (let ((port (open-output-pipe "lpr")))
2218 (display "Something for the line printer.\n" port)
2219 (if (not (eqv? 0 (status:exit-val (close-pipe port))))
2220 (error "Cannot print")))
2221 @end lisp
2222 @end deffn
2223
2224 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} open-input-output-pipe command
2225 Equivalent to @code{open-pipe} with mode @code{OPEN_BOTH}.
2226 @end deffn
2227
2228 @findex pclose
2229 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} close-pipe port
2230 Close a pipe created by @code{open-pipe}, wait for the process to
2231 terminate, and return the wait status code. The status is as per
2232 @code{waitpid} and can be decoded with @code{status:exit-val} etc
2233 (@pxref{Processes})
2234 @end deffn
2235
2236 @sp 1
2237 @code{waitpid WAIT_ANY} should not be used when pipes are open, since
2238 it can reap a pipe's child process, causing an error from a subsequent
2239 @code{close-pipe}.
2240
2241 @code{close-port} (@pxref{Closing}) can close a pipe, but it doesn't
2242 reap the child process.
2243
2244 The garbage collector will close a pipe no longer in use, and reap the
2245 child process with @code{waitpid}. If the child hasn't yet terminated
2246 the garbage collector doesn't block, but instead checks again in the
2247 next GC.
2248
2249 Many systems have per-user and system-wide limits on the number of
2250 processes, and a system-wide limit on the number of pipes, so pipes
2251 should be closed explicitly when no longer needed, rather than letting
2252 the garbage collector pick them up at some later time.
2253
2254
2255 @node Networking
2256 @subsection Networking
2257 @cindex network
2258
2259 @menu
2260 * Network Address Conversion::
2261 * Network Databases::
2262 * Network Socket Address::
2263 * Network Sockets and Communication::
2264 * Internet Socket Examples::
2265 @end menu
2266
2267 @node Network Address Conversion
2268 @subsubsection Network Address Conversion
2269 @cindex network address
2270
2271 This section describes procedures which convert internet addresses
2272 between numeric and string formats.
2273
2274 @subsubheading IPv4 Address Conversion
2275 @cindex IPv4
2276
2277 An IPv4 Internet address is a 4-byte value, represented in Guile as an
2278 integer in host byte order, so that say ``0.0.0.1'' is 1, or
2279 ``1.0.0.0'' is 16777216.
2280
2281 Some underlying C functions use network byte order for addresses,
2282 Guile converts as necessary so that at the Scheme level its host byte
2283 order everywhere.
2284
2285 @defvar INADDR_ANY
2286 For a server, this can be used with @code{bind} (@pxref{Network
2287 Sockets and Communication}) to allow connections from any interface on
2288 the machine.
2289 @end defvar
2290
2291 @defvar INADDR_BROADCAST
2292 The broadcast address on the local network.
2293 @end defvar
2294
2295 @defvar INADDR_LOOPBACK
2296 The address of the local host using the loopback device, ie.@:
2297 @samp{127.0.0.1}.
2298 @end defvar
2299
2300 @c INADDR_NONE is defined in the code, but serves no purpose.
2301 @c inet_addr() returns it as an error indication, but that function
2302 @c isn't provided, for the good reason that inet_aton() does the same
2303 @c job and gives an unambiguous error indication. (INADDR_NONE is a
2304 @c valid 4-byte value, in glibc it's the same as INADDR_BROADCAST.)
2305 @c
2306 @c @defvar INADDR_NONE
2307 @c No address.
2308 @c @end defvar
2309
2310 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-aton address
2311 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_aton (address)
2312 This function is deprecated in favor of @code{inet-pton}.
2313
2314 Convert an IPv4 Internet address from printable string
2315 (dotted decimal notation) to an integer. E.g.,
2316
2317 @lisp
2318 (inet-aton "127.0.0.1") @result{} 2130706433
2319 @end lisp
2320 @end deffn
2321
2322 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-ntoa inetid
2323 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_ntoa (inetid)
2324 This function is deprecated in favor of @code{inet-ntop}.
2325
2326 Convert an IPv4 Internet address to a printable
2327 (dotted decimal notation) string. E.g.,
2328
2329 @lisp
2330 (inet-ntoa 2130706433) @result{} "127.0.0.1"
2331 @end lisp
2332 @end deffn
2333
2334 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-netof address
2335 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_netof (address)
2336 Return the network number part of the given IPv4
2337 Internet address. E.g.,
2338
2339 @lisp
2340 (inet-netof 2130706433) @result{} 127
2341 @end lisp
2342 @end deffn
2343
2344 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-lnaof address
2345 @deffnx {C Function} scm_lnaof (address)
2346 Return the local-address-with-network part of the given
2347 IPv4 Internet address, using the obsolete class A/B/C system.
2348 E.g.,
2349
2350 @lisp
2351 (inet-lnaof 2130706433) @result{} 1
2352 @end lisp
2353 @end deffn
2354
2355 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-makeaddr net lna
2356 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_makeaddr (net, lna)
2357 Make an IPv4 Internet address by combining the network number
2358 @var{net} with the local-address-within-network number
2359 @var{lna}. E.g.,
2360
2361 @lisp
2362 (inet-makeaddr 127 1) @result{} 2130706433
2363 @end lisp
2364 @end deffn
2365
2366 @subsubheading IPv6 Address Conversion
2367 @cindex IPv6
2368
2369 An IPv6 Internet address is a 16-byte value, represented in Guile as
2370 an integer in host byte order, so that say ``::1'' is 1.
2371
2372 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-ntop family address
2373 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_ntop (family, address)
2374 Convert a network address from an integer to a printable string.
2375 @var{family} can be @code{AF_INET} or @code{AF_INET6}. E.g.,
2376
2377 @lisp
2378 (inet-ntop AF_INET 2130706433) @result{} "127.0.0.1"
2379 (inet-ntop AF_INET6 (- (expt 2 128) 1))
2380 @result{} "ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff"
2381 @end lisp
2382 @end deffn
2383
2384 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} inet-pton family address
2385 @deffnx {C Function} scm_inet_pton (family, address)
2386 Convert a string containing a printable network address to an integer
2387 address. @var{family} can be @code{AF_INET} or @code{AF_INET6}.
2388 E.g.,
2389
2390 @lisp
2391 (inet-pton AF_INET "127.0.0.1") @result{} 2130706433
2392 (inet-pton AF_INET6 "::1") @result{} 1
2393 @end lisp
2394 @end deffn
2395
2396
2397 @node Network Databases
2398 @subsubsection Network Databases
2399 @cindex network database
2400
2401 This section describes procedures which query various network databases.
2402 Care should be taken when using the database routines since they are not
2403 reentrant.
2404
2405 @subsubheading @code{getaddrinfo}
2406
2407 @cindex @code{addrinfo} object type
2408 @cindex host name lookup
2409 @cindex service name lookup
2410
2411 The @code{getaddrinfo} procedure maps host and service names to socket addresses
2412 and associated information in a protocol-independent way.
2413
2414 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getaddrinfo name service [hint_flags [hint_family [hint_socktype [hint_protocol]]]]
2415 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getaddrinfo (name, service, hint_flags, hint_family, hint_socktype, hint_protocol)
2416 Return a list of @code{addrinfo} structures containing
2417 a socket address and associated information for host @var{name}
2418 and/or @var{service} to be used in creating a socket with
2419 which to address the specified service.
2420
2421 @example
2422 (let* ((ai (car (getaddrinfo "www.gnu.org" "http")))
2423 (s (socket (addrinfo:fam ai) (addrinfo:socktype ai)
2424 (addrinfo:protocol ai))))
2425 (connect s (addrinfo:addr ai))
2426 s)
2427 @end example
2428
2429 When @var{service} is omitted or is @code{#f}, return
2430 network-level addresses for @var{name}. When @var{name}
2431 is @code{#f} @var{service} must be provided and service
2432 locations local to the caller are returned.
2433
2434 Additional hints can be provided. When specified,
2435 @var{hint_flags} should be a bitwise-or of zero or more
2436 constants among the following:
2437
2438 @table @code
2439 @item AI_PASSIVE
2440 Socket address is intended for @code{bind}.
2441
2442 @item AI_CANONNAME
2443 Request for canonical host name, available via
2444 @code{addrinfo:canonname}. This makes sense mainly when
2445 DNS lookups are involved.
2446
2447 @item AI_NUMERICHOST
2448 Specifies that @var{name} is a numeric host address string
2449 (e.g., @code{"127.0.0.1"}), meaning that name resolution
2450 will not be used.
2451
2452 @item AI_NUMERICSERV
2453 Likewise, specifies that @var{service} is a numeric port
2454 string (e.g., @code{"80"}).
2455
2456 @item AI_ADDRCONFIG
2457 Return only addresses configured on the local system It is
2458 highly recommended to provide this flag when the returned
2459 socket addresses are to be used to make connections;
2460 otherwise, some of the returned addresses could be unreachable
2461 or use a protocol that is not supported.
2462
2463 @item AI_V4MAPPED
2464 When looking up IPv6 addresses, return mapped IPv4 addresses if
2465 there is no IPv6 address available at all.
2466
2467 @item AI_ALL
2468 If this flag is set along with @code{AI_V4MAPPED} when looking up IPv6
2469 addresses, return all IPv6 addresses as well as all IPv4 addresses, the latter
2470 mapped to IPv6 format.
2471 @end table
2472
2473 When given, @var{hint_family} should specify the requested
2474 address family, e.g., @code{AF_INET6}. Similarly,
2475 @var{hint_socktype} should specify the requested socket type
2476 (e.g., @code{SOCK_DGRAM}), and @var{hint_protocol} should
2477 specify the requested protocol (its value is interpreted
2478 as in calls to @code{socket}).
2479
2480 On error, an exception with key @code{getaddrinfo-error} is
2481 thrown, with an error code (an integer) as its argument:
2482
2483 @example
2484 (catch 'getaddrinfo-error
2485 (lambda ()
2486 (getaddrinfo "www.gnu.org" "gopher"))
2487 (lambda (key errcode)
2488 (cond ((= errcode EAI_SERVICE)
2489 (display "doesn't know about Gopher!\n"))
2490 ((= errcode EAI_NONAME)
2491 (display "www.gnu.org not found\\n"))
2492 (else
2493 (format #t "something wrong: ~a\n"
2494 (gai-strerror errcode))))))
2495 @end example
2496
2497 Error codes are:
2498
2499 @table @code
2500 @item EAI_AGAIN
2501 The name or service could not be resolved at this time. Future
2502 attempts may succeed.
2503
2504 @item EAI_BADFLAGS
2505 @var{hint_flags} contains an invalid value.
2506
2507 @item EAI_FAIL
2508 A non-recoverable error occurred when attempting to
2509 resolve the name.
2510
2511 @item EAI_FAMILY
2512 @var{hint_family} was not recognized.
2513
2514 @item EAI_NONAME
2515 Either @var{name} does not resolve for the supplied parameters,
2516 or neither @var{name} nor @var{service} were supplied.
2517
2518 @item EAI_NODATA
2519 This non-POSIX error code can be returned on some systems (GNU
2520 and Darwin, at least), for example when @var{name} is known
2521 but requests that were made turned out no data. Error handling
2522 code should be prepared to handle it when it is defined.
2523
2524 @item EAI_SERVICE
2525 @var{service} was not recognized for the specified socket type.
2526
2527 @item EAI_SOCKTYPE
2528 @var{hint_socktype} was not recognized.
2529
2530 @item EAI_SYSTEM
2531 A system error occurred; the error code can be found in
2532 @code{errno}.
2533 @end table
2534
2535 Users are encouraged to read the
2536 @url{http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/functions/getaddrinfo.html,
2537 "POSIX specification} for more details.
2538 @end deffn
2539
2540 The following procedures take an @code{addrinfo} object as returned by
2541 @code{getaddrinfo}:
2542
2543 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:flags ai
2544 Return flags for @var{ai} as a bitwise or of @code{AI_} values (see above).
2545 @end deffn
2546
2547 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:fam ai
2548 Return the address family of @var{ai} (a @code{AF_} value).
2549 @end deffn
2550
2551 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:socktype ai
2552 Return the socket type for @var{ai} (a @code{SOCK_} value).
2553 @end deffn
2554
2555 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:protocol ai
2556 Return the protocol of @var{ai}.
2557 @end deffn
2558
2559 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:addr ai
2560 Return the socket address associated with @var{ai} as a @code{sockaddr}
2561 object (@pxref{Network Socket Address}).
2562 @end deffn
2563
2564 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} addrinfo:canonname ai
2565 Return a string for the canonical name associated with @var{ai} if
2566 the @code{AI_CANONNAME} flag was supplied.
2567 @end deffn
2568
2569 @subsubheading The Host Database
2570 @cindex @file{/etc/hosts}
2571 @cindex network database
2572
2573 A @dfn{host object} is a structure that represents what is known about a
2574 network host, and is the usual way of representing a system's network
2575 identity inside software.
2576
2577 The following functions accept a host object and return a selected
2578 component:
2579
2580 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hostent:name host
2581 The ``official'' hostname for @var{host}.
2582 @end deffn
2583 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hostent:aliases host
2584 A list of aliases for @var{host}.
2585 @end deffn
2586 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hostent:addrtype host
2587 The host address type, one of the @code{AF} constants, such as
2588 @code{AF_INET} or @code{AF_INET6}.
2589 @end deffn
2590 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hostent:length host
2591 The length of each address for @var{host}, in bytes.
2592 @end deffn
2593 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} hostent:addr-list host
2594 The list of network addresses associated with @var{host}. For
2595 @code{AF_INET} these are integer IPv4 address (@pxref{Network Address
2596 Conversion}).
2597 @end deffn
2598
2599 The following procedures can be used to search the host database. However,
2600 @code{getaddrinfo} should be preferred over them since it's more generic and
2601 thread-safe.
2602
2603 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gethost [host]
2604 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} gethostbyname hostname
2605 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} gethostbyaddr address
2606 @deffnx {C Function} scm_gethost (host)
2607 Look up a host by name or address, returning a host object. The
2608 @code{gethost} procedure will accept either a string name or an integer
2609 address; if given no arguments, it behaves like @code{gethostent} (see
2610 below). If a name or address is supplied but the address can not be
2611 found, an error will be thrown to one of the keys:
2612 @code{host-not-found}, @code{try-again}, @code{no-recovery} or
2613 @code{no-data}, corresponding to the equivalent @code{h_error} values.
2614 Unusual conditions may result in errors thrown to the
2615 @code{system-error} or @code{misc_error} keys.
2616
2617 @lisp
2618 (gethost "www.gnu.org")
2619 @result{} #("www.gnu.org" () 2 4 (3353880842))
2620
2621 (gethostbyname "www.emacs.org")
2622 @result{} #("emacs.org" ("www.emacs.org") 2 4 (1073448978))
2623 @end lisp
2624 @end deffn
2625
2626 The following procedures may be used to step through the host
2627 database from beginning to end.
2628
2629 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sethostent [stayopen]
2630 Initialize an internal stream from which host objects may be read. This
2631 procedure must be called before any calls to @code{gethostent}, and may
2632 also be called afterward to reset the host entry stream. If
2633 @var{stayopen} is supplied and is not @code{#f}, the database is not
2634 closed by subsequent @code{gethostbyname} or @code{gethostbyaddr} calls,
2635 possibly giving an efficiency gain.
2636 @end deffn
2637
2638 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gethostent
2639 Return the next host object from the host database, or @code{#f} if
2640 there are no more hosts to be found (or an error has been encountered).
2641 This procedure may not be used before @code{sethostent} has been called.
2642 @end deffn
2643
2644 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endhostent
2645 Close the stream used by @code{gethostent}. The return value is unspecified.
2646 @end deffn
2647
2648 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sethost [stayopen]
2649 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sethost (stayopen)
2650 If @var{stayopen} is omitted, this is equivalent to @code{endhostent}.
2651 Otherwise it is equivalent to @code{sethostent stayopen}.
2652 @end deffn
2653
2654 @subsubheading The Network Database
2655 @cindex network database
2656
2657 The following functions accept an object representing a network
2658 and return a selected component:
2659
2660 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} netent:name net
2661 The ``official'' network name.
2662 @end deffn
2663 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} netent:aliases net
2664 A list of aliases for the network.
2665 @end deffn
2666 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} netent:addrtype net
2667 The type of the network number. Currently, this returns only
2668 @code{AF_INET}.
2669 @end deffn
2670 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} netent:net net
2671 The network number.
2672 @end deffn
2673
2674 The following procedures are used to search the network database:
2675
2676 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getnet [net]
2677 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getnetbyname net-name
2678 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getnetbyaddr net-number
2679 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getnet (net)
2680 Look up a network by name or net number in the network database. The
2681 @var{net-name} argument must be a string, and the @var{net-number}
2682 argument must be an integer. @code{getnet} will accept either type of
2683 argument, behaving like @code{getnetent} (see below) if no arguments are
2684 given.
2685 @end deffn
2686
2687 The following procedures may be used to step through the network
2688 database from beginning to end.
2689
2690 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setnetent [stayopen]
2691 Initialize an internal stream from which network objects may be read. This
2692 procedure must be called before any calls to @code{getnetent}, and may
2693 also be called afterward to reset the net entry stream. If
2694 @var{stayopen} is supplied and is not @code{#f}, the database is not
2695 closed by subsequent @code{getnetbyname} or @code{getnetbyaddr} calls,
2696 possibly giving an efficiency gain.
2697 @end deffn
2698
2699 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getnetent
2700 Return the next entry from the network database.
2701 @end deffn
2702
2703 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endnetent
2704 Close the stream used by @code{getnetent}. The return value is unspecified.
2705 @end deffn
2706
2707 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setnet [stayopen]
2708 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setnet (stayopen)
2709 If @var{stayopen} is omitted, this is equivalent to @code{endnetent}.
2710 Otherwise it is equivalent to @code{setnetent stayopen}.
2711 @end deffn
2712
2713 @subsubheading The Protocol Database
2714 @cindex @file{/etc/protocols}
2715 @cindex protocols
2716 @cindex network protocols
2717
2718 The following functions accept an object representing a protocol
2719 and return a selected component:
2720
2721 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} protoent:name protocol
2722 The ``official'' protocol name.
2723 @end deffn
2724 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} protoent:aliases protocol
2725 A list of aliases for the protocol.
2726 @end deffn
2727 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} protoent:proto protocol
2728 The protocol number.
2729 @end deffn
2730
2731 The following procedures are used to search the protocol database:
2732
2733 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getproto [protocol]
2734 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getprotobyname name
2735 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getprotobynumber number
2736 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getproto (protocol)
2737 Look up a network protocol by name or by number. @code{getprotobyname}
2738 takes a string argument, and @code{getprotobynumber} takes an integer
2739 argument. @code{getproto} will accept either type, behaving like
2740 @code{getprotoent} (see below) if no arguments are supplied.
2741 @end deffn
2742
2743 The following procedures may be used to step through the protocol
2744 database from beginning to end.
2745
2746 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setprotoent [stayopen]
2747 Initialize an internal stream from which protocol objects may be read. This
2748 procedure must be called before any calls to @code{getprotoent}, and may
2749 also be called afterward to reset the protocol entry stream. If
2750 @var{stayopen} is supplied and is not @code{#f}, the database is not
2751 closed by subsequent @code{getprotobyname} or @code{getprotobynumber} calls,
2752 possibly giving an efficiency gain.
2753 @end deffn
2754
2755 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getprotoent
2756 Return the next entry from the protocol database.
2757 @end deffn
2758
2759 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endprotoent
2760 Close the stream used by @code{getprotoent}. The return value is unspecified.
2761 @end deffn
2762
2763 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setproto [stayopen]
2764 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setproto (stayopen)
2765 If @var{stayopen} is omitted, this is equivalent to @code{endprotoent}.
2766 Otherwise it is equivalent to @code{setprotoent stayopen}.
2767 @end deffn
2768
2769 @subsubheading The Service Database
2770 @cindex @file{/etc/services}
2771 @cindex services
2772 @cindex network services
2773
2774 The following functions accept an object representing a service
2775 and return a selected component:
2776
2777 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} servent:name serv
2778 The ``official'' name of the network service.
2779 @end deffn
2780 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} servent:aliases serv
2781 A list of aliases for the network service.
2782 @end deffn
2783 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} servent:port serv
2784 The Internet port used by the service.
2785 @end deffn
2786 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} servent:proto serv
2787 The protocol used by the service. A service may be listed many times
2788 in the database under different protocol names.
2789 @end deffn
2790
2791 The following procedures are used to search the service database:
2792
2793 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getserv [name [protocol]]
2794 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getservbyname name protocol
2795 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} getservbyport port protocol
2796 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getserv (name, protocol)
2797 Look up a network service by name or by service number, and return a
2798 network service object. The @var{protocol} argument specifies the name
2799 of the desired protocol; if the protocol found in the network service
2800 database does not match this name, a system error is signalled.
2801
2802 The @code{getserv} procedure will take either a service name or number
2803 as its first argument; if given no arguments, it behaves like
2804 @code{getservent} (see below).
2805
2806 @lisp
2807 (getserv "imap" "tcp")
2808 @result{} #("imap2" ("imap") 143 "tcp")
2809
2810 (getservbyport 88 "udp")
2811 @result{} #("kerberos" ("kerberos5" "krb5") 88 "udp")
2812 @end lisp
2813 @end deffn
2814
2815 The following procedures may be used to step through the service
2816 database from beginning to end.
2817
2818 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setservent [stayopen]
2819 Initialize an internal stream from which service objects may be read. This
2820 procedure must be called before any calls to @code{getservent}, and may
2821 also be called afterward to reset the service entry stream. If
2822 @var{stayopen} is supplied and is not @code{#f}, the database is not
2823 closed by subsequent @code{getservbyname} or @code{getservbyport} calls,
2824 possibly giving an efficiency gain.
2825 @end deffn
2826
2827 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getservent
2828 Return the next entry from the services database.
2829 @end deffn
2830
2831 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} endservent
2832 Close the stream used by @code{getservent}. The return value is unspecified.
2833 @end deffn
2834
2835 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setserv [stayopen]
2836 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setserv (stayopen)
2837 If @var{stayopen} is omitted, this is equivalent to @code{endservent}.
2838 Otherwise it is equivalent to @code{setservent stayopen}.
2839 @end deffn
2840
2841
2842 @node Network Socket Address
2843 @subsubsection Network Socket Address
2844 @cindex socket address
2845 @cindex network socket address
2846 @tpindex Socket address
2847
2848 A @dfn{socket address} object identifies a socket endpoint for
2849 communication. In the case of @code{AF_INET} for instance, the socket
2850 address object comprises the host address (or interface on the host)
2851 and a port number which specifies a particular open socket in a
2852 running client or server process. A socket address object can be
2853 created with,
2854
2855 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} make-socket-address AF_INET ipv4addr port
2856 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-socket-address AF_INET6 ipv6addr port [flowinfo [scopeid]]
2857 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} make-socket-address AF_UNIX path
2858 @deffnx {C Function} scm_make_socket_address (family, address, arglist)
2859 Return a new socket address object. The first argument is the address
2860 family, one of the @code{AF} constants, then the arguments vary
2861 according to the family.
2862
2863 For @code{AF_INET} the arguments are an IPv4 network address number
2864 (@pxref{Network Address Conversion}), and a port number.
2865
2866 For @code{AF_INET6} the arguments are an IPv6 network address number
2867 and a port number. Optional @var{flowinfo} and @var{scopeid}
2868 arguments may be given (both integers, default 0).
2869
2870 For @code{AF_UNIX} the argument is a filename (a string).
2871
2872 The C function @code{scm_make_socket_address} takes the @var{family}
2873 and @var{address} arguments directly, then @var{arglist} is a list of
2874 further arguments, being the port for IPv4, port and optional flowinfo
2875 and scopeid for IPv6, or the empty list @code{SCM_EOL} for Unix
2876 domain.
2877 @end deffn
2878
2879 @noindent
2880 The following functions access the fields of a socket address object,
2881
2882 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:fam sa
2883 Return the address family from socket address object @var{sa}. This
2884 is one of the @code{AF} constants (e.g.@: @code{AF_INET}).
2885 @end deffn
2886
2887 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:path sa
2888 For an @code{AF_UNIX} socket address object @var{sa}, return the
2889 filename.
2890 @end deffn
2891
2892 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:addr sa
2893 For an @code{AF_INET} or @code{AF_INET6} socket address object
2894 @var{sa}, return the network address number.
2895 @end deffn
2896
2897 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:port sa
2898 For an @code{AF_INET} or @code{AF_INET6} socket address object
2899 @var{sa}, return the port number.
2900 @end deffn
2901
2902 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:flowinfo sa
2903 For an @code{AF_INET6} socket address object @var{sa}, return the
2904 flowinfo value.
2905 @end deffn
2906
2907 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sockaddr:scopeid sa
2908 For an @code{AF_INET6} socket address object @var{sa}, return the
2909 scope ID value.
2910 @end deffn
2911
2912 @tpindex @code{struct sockaddr}
2913 @tpindex @code{sockaddr}
2914 The functions below convert to and from the C @code{struct sockaddr}
2915 (@pxref{Address Formats,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
2916 That structure is a generic type, an application can cast to or from
2917 @code{struct sockaddr_in}, @code{struct sockaddr_in6} or @code{struct
2918 sockaddr_un} according to the address family.
2919
2920 In a @code{struct sockaddr} taken or returned, the byte ordering in
2921 the fields follows the C conventions (@pxref{Byte Order,, Byte Order
2922 Conversion, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}). This means
2923 network byte order for @code{AF_INET} host address
2924 (@code{sin_addr.s_addr}) and port number (@code{sin_port}), and
2925 @code{AF_INET6} port number (@code{sin6_port}). But at the Scheme
2926 level these values are taken or returned in host byte order, so the
2927 port is an ordinary integer, and the host address likewise is an
2928 ordinary integer (as described in @ref{Network Address Conversion}).
2929
2930 @deftypefn {C Function} {struct sockaddr *} scm_c_make_socket_address (SCM family, SCM address, SCM args, size_t *outsize)
2931 Return a newly-@code{malloc}ed @code{struct sockaddr} created from
2932 arguments like those taken by @code{scm_make_socket_address} above.
2933
2934 The size (in bytes) of the @code{struct sockaddr} return is stored
2935 into @code{*@var{outsize}}. An application must call @code{free} to
2936 release the returned structure when no longer required.
2937 @end deftypefn
2938
2939 @deftypefn {C Function} SCM scm_from_sockaddr (const struct sockaddr *address, unsigned address_size)
2940 Return a Scheme socket address object from the C @var{address}
2941 structure. @var{address_size} is the size in bytes of @var{address}.
2942 @end deftypefn
2943
2944 @deftypefn {C Function} {struct sockaddr *} scm_to_sockaddr (SCM address, size_t *address_size)
2945 Return a newly-@code{malloc}ed @code{struct sockaddr} from a Scheme
2946 level socket address object.
2947
2948 The size (in bytes) of the @code{struct sockaddr} return is stored
2949 into @code{*@var{outsize}}. An application must call @code{free} to
2950 release the returned structure when no longer required.
2951 @end deftypefn
2952
2953
2954 @node Network Sockets and Communication
2955 @subsubsection Network Sockets and Communication
2956 @cindex socket
2957 @cindex network socket
2958
2959 Socket ports can be created using @code{socket} and @code{socketpair}.
2960 The ports are initially unbuffered, to make reading and writing to the
2961 same port more reliable. A buffer can be added to the port using
2962 @code{setvbuf}; see @ref{Ports and File Descriptors}.
2963
2964 Most systems have limits on how many files and sockets can be open, so
2965 it's strongly recommended that socket ports be closed explicitly when
2966 no longer required (@pxref{Ports}).
2967
2968 Some of the underlying C functions take values in network byte order,
2969 but the convention in Guile is that at the Scheme level everything is
2970 ordinary host byte order and conversions are made automatically where
2971 necessary.
2972
2973 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} socket family style proto
2974 @deffnx {C Function} scm_socket (family, style, proto)
2975 Return a new socket port of the type specified by @var{family},
2976 @var{style} and @var{proto}. All three parameters are integers. The
2977 possible values for @var{family} are as follows, where supported by
2978 the system,
2979
2980 @defvar PF_UNIX
2981 @defvarx PF_INET
2982 @defvarx PF_INET6
2983 @end defvar
2984
2985 The possible values for @var{style} are as follows, again where
2986 supported by the system,
2987
2988 @defvar SOCK_STREAM
2989 @defvarx SOCK_DGRAM
2990 @defvarx SOCK_RAW
2991 @defvarx SOCK_RDM
2992 @defvarx SOCK_SEQPACKET
2993 @end defvar
2994
2995 @var{proto} can be obtained from a protocol name using
2996 @code{getprotobyname} (@pxref{Network Databases}). A value of zero
2997 means the default protocol, which is usually right.
2998
2999 A socket cannot by used for communication until it has been connected
3000 somewhere, usually with either @code{connect} or @code{accept} below.
3001 @end deffn
3002
3003 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} socketpair family style proto
3004 @deffnx {C Function} scm_socketpair (family, style, proto)
3005 Return a pair, the @code{car} and @code{cdr} of which are two unnamed
3006 socket ports connected to each other. The connection is full-duplex,
3007 so data can be transferred in either direction between the two.
3008
3009 @var{family}, @var{style} and @var{proto} are as per @code{socket}
3010 above. But many systems only support socket pairs in the
3011 @code{PF_UNIX} family. Zero is likely to be the only meaningful value
3012 for @var{proto}.
3013 @end deffn
3014
3015 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getsockopt sock level optname
3016 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} setsockopt sock level optname value
3017 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getsockopt (sock, level, optname)
3018 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setsockopt (sock, level, optname, value)
3019 Get or set an option on socket port @var{sock}. @code{getsockopt}
3020 returns the current value. @code{setsockopt} sets a value and the
3021 return is unspecified.
3022
3023 @var{level} is an integer specifying a protocol layer, either
3024 @code{SOL_SOCKET} for socket level options, or a protocol number from
3025 the @code{IPPROTO} constants or @code{getprotoent} (@pxref{Network
3026 Databases}).
3027
3028 @defvar SOL_SOCKET
3029 @defvarx IPPROTO_IP
3030 @defvarx IPPROTO_TCP
3031 @defvarx IPPROTO_UDP
3032 @end defvar
3033
3034 @var{optname} is an integer specifying an option within the protocol
3035 layer.
3036
3037 For @code{SOL_SOCKET} level the following @var{optname}s are defined
3038 (when provided by the system). For their meaning see
3039 @ref{Socket-Level Options,,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
3040 Manual}, or @command{man 7 socket}.
3041
3042 @defvar SO_DEBUG
3043 @defvarx SO_REUSEADDR
3044 @defvarx SO_STYLE
3045 @defvarx SO_TYPE
3046 @defvarx SO_ERROR
3047 @defvarx SO_DONTROUTE
3048 @defvarx SO_BROADCAST
3049 @defvarx SO_SNDBUF
3050 @defvarx SO_RCVBUF
3051 @defvarx SO_KEEPALIVE
3052 @defvarx SO_OOBINLINE
3053 @defvarx SO_NO_CHECK
3054 @defvarx SO_PRIORITY
3055 The @var{value} taken or returned is an integer.
3056 @end defvar
3057
3058 @defvar SO_LINGER
3059 The @var{value} taken or returned is a pair of integers
3060 @code{(@var{ENABLE} . @var{TIMEOUT})}. On old systems without timeout
3061 support (ie.@: without @code{struct linger}), only @var{ENABLE} has an
3062 effect but the value in Guile is always a pair.
3063 @end defvar
3064
3065 @c Note that we refer only to ``man ip'' here. On GNU/Linux it's
3066 @c ``man 7 ip'' but on NetBSD it's ``man 4 ip''.
3067 @c
3068 For IP level (@code{IPPROTO_IP}) the following @var{optname}s are
3069 defined (when provided by the system). See @command{man ip} for what
3070 they mean.
3071
3072 @defvar IP_MULTICAST_IF
3073 This sets the source interface used by multicast traffic.
3074 @end defvar
3075
3076 @defvar IP_MULTICAST_TTL
3077 This sets the default TTL for multicast traffic. This defaults
3078 to 1 and should be increased to allow traffic to pass beyond the
3079 local network.
3080 @end defvar
3081
3082 @defvar IP_ADD_MEMBERSHIP
3083 @defvarx IP_DROP_MEMBERSHIP
3084 These can be used only with @code{setsockopt}, not @code{getsockopt}.
3085 @var{value} is a pair @code{(@var{MULTIADDR} . @var{INTERFACEADDR})}
3086 of integer IPv4 addresses (@pxref{Network Address Conversion}).
3087 @var{MULTIADDR} is a multicast address to be added to or dropped from
3088 the interface @var{INTERFACEADDR}. @var{INTERFACEADDR} can be
3089 @code{INADDR_ANY} to have the system select the interface.
3090 @var{INTERFACEADDR} can also be an interface index number, on systems
3091 supporting that.
3092 @end defvar
3093 @end deffn
3094
3095 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} shutdown sock how
3096 @deffnx {C Function} scm_shutdown (sock, how)
3097 Sockets can be closed simply by using @code{close-port}. The
3098 @code{shutdown} procedure allows reception or transmission on a
3099 connection to be shut down individually, according to the parameter
3100 @var{how}:
3101
3102 @table @asis
3103 @item 0
3104 Stop receiving data for this socket. If further data arrives, reject it.
3105 @item 1
3106 Stop trying to transmit data from this socket. Discard any
3107 data waiting to be sent. Stop looking for acknowledgement of
3108 data already sent; don't retransmit it if it is lost.
3109 @item 2
3110 Stop both reception and transmission.
3111 @end table
3112
3113 The return value is unspecified.
3114 @end deffn
3115
3116 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} connect sock sockaddr
3117 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} connect sock AF_INET ipv4addr port
3118 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} connect sock AF_INET6 ipv6addr port [flowinfo [scopeid]]
3119 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} connect sock AF_UNIX path
3120 @deffnx {C Function} scm_connect (sock, fam, address, args)
3121 Initiate a connection on socket port @var{sock} to a given address.
3122 The destination is either a socket address object, or arguments the
3123 same as @code{make-socket-address} would take to make such an object
3124 (@pxref{Network Socket Address}). The return value is unspecified.
3125
3126 @example
3127 (connect sock AF_INET INADDR_LOOPBACK 23)
3128 (connect sock (make-socket-address AF_INET INADDR_LOOPBACK 23))
3129 @end example
3130 @end deffn
3131
3132 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} bind sock sockaddr
3133 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} bind sock AF_INET ipv4addr port
3134 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} bind sock AF_INET6 ipv6addr port [flowinfo [scopeid]]
3135 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} bind sock AF_UNIX path
3136 @deffnx {C Function} scm_bind (sock, fam, address, args)
3137 Bind socket port @var{sock} to the given address. The address is
3138 either a socket address object, or arguments the same as
3139 @code{make-socket-address} would take to make such an object
3140 (@pxref{Network Socket Address}). The return value is unspecified.
3141
3142 Generally a socket is only explicitly bound to a particular address
3143 when making a server, i.e.@: to listen on a particular port. For an
3144 outgoing connection the system will assign a local address
3145 automatically, if not already bound.
3146
3147 @example
3148 (bind sock AF_INET INADDR_ANY 12345)
3149 (bind sock (make-socket-address AF_INET INADDR_ANY 12345))
3150 @end example
3151 @end deffn
3152
3153 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} listen sock backlog
3154 @deffnx {C Function} scm_listen (sock, backlog)
3155 Enable @var{sock} to accept connection
3156 requests. @var{backlog} is an integer specifying
3157 the maximum length of the queue for pending connections.
3158 If the queue fills, new clients will fail to connect until
3159 the server calls @code{accept} to accept a connection from
3160 the queue.
3161
3162 The return value is unspecified.
3163 @end deffn
3164
3165 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} accept sock
3166 @deffnx {C Function} scm_accept (sock)
3167 Accept a connection from socket port @var{sock} which has been enabled
3168 for listening with @code{listen} above. If there are no incoming
3169 connections in the queue, wait until one is available (unless
3170 @code{O_NONBLOCK} has been set on the socket, @pxref{Ports and File
3171 Descriptors,@code{fcntl}}).
3172
3173 The return value is a pair. The @code{car} is a new socket port,
3174 connected and ready to communicate. The @code{cdr} is a socket
3175 address object (@pxref{Network Socket Address}) which is where the
3176 remote connection is from (like @code{getpeername} below).
3177
3178 All communication takes place using the new socket returned. The
3179 given @var{sock} remains bound and listening, and @code{accept} may be
3180 called on it again to get another incoming connection when desired.
3181 @end deffn
3182
3183 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getsockname sock
3184 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getsockname (sock)
3185 Return a socket address object which is the where @var{sock} is bound
3186 locally. @var{sock} may have obtained its local address from
3187 @code{bind} (above), or if a @code{connect} is done with an otherwise
3188 unbound socket (which is usual) then the system will have assigned an
3189 address.
3190
3191 Note that on many systems the address of a socket in the
3192 @code{AF_UNIX} namespace cannot be read.
3193 @end deffn
3194
3195 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpeername sock
3196 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpeername (sock)
3197 Return a socket address object which is where @var{sock} is connected
3198 to, i.e.@: the remote endpoint.
3199
3200 Note that on many systems the address of a socket in the
3201 @code{AF_UNIX} namespace cannot be read.
3202 @end deffn
3203
3204 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} recv! sock buf [flags]
3205 @deffnx {C Function} scm_recv (sock, buf, flags)
3206 Receive data from a socket port.
3207 @var{sock} must already
3208 be bound to the address from which data is to be received.
3209 @var{buf} is a bytevector into which
3210 the data will be written. The size of @var{buf} limits
3211 the amount of
3212 data which can be received: in the case of packet
3213 protocols, if a packet larger than this limit is encountered
3214 then some data
3215 will be irrevocably lost.
3216
3217 @vindex MSG_OOB
3218 @vindex MSG_PEEK
3219 @vindex MSG_DONTROUTE
3220 The optional @var{flags} argument is a value or bitwise OR of
3221 @code{MSG_OOB}, @code{MSG_PEEK}, @code{MSG_DONTROUTE} etc.
3222
3223 The value returned is the number of bytes read from the
3224 socket.
3225
3226 Note that the data is read directly from the socket file
3227 descriptor:
3228 any unread buffered port data is ignored.
3229 @end deffn
3230
3231 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} send sock message [flags]
3232 @deffnx {C Function} scm_send (sock, message, flags)
3233 @vindex MSG_OOB
3234 @vindex MSG_PEEK
3235 @vindex MSG_DONTROUTE
3236 Transmit bytevector @var{message} on socket port @var{sock}.
3237 @var{sock} must already be bound to a destination address. The value
3238 returned is the number of bytes transmitted---it's possible for this
3239 to be less than the length of @var{message} if the socket is set to be
3240 non-blocking. The optional @var{flags} argument is a value or bitwise
3241 OR of @code{MSG_OOB}, @code{MSG_PEEK}, @code{MSG_DONTROUTE} etc.
3242
3243 Note that the data is written directly to the socket
3244 file descriptor:
3245 any unflushed buffered port data is ignored.
3246 @end deffn
3247
3248 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} recvfrom! sock buf [flags [start [end]]]
3249 @deffnx {C Function} scm_recvfrom (sock, buf, flags, start, end)
3250 Receive data from socket port @var{sock}, returning the originating
3251 address as well as the data. This function is usually for datagram
3252 sockets, but can be used on stream-oriented sockets too.
3253
3254 The data received is stored in bytevector @var{buf}, using
3255 either the whole bytevector or just the region between the optional
3256 @var{start} and @var{end} positions. The size of @var{buf}
3257 limits the amount of data that can be received. For datagram
3258 protocols if a packet larger than this is received then excess
3259 bytes are irrevocably lost.
3260
3261 The return value is a pair. The @code{car} is the number of bytes
3262 read. The @code{cdr} is a socket address object (@pxref{Network
3263 Socket Address}) which is where the data came from, or @code{#f} if
3264 the origin is unknown.
3265
3266 @vindex MSG_OOB
3267 @vindex MSG_PEEK
3268 @vindex MSG_DONTROUTE
3269 The optional @var{flags} argument is a or bitwise-OR (@code{logior})
3270 of @code{MSG_OOB}, @code{MSG_PEEK}, @code{MSG_DONTROUTE} etc.
3271
3272 Data is read directly from the socket file descriptor, any buffered
3273 port data is ignored.
3274
3275 @c This was linux kernel 2.6.15 and glibc 2.3.6, not sure what any
3276 @c specs are supposed to say about recvfrom threading.
3277 @c
3278 On a GNU/Linux system @code{recvfrom!} is not multi-threading, all
3279 threads stop while a @code{recvfrom!} call is in progress. An
3280 application may need to use @code{select}, @code{O_NONBLOCK} or
3281 @code{MSG_DONTWAIT} to avoid this.
3282 @end deffn
3283
3284 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sendto sock message sockaddr [flags]
3285 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} sendto sock message AF_INET ipv4addr port [flags]
3286 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} sendto sock message AF_INET6 ipv6addr port [flowinfo [scopeid [flags]]]
3287 @deffnx {Scheme Procedure} sendto sock message AF_UNIX path [flags]
3288 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sendto (sock, message, fam, address, args_and_flags)
3289 Transmit bytevector @var{message} as a datagram socket port
3290 @var{sock}. The destination is specified either as a socket address
3291 object, or as arguments the same as would be taken by
3292 @code{make-socket-address} to create such an object (@pxref{Network
3293 Socket Address}).
3294
3295 The destination address may be followed by an optional @var{flags}
3296 argument which is a @code{logior} (@pxref{Bitwise Operations}) of
3297 @code{MSG_OOB}, @code{MSG_PEEK}, @code{MSG_DONTROUTE} etc.
3298
3299 The value returned is the number of bytes transmitted --
3300 it's possible for
3301 this to be less than the length of @var{message} if the
3302 socket is
3303 set to be non-blocking.
3304 Note that the data is written directly to the socket
3305 file descriptor:
3306 any unflushed buffered port data is ignored.
3307 @end deffn
3308
3309 The following functions can be used to convert short and long integers
3310 between ``host'' and ``network'' order. Although the procedures above do
3311 this automatically for addresses, the conversion will still need to
3312 be done when sending or receiving encoded integer data from the network.
3313
3314 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} htons value
3315 @deffnx {C Function} scm_htons (value)
3316 Convert a 16 bit quantity from host to network byte ordering.
3317 @var{value} is packed into 2 bytes, which are then converted
3318 and returned as a new integer.
3319 @end deffn
3320
3321 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} ntohs value
3322 @deffnx {C Function} scm_ntohs (value)
3323 Convert a 16 bit quantity from network to host byte ordering.
3324 @var{value} is packed into 2 bytes, which are then converted
3325 and returned as a new integer.
3326 @end deffn
3327
3328 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} htonl value
3329 @deffnx {C Function} scm_htonl (value)
3330 Convert a 32 bit quantity from host to network byte ordering.
3331 @var{value} is packed into 4 bytes, which are then converted
3332 and returned as a new integer.
3333 @end deffn
3334
3335 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} ntohl value
3336 @deffnx {C Function} scm_ntohl (value)
3337 Convert a 32 bit quantity from network to host byte ordering.
3338 @var{value} is packed into 4 bytes, which are then converted
3339 and returned as a new integer.
3340 @end deffn
3341
3342 These procedures are inconvenient to use at present, but consider:
3343
3344 @example
3345 (define write-network-long
3346 (lambda (value port)
3347 (let ((v (make-uniform-vector 1 1 0)))
3348 (uniform-vector-set! v 0 (htonl value))
3349 (uniform-vector-write v port))))
3350
3351 (define read-network-long
3352 (lambda (port)
3353 (let ((v (make-uniform-vector 1 1 0)))
3354 (uniform-vector-read! v port)
3355 (ntohl (uniform-vector-ref v 0)))))
3356 @end example
3357
3358
3359 @node Internet Socket Examples
3360 @subsubsection Network Socket Examples
3361 @cindex network examples
3362 @cindex socket examples
3363
3364 The following give examples of how to use network sockets.
3365
3366 @subsubheading Internet Socket Client Example
3367
3368 @cindex socket client example
3369 The following example demonstrates an Internet socket client.
3370 It connects to the HTTP daemon running on the local machine and
3371 returns the contents of the root index URL.
3372
3373 @example
3374 (let ((s (socket PF_INET SOCK_STREAM 0)))
3375 (connect s AF_INET (inet-pton AF_INET "127.0.0.1") 80)
3376 (display "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n" s)
3377
3378 (do ((line (read-line s) (read-line s)))
3379 ((eof-object? line))
3380 (display line)
3381 (newline)))
3382 @end example
3383
3384
3385 @subsubheading Internet Socket Server Example
3386
3387 @cindex socket server example
3388 The following example shows a simple Internet server which listens on
3389 port 2904 for incoming connections and sends a greeting back to the
3390 client.
3391
3392 @example
3393 (let ((s (socket PF_INET SOCK_STREAM 0)))
3394 (setsockopt s SOL_SOCKET SO_REUSEADDR 1)
3395 ;; @r{Specific address?}
3396 ;; @r{(bind s AF_INET (inet-pton AF_INET "127.0.0.1") 2904)}
3397 (bind s AF_INET INADDR_ANY 2904)
3398 (listen s 5)
3399
3400 (simple-format #t "Listening for clients in pid: ~S" (getpid))
3401 (newline)
3402
3403 (while #t
3404 (let* ((client-connection (accept s))
3405 (client-details (cdr client-connection))
3406 (client (car client-connection)))
3407 (simple-format #t "Got new client connection: ~S"
3408 client-details)
3409 (newline)
3410 (simple-format #t "Client address: ~S"
3411 (gethostbyaddr
3412 (sockaddr:addr client-details)))
3413 (newline)
3414 ;; @r{Send back the greeting to the client port}
3415 (display "Hello client\r\n" client)
3416 (close client))))
3417 @end example
3418
3419
3420 @node System Identification
3421 @subsection System Identification
3422 @cindex system name
3423
3424 This section lists the various procedures Guile provides for accessing
3425 information about the system it runs on.
3426
3427 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} uname
3428 @deffnx {C Function} scm_uname ()
3429 Return an object with some information about the computer
3430 system the program is running on.
3431
3432 The following procedures accept an object as returned by @code{uname}
3433 and return a selected component (all of which are strings).
3434
3435 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utsname:sysname un
3436 The name of the operating system.
3437 @end deffn
3438 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utsname:nodename un
3439 The network name of the computer.
3440 @end deffn
3441 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utsname:release un
3442 The current release level of the operating system implementation.
3443 @end deffn
3444 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utsname:version un
3445 The current version level within the release of the operating system.
3446 @end deffn
3447 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} utsname:machine un
3448 A description of the hardware.
3449 @end deffn
3450 @end deffn
3451
3452 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} gethostname
3453 @deffnx {C Function} scm_gethostname ()
3454 @cindex host name
3455 Return the host name of the current processor.
3456 @end deffn
3457
3458 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} sethostname name
3459 @deffnx {C Function} scm_sethostname (name)
3460 Set the host name of the current processor to @var{name}. May
3461 only be used by the superuser. The return value is not
3462 specified.
3463 @end deffn
3464
3465 @node Locales
3466 @subsection Locales
3467 @cindex locale
3468
3469 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} setlocale category [locale]
3470 @deffnx {C Function} scm_setlocale (category, locale)
3471 Get or set the current locale, used for various internationalizations.
3472 Locales are strings, such as @samp{sv_SE}.
3473
3474 If @var{locale} is given then the locale for the given @var{category}
3475 is set and the new value returned. If @var{locale} is not given then
3476 the current value is returned. @var{category} should be one of the
3477 following values (@pxref{Locale Categories, Categories of Activities
3478 that Locales Affect,, libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}):
3479
3480 @defvar LC_ALL
3481 @defvarx LC_COLLATE
3482 @defvarx LC_CTYPE
3483 @defvarx LC_MESSAGES
3484 @defvarx LC_MONETARY
3485 @defvarx LC_NUMERIC
3486 @defvarx LC_TIME
3487 @end defvar
3488
3489 @cindex @code{LANG}
3490 A common usage is @samp{(setlocale LC_ALL "")}, which initializes all
3491 categories based on standard environment variables (@code{LANG} etc).
3492 For full details on categories and locale names @pxref{Locales,,
3493 Locales and Internationalization, libc, The GNU C Library Reference
3494 Manual}.
3495
3496 Note that @code{setlocale} affects locale settings for the whole
3497 process. @xref{i18n Introduction, locale objects and
3498 @code{make-locale}}, for a thread-safe alternative.
3499 @end deffn
3500
3501 @node Encryption
3502 @subsection Encryption
3503 @cindex encryption
3504
3505 Please note that the procedures in this section are not suited for
3506 strong encryption, they are only interfaces to the well-known and
3507 common system library functions of the same name. They are just as good
3508 (or bad) as the underlying functions, so you should refer to your system
3509 documentation before using them (@pxref{crypt,, Encrypting Passwords,
3510 libc, The GNU C Library Reference Manual}).
3511
3512 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} crypt key salt
3513 @deffnx {C Function} scm_crypt (key, salt)
3514 Encrypt @var{key}, with the addition of @var{salt} (both strings),
3515 using the @code{crypt} C library call.
3516 @end deffn
3517
3518 Although @code{getpass} is not an encryption procedure per se, it
3519 appears here because it is often used in combination with @code{crypt}:
3520
3521 @deffn {Scheme Procedure} getpass prompt
3522 @deffnx {C Function} scm_getpass (prompt)
3523 @cindex password
3524 Display @var{prompt} to the standard error output and read
3525 a password from @file{/dev/tty}. If this file is not
3526 accessible, it reads from standard input. The password may be
3527 up to 127 characters in length. Additional characters and the
3528 terminating newline character are discarded. While reading
3529 the password, echoing and the generation of signals by special
3530 characters is disabled.
3531 @end deffn
3532
3533
3534 @c Local Variables:
3535 @c TeX-master: "guile.texi"
3536 @c End: