Given an open file descriptor, you can create a stream for it with the
fdopen
function. You can get the underlying file descriptor for
an existing stream with the fileno
function. These functions are
declared in the header file stdio.h.
The
fdopen
function returns a new stream for the file descriptor filedes.The opentype argument is interpreted in the same way as for the
fopen
function (see Opening Streams), except that the ‘b’ option is not permitted; this is because GNU makes no distinction between text and binary files. Also,"w"
and"w+"
do not cause truncation of the file; these have an effect only when opening a file, and in this case the file has already been opened. You must make sure that the opentype argument matches the actual mode of the open file descriptor.The return value is the new stream. If the stream cannot be created (for example, if the modes for the file indicated by the file descriptor do not permit the access specified by the opentype argument), a null pointer is returned instead.
In some other systems,
fdopen
may fail to detect that the modes for file descriptor do not permit the access specified byopentype
. The GNU C library always checks for this.
For an example showing the use of the fdopen
function,
see Creating a Pipe.
This function returns the file descriptor associated with the stream stream. If an error is detected (for example, if the stream is not valid) or if stream does not do I/O to a file,
fileno
returns -1.
The
fileno_unlocked
function is equivalent to thefileno
function except that it does not implicitly lock the stream if the state isFSETLOCKING_INTERNAL
.This function is a GNU extension.
There are also symbolic constants defined in unistd.h for the
file descriptors belonging to the standard streams stdin
,
stdout
, and stderr
; see Standard Streams.
STDIN_FILENO
0
, which is the file descriptor for
standard input.
STDOUT_FILENO
1
, which is the file descriptor for
standard output.
STDERR_FILENO
2
, which is the file descriptor for
standard error output.