I have a little problem, in a scenario where:
while (read(dp->fd, (char *) &dirbuf, sizeof(dirbuf)) == sizeof(dirbuf)) { ... }
where dirbuf is:
struct direct dirbuf {
ino_t d_ino; char d_name[DIRSIZ];
};
How does C know to read in data contingently into our structure? With the read() Like, the alignment of our dirbuf fits perfectly as a character array? since read accepts a void * for its second argument, passing a structure as a cast to char * makes very little sense to me, how does it cater for other member elements properly?
I'm not sure if I'm even asking this question properly, I hope someone can decipher my problem behind my lunacy and help me out.
Thanks.
while
condition mean that the number of characterread
should always be equal to the structure size? isn't there a high probability that it could be false most of the time?read()
to read a file descriptor that has a directory open. (You can use such a file descriptor for thefchdir()
system call and maybe the*at()
system calls.) In the old days when the UFS meant the 14-character maximum file name length, theread()
shown would return 16 reliably each time until it reached EOF, when it would return 0, of course. In the not quite so old days, trying to read a FFS (Berkeley 'Fast File System'), you'd run into problems because the names varied.