Is there any portable way (on POSIX systems) to determine if a file descriptor is seekable? My thought is to use lseek(fd, 0, SEEK_CUR); and check if the return value is -1, but I'm uncertain if this could give false negatives or false positives. Using fstat and making assumptions about what types of files are seekable/nonseekable does not sound like a good idea. Any other ideas?
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You can use fstat(), then the S_ISREG macro on the mode field of the stat struct to check whether it's a regular file; a regular file, per definiton, is seekable whereas a "non-regular" (special) file might not be (I don't know if there are special files that are also seekable). But yeah, checking the return value of lseek() and errno == ESPIPE should also work. In principle, the effect of lseek() on devices which are incapable of seeking is implementation-defined, so beware of nasal daemons. |
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