I'm porting a relatively simple console program written for Unix to the Windows platform (Visual C++ 8.0). All the source files include "unistd.h", which doesn't exist. Removing it, I get complaints about misssing prototypes for 'srandom', 'random', and 'getopt'. I know I can replace the random functions, and I'm pretty sure I can find/hack-up a getopt implementation.

But I'm sure others have run into the same challenge. My question is: is there a port of "unistd.h" to Windows? At least one containg those functions which do have a native Windows implementation - I don't need pipes or forking.

EDIT:

I know I can create my very own "unistd.h" which contains replacements for the things I need - especially in this case, since it is a limited set. But since it seems like a common problem, I was wondering if someone had done the work already for a bigger subset of the functionality.

Switching to a different compiler or environment isn't possible at work - I'm stuck with Visual Studio.

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8 Answers

up vote 31 down vote accepted

Since we can't find a version on the Internet, let's start one here.
Most ports to Windows probably only need a subset of the complete Unix file.
Here's a starting point. Please add definitions as needed.

#ifndef _UNISTD_H
#define _UNISTD_H    1

/* This file intended to serve as a drop-in replacement for 
 *  unistd.h on Windows
 *  Please add functionality as neeeded 
 */

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <io.h>
#include <getopt.h> /* getopt from: http://www.pwilson.net/sample.html. */
#include <process.h> /* for getpid() and the exec..() family */

#define srandom srand
#define random rand

const W_OK = 2;
const R_OK = 4;

#define access _access
#define ftruncate _chsize

#define ssize_t int

#define STDIN_FILENO 0
#define STDOUT_FILENO 1
#define STDERR_FILENO 2
/* should be in some equivalent to <sys/types.h> */
typedef __int8            int8_t;
typedef __int16           int16_t; 
typedef __int32           int32_t;
typedef __int64           int64_t;
typedef unsigned __int8   uint8_t;
typedef unsigned __int16  uint16_t;
typedef unsigned __int32  uint32_t;
typedef unsigned __int64  uint64_t;

#endif /* unistd.h  */
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I would recommend using mingw/msys as a development environment. Especially if you are porting simple console programs. Msys implements a Unix-like shell on Windows, and mingw is a port of the GNU compiler collection (GCC) and other GNU build tools to the Windows platform. It is an open-source project, and well-suited to the task. I currently use it to build utility programs and console applications for Windows XP, and it most certainly has that unistd.h header you are looking for.

The install procedure can be a little bit tricky, but I found that the best place to start is in MSYS.

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So far, I haven't found a pre-existing unistd.h, but I did find a drop-in getopt() replacement in Pete Wilson's free sample code. It compiled on Visual C++ 8.0 without any code changes needed.

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Try including the io.h file. It seems to be the Visual Studio's equivalent of unistd.h.

I hope this helps.

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I stumbled on this thread while trying to find a Windows alternative for getpid() (defined in unistd.h). It turns out that including process.h does the trick. Maybe this helps people who find this thread in the future.

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See Interoperability and Migration (Microsoft recommendations).

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+1 for the link – Tony Lee Nov 12 '09 at 17:41
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Create your own unistd.h header and include the needed headers for function prototypes.

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I know I can do do that, I'll edit the question to make that clearer. The point of the question was: has anyone else done it for me? – AShelly Dec 5 '08 at 20:42
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No, IIRC there is no getopt() on Windows.

Boost, however, has the program_options library... which works okay. It will seem like overkill at first, but it isn't terrible, especially considering it can handle setting program options in configuration files and environment variables in addition to command line options.

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funny googling for "getopt windows" give this as the first hit: codeproject.com/KB/cpp/xgetopt.aspx – Evan Teran Dec 5 '08 at 5:20
The point was not having to re-write the existing code to use Boost or some other parser. – AShelly Dec 5 '08 at 21:52
@AShelly: I'm afraid if you code using *nix only API's, then you have no choice but to either re-write existing code to be portable, or to provide your own implementation of the missing functionality. If you used boost::program_options to begin with it will work on many platforms without change. – ceretullis Dec 8 '08 at 0:15
But I didn't write the original code: I found a useful open-source command-line utility written for *nix. I wanted to create a version for my workplace environment which is fixed on VS2005. – AShelly Jan 13 '10 at 17:57
@AShelly: fair enough. – ceretullis Jan 13 '10 at 20:24
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