As mux has explained you need to use
struct dirent *ent = (struct dirent *)arg;
I just want to make it clear why you have to do this. When you declare a structure we do one of the following
1. Without typedef
struct my_struct // <----- Name of the structure(equivalent to datatype)
{
int x;
int y;
} hello; // <------Variable of type my_struct
Now you can access using:
hello.x=100;
Declaring a new variable can be done using
struct my_struct new_variable; (new_variable is new variable of type my_struct)
2. Now using typedef
typedef struct my_struct
{
int x;
int y;
} hello; //<----- Hello is a typedef for **struct my_struct**
So when you do
hello new_var; // <-------- new_var is a new variable of type my_struct
hello.x // <-------- Here hello refers to the datatype and not the variable
Therefore the variable dirent can mean different things in different contexts:-
If you don't mention the struct the compiler will assume it is in typedef context and hence will find that the variable is undeclared.
Hence you need to mention it directly as pointed by mux.
'dirent' undeclared
, then declare it?dirent
:#include <dirent.h>