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NAME

       pread, read - read from a file

SYNOPSIS

       #include <unistd.h>

       ssize_t pread(int fildes, void *buf, size_t nbyte, off_t offset);
       ssize_t read(int fildes, void *buf, size_t nbyte);

DESCRIPTION

       The  read()  function  shall  attempt  to  read  nbyte  bytes from the file associated with the open file
       descriptor, fildes, into the buffer pointed to by buf. The behavior of multiple concurrent reads  on  the
       same pipe, FIFO, or terminal device is unspecified.

       Before  any  action  described  below  is taken, and if nbyte is zero, the read() function may detect and
       return errors as described below. In the absence of errors, or if error detection is not  performed,  the
       read() function shall return zero and have no other results.

       On  files that support seeking (for example, a regular file), the read() shall start at a position in the
       file given by the file offset associated with fildes. The file offset shall be incremented by the  number
       of bytes actually read.

       Files that do not support seeking-for example, terminals-always read from the current position. The value
       of a file offset associated with such a file is undefined.

       No  data  transfer  shall occur past the current end-of-file. If the starting position is at or after the
       end-of-file, 0 shall be returned. If the file refers to a device special file, the result  of  subsequent
       read() requests is implementation-defined.

       If the value of nbyte is greater than {SSIZE_MAX}, the result is implementation-defined.

       When attempting to read from an empty pipe or FIFO:

        * If no process has the pipe open for writing, read() shall return 0 to indicate end-of-file.

        * If  some  process  has the pipe open for writing and O_NONBLOCK is set, read() shall return -1 and set
          errno to [EAGAIN].

        * If some process has the pipe open for writing and O_NONBLOCK is clear, read() shall block the  calling
          thread  until  some  data is written or the pipe is closed by all processes that had the pipe open for
          writing.

       When attempting to read a file (other than a pipe or FIFO) that supports non-blocking reads  and  has  no
       data currently available:

        * If O_NONBLOCK is set, read() shall return -1 and set errno to [EAGAIN].

        * If O_NONBLOCK is clear, read() shall block the calling thread until some data becomes available.

        * The use of the O_NONBLOCK flag has no effect if there is some data available.

       The  read()  function reads data previously written to a file.  If any portion of a regular file prior to
       the end-of-file has not been written, read() shall return bytes  with  value  0.   For  example,  lseek()
       allows the file offset to be set beyond the end of existing data in the file. If data is later written at
       this point, subsequent reads in the gap between the previous end of data and the newly written data shall
       return bytes with value 0 until data is written into the gap.

       Upon  successful  completion,  where  nbyte  is greater than 0, read() shall mark for update the st_atime
       field of the file, and shall return the number of bytes read. This number shall  never  be  greater  than
       nbyte.  The  value  returned  may be less than nbyte if the number of bytes left in the file is less than
       nbyte, if the read() request was interrupted by a signal, or if the file is a pipe  or  FIFO  or  special
       file  and has fewer than nbyte bytes immediately available for reading. For example, a read() from a file
       associated with a terminal may return one typed line of data.

       If a read() is interrupted by a signal before it reads any data, it shall return -1  with  errno  set  to
       [EINTR].

       If  a  read()  is  interrupted  by a signal after it has successfully read some data, it shall return the
       number of bytes read.

       For regular files, no data transfer shall occur past the offset maximum  established  in  the  open  file
       description associated with fildes.

       If fildes refers to a socket, read() shall be equivalent to recv() with no flags set.

       If  the O_DSYNC and O_RSYNC bits have been set, read I/O operations on the file descriptor shall complete
       as defined by synchronized I/O data integrity completion. If the O_SYNC and O_RSYNC bits have  been  set,
       read  I/O  operations on the file descriptor shall complete as defined by synchronized I/O file integrity
       completion.

       If fildes refers to a shared memory object, the result of the read() function is unspecified.

       If fildes refers to a typed memory object, the result of the read() function is unspecified.

       A read() from a STREAMS file can read data in three different modes: byte-stream mode, message-nondiscard
       mode, and message-discard mode. The default shall be byte-stream mode.  This can  be  changed  using  the
       I_SRDOPT  ioctl()  request,  and  can  be tested with I_GRDOPT ioctl(). In byte-stream mode, read() shall
       retrieve data from the STREAM until as many bytes as were requested are transferred, or until there is no
       more data to be retrieved. Byte-stream mode ignores message boundaries.

       In STREAMS message-nondiscard mode, read() shall retrieve data until as many bytes as were requested  are
       transferred,  or  until  a  message  boundary  is  reached. If read() does not retrieve all the data in a
       message, the remaining data shall be left on the STREAM, and can be retrieved by the  next  read()  call.
       Message-discard  mode  also  retrieves  data  until as many bytes as were requested are transferred, or a
       message boundary is reached.  However, unread data remaining in a message after the read() returns  shall
       be discarded, and shall not be available for a subsequent read(), getmsg(), or getpmsg() call.

       How  read()  handles  zero-byte STREAMS messages is determined by the current read mode setting. In byte-
       stream mode, read() shall accept data until it has read nbyte bytes, or until there is no  more  data  to
       read, or until a zero-byte message block is encountered. The read() function shall then return the number
       of  bytes  read,  and  place the zero-byte message back on the STREAM to be retrieved by the next read(),
       getmsg(), or getpmsg(). In message-nondiscard mode or message-discard mode,  a  zero-byte  message  shall
       return  0 and the message shall be removed from the STREAM. When a zero-byte message is read as the first
       message on a STREAM, the message shall be removed from the STREAM and 0 shall be returned, regardless  of
       the read mode.

       A  read()  from  a STREAMS file shall return the data in the message at the front of the STREAM head read
       queue, regardless of the priority band of the message.

       By default, STREAMs are in control-normal mode, in which a read() from a STREAMS file  can  only  process
       messages  that  contain a data part but do not contain a control part. The read() shall fail if a message
       containing a control part is encountered at the STREAM head.  This  default  action  can  be  changed  by
       placing the STREAM in either control-data mode or control-discard mode with the I_SRDOPT ioctl() command.
       In control-data mode, read() shall convert any control part to data and pass it to the application before
       passing  any  data  part  originally  present  in the same message. In control-discard mode, read() shall
       discard message control parts but return to the process any data part in the message.

       In addition, read() shall fail if the STREAM head had processed an asynchronous error before the call. In
       this case, the value of errno shall not reflect the result of read(), but reflect the prior error.  If  a
       hangup  occurs  on the STREAM being read, read() shall continue to operate normally until the STREAM head
       read queue is empty. Thereafter, it shall return 0.

       The pread() function shall be equivalent to read(), except that it shall read from a  given  position  in
       the  file  without changing the file pointer. The first three arguments to pread() are the same as read()
       with the addition of a fourth argument offset for the desired position inside the file.   An  attempt  to
       perform a pread() on a file that is incapable of seeking shall result in an error.

RETURN VALUE

       Upon  successful  completion,  read()     and pread()  shall return a non-negative integer indicating the
       number of bytes actually read. Otherwise, the functions shall return -1 and set  errno  to  indicate  the
       error.

ERRORS

       The read() and   pread()  functions shall fail if:

       EAGAIN The O_NONBLOCK flag is set for the file descriptor and the process would be delayed.

       EBADF  The fildes argument is not a valid file descriptor open for reading.

       EBADMSG
              The  file  is  a STREAM file that is set to control-normal mode and the message waiting to be read
              includes a control part.

       EINTR  The read operation was terminated due to the receipt of a signal, and no data was transferred.

       EINVAL The STREAM or multiplexer referenced by fildes is linked (directly or indirectly) downstream  from
              a multiplexer.

       EIO    The  process is a member of a background process attempting to read from its controlling terminal,
              the process is ignoring or blocking the SIGTTIN signal, or the process  group  is  orphaned.  This
              error may also be generated for implementation-defined reasons.

       EISDIR The  fildes  argument refers to a directory and the implementation does not allow the directory to
              be read using read() or pread(). The readdir() function should be used instead.

       EOVERFLOW
              The file is a regular file, nbyte is greater than 0, the starting position is before  the  end-of-
              file,  and the starting position is greater than or equal to the offset maximum established in the
              open file description associated with fildes.

       The read() function shall fail if:

       EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK

              The file descriptor is for a socket, is marked O_NONBLOCK, and no data is waiting to be received.

       ECONNRESET
              A read was attempted on a socket and the connection was forcibly closed by its peer.

       ENOTCONN
              A read was attempted on a socket that is not connected.

       ETIMEDOUT
              A read was attempted on a socket and a transmission timeout occurred.

       The read() and   pread()  functions may fail if:

       EIO    A physical I/O error has occurred.

       ENOBUFS
              Insufficient resources were available in the system to perform the operation.

       ENOMEM Insufficient memory was available to fulfill the request.

       ENXIO  A request was made of a nonexistent device, or the request was outside  the  capabilities  of  the
              device.

       The pread() function shall fail, and the file pointer shall remain unchanged, if:

       EINVAL The offset argument is invalid. The value is negative.

       EOVERFLOW
              The  file  is  a  regular  file  and  an  attempt was made to read at or beyond the offset maximum
              associated with the file.

       ENXIO  A request was outside the capabilities of the device.

       ESPIPE fildes is associated with a pipe or FIFO.

       The following sections are informative.

EXAMPLES

   Reading Data into a Buffer
       The following example reads data from the file associated with the file descriptor  fd  into  the  buffer
       pointed to by buf.

              #include <sys/types.h>
              #include <unistd.h>
              ...
              char buf[20];
              size_t nbytes;
              ssize_t bytes_read;
              int fd;
              ...
              nbytes = sizeof(buf);
              bytes_read = read(fd, buf, nbytes);
              ...

APPLICATION USAGE

       None.

RATIONALE

       This  volume  of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  does  not  specify the value of the file offset after an error is
       returned; there are too many cases. For programming errors, such as [EBADF], the concept  is  meaningless
       since  no  file  is  involved.  For  errors  that are detected immediately, such as [EAGAIN], clearly the
       pointer should not change. After an interrupt or hardware error, however, an updated value would be  very
       useful and is the behavior of many implementations.

       Note  that a read() of zero bytes does not modify st_atime.  A read() that requests more than zero bytes,
       but returns zero, shall modify st_atime.

       Implementations are allowed, but not required, to perform error checking  for  read()  requests  of  zero
       bytes.

   Input and Output
       The  use of I/O with large byte counts has always presented problems.  Ideas such as lread() and lwrite()
       (using and returning longs) were considered at one time. The current solution is to use abstract types on
       the ISO C standard function to read() and write(). The abstract types can be declared  so  that  existing
       functions  work,  but  can  also  be  declared  so  that  larger  types  can  be  represented  in  future
       implementations. It is presumed that whatever constraints limit the maximum range of  size_t  also  limit
       portable  I/O  requests  to  the  same  range.  This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 also limits the range
       further by requiring that the byte count be limited so that a signed  return  value  remains  meaningful.
       Since  the  return  type  is  also  a  (signed)  abstract  type,  the  byte  count  can be defined by the
       implementation to be larger than an int can hold.

       The standard developers considered adding atomicity requirements to a pipe or FIFO, but  recognized  that
       due  to  the nature of pipes and FIFOs there could be no guarantee of atomicity of reads of {PIPE_BUF} or
       any other size that would be an aid to applications portability.

       This volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires that no action be taken for read() or write() when nbyte  is
       zero.  This  is not intended to take precedence over detection of errors (such as invalid buffer pointers
       or file descriptors). This is consistent with the rest of this volume of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,  but  the
       phrasing  here could be misread to require detection of the zero case before any other errors. A value of
       zero is to be considered a correct value, for which the semantics are a no-op.

       I/O is intended to be atomic to ordinary files and pipes and FIFOs.  Atomic means that all the bytes from
       a single operation that started out together  end  up  together,  without  interleaving  from  other  I/O
       operations.  It  is a known attribute of terminals that this is not honored, and terminals are explicitly
       (and implicitly permanently) excepted, making the behavior unspecified. The  behavior  for  other  device
       types  is  also left unspecified, but the wording is intended to imply that future standards might choose
       to specify atomicity (or not).

       There were recommendations to add format parameters to read() and write() in order  to  handle  networked
       transfers  among  heterogeneous  file system and base hardware types. Such a facility may be required for
       support by the OSI presentation of layer services. However, it was determined that this should correspond
       with similar C-language facilities, and that is beyond the scope of this volume of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
       The  concept  was suggested to the developers of the ISO C standard for their consideration as a possible
       area for future work.

       In 4.3 BSD, a read() or write() that is interrupted by a signal before transferring any data does not  by
       default  return an [EINTR] error, but is restarted. In 4.2 BSD, 4.3 BSD, and the Eighth Edition, there is
       an additional function, select(), whose purpose is to pause until specified activity (data to read, space
       to write, and so on) is detected on specified file descriptors. It is common in applications written  for
       those  systems  for  select()  to  be  used  before  read()  in situations (such as keyboard input) where
       interruption of I/O due to a signal is desired.

       The issue of which files or file types are interruptible is considered an  implementation  design  issue.
       This is often affected primarily by hardware and reliability issues.

       There  are no references to actions taken following an "unrecoverable error". It is considered beyond the
       scope of this volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 to describe what happens in the case of hardware errors.

       Previous versions of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 allowed  two  very  different  behaviors  with  regard  to  the
       handling   of   interrupts.   In  order  to  minimize  the  resulting  confusion,  it  was  decided  that
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 should support only one of these  behaviors.  Historical  practice  on  AT&T-derived
       systems  was  to  have read() and write() return -1 and set errno to [EINTR] when interrupted after some,
       but not all, of the data requested had been transferred. However, the U.S. Department  of  Commerce  FIPS
       151-1  and  FIPS 151-2 require the historical BSD behavior, in which read() and write() return the number
       of bytes actually transferred before the interrupt. If -1 is returned when any data is transferred, it is
       difficult to recover from the error on a seekable device and impossible on a  non-seekable  device.  Most
       new implementations support this behavior. The behavior required by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 is to return the
       number of bytes transferred.

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  does  not  specify  when an implementation that buffers read()ss actually moves the
       data into the user-supplied buffer, so an implementation may chose to do  this  at  the  latest  possible
       moment. Therefore, an interrupt arriving earlier may not cause read() to return a partial byte count, but
       rather to return -1 and set errno to [EINTR].

       Consideration  was  also  given to combining the two previous options, and setting errno to [EINTR] while
       returning a short count. However, not only is there no existing practice that implements this, it is also
       contradictory to the idea that when errno is set, the function responsible shall return -1.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       fcntl()  ,  ioctl()  ,  lseek()  ,  open()  ,  pipe()  ,  readv()  ,  the  Base  Definitions  volume   of
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Chapter 11, General Terminal Interface, <stropts.h>, <sys/uio.h>, <unistd.h>

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition,
       Standard  for  Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
       Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,
       Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between this version and the  original  IEEE  and
       The  Open  Group  Standard,  the  original  IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The
       original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .

IEEE/The Open Group                                   2003                                               READ(P)