xenial (3) gd_rename.3.gz

Provided by: libgetdata-doc_0.9.0-2.2_all bug

NAME

       gd_rename — change the name of a dirfile field or alias

SYNOPSIS

       #include <getdata.h>

       int gd_rename(DIRFILE *dirfile, const char *old_code, const char *new_name, unsigned int flags);

DESCRIPTION

       The  gd_rename()  function changes the name of the field or alias specified by old_code, which should not
       contain a representation suffix, defined in the dirfile specified by dirfile to  new_name.   If  the  new
       name is the same as the old name, this function does nothing and returns no error.

       When  renaming  a  metafield,  the  metafield should be specified in old_code by its full (slashed) field
       code, while new_name should only contain the new name (without slash).

       If old_code specifies a top-level field with meta subfields, the subfields  will  be  renamed,  too.   By
       default,  this  function  also  updates  ALIAS entries whose target contains old_code to point to the new
       field.  Similarly, specifying the GD_REN_UPDB flag will cause this function to  modify  any  field  entry
       containing  old_code.   As  a  result,  this  function  may  cause  more than one metadata fragment to be
       modified.

       The flags parameter should be zero or more of the following flags, bitwise or'd together:

       GD_REN_DANGLE
              Don't update ALIAS entries, instead turning them into dangling aliases.

       GD_REN_DATA
              if old_code specifies a RAW field, the binary file associated with the field will  be  renamed  as
              well.   Without  this flag, no changes are made to the binary file.  In this case, the field's I/O
              pointer will be reset to the beginning-of-frame.  If field_code specifies a field  of  type  other
              than RAW, this flag is ignored.

       GD_REN_FORCE
              When  updating  field  metadata  (either the target of an alias, or else when specified along with
              GD_REN_UPDB), skip updating field codes which would be invalid (due to /INCLUDE affixes).  Without
              this flag, such invalid field codes causes this function to fail with the error GD_E_BAD_CODE.

       GD_REN_UPDB
              Rename  the  field in any other field specifications which use this field as an input (either as a
              vector input field to a derived field, or else as a scalar field parameter).  Without  this  flag,
              fields which depend on the old name of this field are left unmodified.

RETURN VALUE

       On  success,  gd_rename()  returns zero.  On error, -1 is returned and the dirfile error is set to a non-
       zero error value.  Possible error values are:

       GD_E_ACCMODE
               The specified dirfile was opened read-only.

       GD_E_ALLOC
               The library was unable to allocate memory.

       GD_E_BAD_CODE
               The field specified by old_code was not found.  Or else the resultant metadata  update  tried  to
               change a field code into something prohibited by a fragment's affixes.

       GD_E_BAD_DIRFILE
               The supplied dirfile was invalid.

       GD_E_BAD_FIELD_TYPE
               An attempt was made to rename the immutable INDEX field.

       GD_E_DUPLICATE
               The new name specified is already in use by another entry.

       GD_E_IO An I/O error occurred while attempting to rename the binary file.

       GD_E_PROTECTED
               The  metadata of the format specification fragment containing the renamed entry, or another entry
               affected by this change, was protected from change, or  the  binary  data  of  the  fragment  was
               protected from change and a binary file move was requested.

       GD_E_UNKNOWN_ENCODING
               The  encoding  scheme  of  the  specified  field could not be determined or was not understood by
               GetData.

       GD_E_UNSUPPORTED
               The encoding scheme of the field does not support binary file renaming.

       The dirfile error may be retrieved by calling gd_error(3).  A descriptive error string for the last error
       encountered can be obtained from a call to gd_error_string(3).

SEE ALSO

       gd_metaflush(3), gd_open(3), gd_error(3), gd_error_string(3), dirfile(5), dirfile-format(5)