SPNU151V January   1998  – February 2020

 

  1.   Read This First
    1.     About This Manual
    2.     Notational Conventions
    3.     Related Documentation
    4.     Related Documentation From Texas Instruments
    5.     Trademarks
  2. 1Introduction to the Software Development Tools
    1. 1.1 Software Development Tools Overview
    2. 1.2 Compiler Interface
    3. 1.3 ANSI/ISO Standard
    4. 1.4 Output Files
    5. 1.5 Utilities
  3. 2Using the C/C++ Compiler
    1. 2.1  About the Compiler
    2. 2.2  Invoking the C/C++ Compiler
    3. 2.3  Changing the Compiler's Behavior with Options
      1. 2.3.1  Linker Options
      2. 2.3.2  Frequently Used Options
      3. 2.3.3  Miscellaneous Useful Options
      4. 2.3.4  Run-Time Model Options
      5. 2.3.5  Symbolic Debugging and Profiling Options
      6. 2.3.6  Specifying Filenames
      7. 2.3.7  Changing How the Compiler Interprets Filenames
      8. 2.3.8  Changing How the Compiler Processes C Files
      9. 2.3.9  Changing How the Compiler Interprets and Names Extensions
      10. 2.3.10 Specifying Directories
      11. 2.3.11 Assembler Options
      12. 2.3.12 Deprecated Options
    4. 2.4  Controlling the Compiler Through Environment Variables
      1. 2.4.1 Setting Default Compiler Options (TI_ARM_C_OPTION)
      2. 2.4.2 Naming One or More Alternate Directories (TI_ARM_C_DIR)
    5. 2.5  Controlling the Preprocessor
      1. 2.5.1  Predefined Macro Names
      2. 2.5.2  The Search Path for #include Files
        1. 2.5.2.1 Adding a Directory to the #include File Search Path (--include_path Option)
      3. 2.5.3  Support for the #warning and #warn Directives
      4. 2.5.4  Generating a Preprocessed Listing File (--preproc_only Option)
      5. 2.5.5  Continuing Compilation After Preprocessing (--preproc_with_compile Option)
      6. 2.5.6  Generating a Preprocessed Listing File with Comments (--preproc_with_comment Option)
      7. 2.5.7  Generating Preprocessed Listing with Line-Control Details (--preproc_with_line Option)
      8. 2.5.8  Generating Preprocessed Output for a Make Utility (--preproc_dependency Option)
      9. 2.5.9  Generating a List of Files Included with #include (--preproc_includes Option)
      10. 2.5.10 Generating a List of Macros in a File (--preproc_macros Option)
    6. 2.6  Passing Arguments to main()
    7. 2.7  Understanding Diagnostic Messages
      1. 2.7.1 Controlling Diagnostic Messages
      2. 2.7.2 How You Can Use Diagnostic Suppression Options
    8. 2.8  Other Messages
    9. 2.9  Generating Cross-Reference Listing Information (--gen_cross_reference Option)
    10. 2.10 Generating a Raw Listing File (--gen_preprocessor_listing Option)
    11. 2.11 Using Inline Function Expansion
      1. 2.11.1 Inlining Intrinsic Operators
      2. 2.11.2 Inlining Restrictions
    12. 2.12 Using Interlist
      1.      Example 1. An Interlisted Assembly Language File
    13. 2.13 Controlling Application Binary Interface
    14. 2.14 VFP Support
    15. 2.15 Enabling Entry Hook and Exit Hook Functions
  4. 3Optimizing Your Code
    1. 3.1  Invoking Optimization
    2. 3.2  Controlling Code Size Versus Speed
    3. 3.3  Performing File-Level Optimization (--opt_level=3 option)
      1. 3.3.1 Creating an Optimization Information File (--gen_opt_info Option)
    4. 3.4  Program-Level Optimization (--program_level_compile and --opt_level=3 options)
      1. 3.4.1 Controlling Program-Level Optimization (--call_assumptions Option)
      2. 3.4.2 Optimization Considerations When Mixing C/C++ and Assembly
    5. 3.5  Automatic Inline Expansion (--auto_inline Option)
    6. 3.6  Link-Time Optimization (--opt_level=4 Option)
      1. 3.6.1 Option Handling
      2. 3.6.2 Incompatible Types
    7. 3.7  Using Feedback Directed Optimization
      1. 3.7.1 Feedback Directed Optimization
        1. 3.7.1.1 Phase 1 -- Collect Program Profile Information
        2. 3.7.1.2 Phase 2 -- Use Application Profile Information for Optimization
        3. 3.7.1.3 Generating and Using Profile Information
        4. 3.7.1.4 Example Use of Feedback Directed Optimization
        5. 3.7.1.5 The .ppdata Section
        6. 3.7.1.6 Feedback Directed Optimization and Code Size Tune
        7. 3.7.1.7 Instrumented Program Execution Overhead
        8. 3.7.1.8 Invalid Profile Data
      2. 3.7.2 Profile Data Decoder
      3. 3.7.3 Feedback Directed Optimization API
      4. 3.7.4 Feedback Directed Optimization Summary
    8. 3.8  Using Profile Information to Analyze Code Coverage
      1. 3.8.1 Code Coverage
        1. 3.8.1.1 Phase1 -- Collect Program Profile Information
        2. 3.8.1.2 Phase 2 -- Generate Code Coverage Reports
      2. 3.8.2 Related Features and Capabilities
        1. 3.8.2.1 Path Profiler
        2. 3.8.2.2 Analysis Options
        3. 3.8.2.3 Environment Variables
    9. 3.9  Accessing Aliased Variables in Optimized Code
    10. 3.10 Use Caution With asm Statements in Optimized Code
    11. 3.11 Using the Interlist Feature With Optimization
      1.      Example 1. The Function From Compiled With the -O2 and --optimizer_interlist Options
      2.      Example 2. The Function From Compiled with the --opt_level=2, --optimizer_interlist, and --c_src_interlist Options
    12. 3.12 Debugging and Profiling Optimized Code
      1. 3.12.1 Profiling Optimized Code
    13. 3.13 What Kind of Optimization Is Being Performed?
      1. 3.13.1  Cost-Based Register Allocation
      2. 3.13.2  Alias Disambiguation
      3. 3.13.3  Branch Optimizations and Control-Flow Simplification
      4. 3.13.4  Data Flow Optimizations
      5. 3.13.5  Expression Simplification
      6. 3.13.6  Inline Expansion of Functions
      7. 3.13.7  Function Symbol Aliasing
      8. 3.13.8  Induction Variables and Strength Reduction
      9. 3.13.9  Loop-Invariant Code Motion
      10. 3.13.10 Loop Rotation
      11. 3.13.11 Instruction Scheduling
      12. 3.13.12 Tail Merging
      13. 3.13.13 Autoincrement Addressing
      14. 3.13.14 Block Conditionalizing
        1.       Example 3. Block Conditionalizing C Source
        2.       Example 4. C/C++ Compiler Output for
      15. 3.13.15 Epilog Inlining
      16. 3.13.16 Removing Comparisons to Zero
      17. 3.13.17 Integer Division With Constant Divisor
      18. 3.13.18 Branch Chaining
  5. 4Linking C/C++ Code
    1. 4.1 Invoking the Linker Through the Compiler (-z Option)
      1. 4.1.1 Invoking the Linker Separately
      2. 4.1.2 Invoking the Linker as Part of the Compile Step
      3. 4.1.3 Disabling the Linker (--compile_only Compiler Option)
    2. 4.2 Linker Code Optimizations
      1. 4.2.1 Generate List of Dead Functions (--generate_dead_funcs_list Option)
      2. 4.2.2 Generating Aggregate Data Subsections (--gen_data_subsections Compiler Option)
    3. 4.3 Controlling the Linking Process
      1. 4.3.1 Including the Run-Time-Support Library
        1. 4.3.1.1 Automatic Run-Time-Support Library Selection
          1.        Example 1. Using the --issue_remarks Option
        2. 4.3.1.2 Manual Run-Time-Support Library Selection
        3. 4.3.1.3 Library Order for Searching for Symbols
      2. 4.3.2 Run-Time Initialization
      3. 4.3.3 Initialization of Cinit and Watchdog Timer Hold
      4. 4.3.4 Global Object Constructors
      5. 4.3.5 Specifying the Type of Global Variable Initialization
      6. 4.3.6 Specifying Where to Allocate Sections in Memory
      7. 4.3.7 A Sample Linker Command File
        1.       Example 2. Linker Command File
  6. 5C/C++ Language Implementation
    1. 5.1  Characteristics of ARM C
      1. 5.1.1 Implementation-Defined Behavior
    2. 5.2  Characteristics of ARM C++
    3. 5.3  Using MISRA C 2004
    4. 5.4  Using the ULP Advisor
    5. 5.5  Data Types
      1. 5.5.1 Size of Enum Types
    6. 5.6  File Encodings and Character Sets
    7. 5.7  Keywords
      1. 5.7.1 The const Keyword
      2. 5.7.2 The __interrupt Keyword
      3. 5.7.3 The volatile Keyword
        1.       Example 1. Volatile for Local Variables With setjmp
    8. 5.8  C++ Exception Handling
    9. 5.9  Register Variables and Parameters
      1. 5.9.1 Local Register Variables and Parameters
      2. 5.9.2 Global Register Variables
    10. 5.10 The __asm Statement
    11. 5.11 Pragma Directives
      1. 5.11.1  The CALLS Pragma
      2. 5.11.2  The CHECK_MISRA Pragma
      3. 5.11.3  The CHECK_ULP Pragma
      4. 5.11.4  The CODE_ALIGN Pragma
      5. 5.11.5  The CODE_SECTION Pragma
        1.       Example 2. Using the CODE_SECTION Pragma C Source File
        2.       Example 3. Generated Assembly Code From
      6. 5.11.6  The CODE_STATE Pragma
      7. 5.11.7  The DATA_ALIGN Pragma
      8. 5.11.8  The DATA_SECTION Pragma
        1.       Example 4. Using the DATA_SECTION Pragma C Source File
        2.       Example 5. Using the DATA_SECTION Pragma C++ Source File
        3.       Example 6. Using the DATA_SECTION Pragma Assembly Source File
      9. 5.11.9  The Diagnostic Message Pragmas
      10. 5.11.10 The DUAL_STATE Pragma
      11. 5.11.11 The FORCEINLINE Pragma
      12. 5.11.12 The FORCEINLINE_RECURSIVE Pragma
      13. 5.11.13 The FUNC_ALWAYS_INLINE Pragma
      14. 5.11.14 The FUNC_CANNOT_INLINE Pragma
      15. 5.11.15 The FUNC_EXT_CALLED Pragma
      16. 5.11.16 The FUNCTION_OPTIONS Pragma
      17. 5.11.17 The INTERRUPT Pragma
      18. 5.11.18 The LOCATION Pragma
      19. 5.11.19 The MUST_ITERATE Pragma
        1. 5.11.19.1 The MUST_ITERATE Pragma Syntax
        2. 5.11.19.2 Using MUST_ITERATE to Expand Compiler Knowledge of Loops
      20. 5.11.20 The NOINIT and PERSISTENT Pragmas
      21. 5.11.21 The NOINLINE Pragma
      22. 5.11.22 The NO_HOOKS Pragma
      23. 5.11.23 The once Pragma
      24. 5.11.24 The pack Pragma
      25. 5.11.25 The RESET_MISRA Pragma
      26. 5.11.26 The RESET_ULP Pragma
      27. 5.11.27 The RETAIN Pragma
      28. 5.11.28 The SET_CODE_SECTION and SET_DATA_SECTION Pragmas
        1.       Example 7. Setting Section With SET_DATA_SECTION Pragma
        2.       Example 8. Setting a Section With SET_CODE_SECTION Pragma
        3.       Example 9. Overriding SET_DATA_SECTION Setting
      29. 5.11.29 The SWI_ALIAS Pragma
        1.       Example 10. Using the SWI_ALIAS Pragma C Source File
        2.       Example 11. Generated Assembly File
      30. 5.11.30 The TASK Pragma
      31. 5.11.31 The UNROLL Pragma
      32. 5.11.32 The WEAK Pragma
    12. 5.12 The _Pragma Operator
    13. 5.13 Application Binary Interface
    14. 5.14 ARM Instruction Intrinsics
    15. 5.15 Object File Symbol Naming Conventions (Linknames)
    16. 5.16 Changing the ANSI/ISO C/C++ Language Mode
      1. 5.16.1 C99 Support (--c99)
      2. 5.16.2 C11 Support (--c11)
      3. 5.16.3 Strict ANSI Mode and Relaxed ANSI Mode (--strict_ansi and --relaxed_ansi)
    17. 5.17 GNU, Clang, and ACLE Language Extensions
      1. 5.17.1 Extensions
      2. 5.17.2 Function Attributes
      3. 5.17.3 Variable Attributes
      4. 5.17.4 Type Attributes
      5. 5.17.5 Built-In Functions
    18. 5.18 AUTOSAR
    19. 5.19 Compiler Limits
  7. 6Run-Time Environment
    1. 6.1  Memory Model
      1. 6.1.1 Sections
      2. 6.1.2 C/C++ System Stack
      3. 6.1.3 Dynamic Memory Allocation
    2. 6.2  Object Representation
      1. 6.2.1 Data Type Storage
        1. 6.2.1.1 char and short Data Types (signed and unsigned)
        2. 6.2.1.2 float, int, and long Data Types (signed and unsigned)
        3. 6.2.1.3 double, long double, and long long Data Types (signed and unsigned)
        4. 6.2.1.4 Pointer to Data Member Types
        5. 6.2.1.5 Pointer to Member Function Types
        6. 6.2.1.6 Structure and Array Alignment
      2. 6.2.2 Bit Fields
      3. 6.2.3 Character String Constants
    3. 6.3  Register Conventions
    4. 6.4  Function Structure and Calling Conventions
      1. 6.4.1 How a Function Makes a Call
      2. 6.4.2 How a Called Function Responds
      3. 6.4.3 C Exception Handler Calling Convention
      4. 6.4.4 Accessing Arguments and Local Variables
    5. 6.5  Accessing Linker Symbols in C and C++
    6. 6.6  Interfacing C and C++ With Assembly Language
      1. 6.6.1 Using Assembly Language Modules With C/C++ Code
      2. 6.6.2 Accessing Assembly Language Functions From C/C++
        1.       Example 1. Calling an Assembly Language Function From a C/C++ Program
        2.       Example 2. Assembly Language Program Called by
      3. 6.6.3 Accessing Assembly Language Variables From C/C++
        1. 6.6.3.1 Accessing Assembly Language Global Variables
          1.        Example 3. Assembly Language Variable Program
          2.        Example 4. C Program to Access Assembly Language From
        2. 6.6.3.2 Accessing Assembly Language Constants
          1.        Example 5. Accessing an Assembly Language Constant From C
          2.        Example 6. Assembly Language Program for
      4. 6.6.4 Sharing C/C++ Header Files With Assembly Source
      5. 6.6.5 Using Inline Assembly Language
      6. 6.6.6 Modifying Compiler Output
    7. 6.7  Interrupt Handling
      1. 6.7.1 Saving Registers During Interrupts
      2. 6.7.2 Using C/C++ Interrupt Routines
      3. 6.7.3 Using Assembly Language Interrupt Routines
      4. 6.7.4 How to Map Interrupt Routines to Interrupt Vectors
        1.       Example 7. Sample intvecs.asm File
      5. 6.7.5 Using Software Interrupts
      6. 6.7.6 Other Interrupt Information
    8. 6.8  Intrinsic Run-Time-Support Arithmetic and Conversion Routines
      1. 6.8.1 CPSR Register and Interrupt Intrinsics
    9. 6.9  Built-In Functions
    10. 6.10 System Initialization
      1. 6.10.1 Boot Hook Functions for System Pre-Initialization
      2. 6.10.2 Run-Time Stack
      3. 6.10.3 Automatic Initialization of Variables
        1. 6.10.3.1 Zero Initializing Variables
        2. 6.10.3.2 Direct Initialization
        3. 6.10.3.3 Autoinitialization of Variables at Run Time
        4. 6.10.3.4 Autoinitialization Tables
          1. 6.10.3.4.1 Length Followed by Data Format
          2. 6.10.3.4.2 Zero Initialization Format
          3. 6.10.3.4.3 Run Length Encoded (RLE) Format
          4. 6.10.3.4.4 Lempel-Ziv-Storer-Szymanski Compression (LZSS) Format
          5. 6.10.3.4.5 Sample C Code to Process the C Autoinitialization Table
            1.         Example 8. Processing the C Autoinitialization Table
        5. 6.10.3.5 Initialization of Variables at Load Time
        6. 6.10.3.6 Global Constructors
      4. 6.10.4 Initialization Tables
        1.       Example 9. Initialized Variables Defined in C
        2.       Example 10. Initialized Information for Variables Defined in
    11. 6.11 Dual-State Interworking Under TIABI (Deprecated)
      1. 6.11.1 Level of Dual-State Support
      2. 6.11.2 Implementation
        1. 6.11.2.1 Naming Conventions for Entry Points
        2. 6.11.2.2 Indirect Calls
          1.        Example 11. C Code Compiled for 16-BIS State: sum( )
          2.        Example 12. 16-Bit Assembly Program for
          3.        Example 13. C Code Compiled for 32-BIS State: sum( )
          4.        Example 14. 32-Bit Assembly Program for
  8. 7Using Run-Time-Support Functions and Building Libraries
    1. 7.1 C and C++ Run-Time Support Libraries
      1. 7.1.1 Linking Code With the Object Library
      2. 7.1.2 Header Files
      3. 7.1.3 Modifying a Library Function
      4. 7.1.4 Support for String Handling
      5. 7.1.5 Minimal Support for Internationalization
      6. 7.1.6 Allowable Number of Open Files
      7. 7.1.7 Nonstandard Header Files in the Source Tree
      8. 7.1.8 Library Naming Conventions
    2. 7.2 The C I/O Functions
      1. 7.2.1 High-Level I/O Functions
        1. 7.2.1.1 Formatting and the Format Conversion Buffer
      2. 7.2.2 Overview of Low-Level I/O Implementation
      3. 7.2.3 Device-Driver Level I/O Functions
      4. 7.2.4 Adding a User-Defined Device Driver for C I/O
        1.       Example 1. Mapping Default Streams to Device
      5. 7.2.5 The device Prefix
        1.       Example 2. Program for C I/O Device
    3. 7.3 Handling Reentrancy (_register_lock() and _register_unlock() Functions)
    4. 7.4 Library-Build Process
      1. 7.4.1 Required Non-Texas Instruments Software
      2. 7.4.2 Using the Library-Build Process
        1. 7.4.2.1 Automatic Standard Library Rebuilding by the Linker
        2. 7.4.2.2 Invoking mklib Manually
          1. 7.4.2.2.1 Building Standard Libraries
          2. 7.4.2.2.2 Shared or Read-Only Library Directory
          3. 7.4.2.2.3 Building Libraries With Custom Options
          4. 7.4.2.2.4 The mklib Program Option Summary
      3. 7.4.3 Extending mklib
        1. 7.4.3.1 Underlying Mechanism
        2. 7.4.3.2 Libraries From Other Vendors
  9. 8C++ Name Demangler
    1. 8.1 Invoking the C++ Name Demangler
    2. 8.2 Sample Usage of the C++ Name Demangler
      1.      Example 1. C++ Code for calories_in_a_banana
      2.      Example 2. Resulting Assembly for calories_in_a_banana
      3.      Example 3. Result After Running the C++ Name Demangler
  10.   A Glossary
    1.     A.1 Terminology
  11.   B Revision History
    1.     B.1 Recent Revisions

Device-Driver Level I/O Functions

At the next level are the device-level drivers. They map directly to the low-level I/O functions. The default device driver is the HOST device driver, which uses the debugger to perform file operations. The HOST device driver is automatically used for the default C streams stdin, stdout, and stderr.

The HOST device driver shares a special protocol with the debugger running on a host system so that the host can perform the C I/O requested by the program. Instructions for C I/O operations that the program wants to perform are encoded in a special buffer named _CIOBUF_ in the .cio section. The debugger halts the program at a special breakpoint (C$$IO$$), reads and decodes the target memory, and performs the requested operation. The result is encoded into _CIOBUF_, the program is resumed, and the target decodes the result.

The HOST device is implemented with seven functions, HOSTopen, HOSTclose, HOSTread, HOSTwrite, HOSTlseek, HOSTunlink, and HOSTrename, which perform the encoding. Each function is called from the low-level I/O function with a similar name.

A device driver is composed of seven required functions. Not all function need to be meaningful for all devices, but all seven must be defined. Here we show the names of all seven functions as starting with DEV, but you may choose any name except for HOST.

DEV_open
Open File for I/O
Syntax

int DEV_open (const char *path, unsigned flags, intllv_fd);

Description

This function finds a file matching path and opens it for I/O as requested by flags.

  • The path is the filename of the file to be opened. If the name of a file passed to open has a device prefix, the device prefix will be stripped by open, so DEV_open will not see it. (See Section 7.2.5 for details on the device prefix.)
  • The flags are attributes that specify how the file is manipulated. The flags are specified using the following symbols:
  • O_RDONLY (0x0000) /* open for reading */ O_WRONLY (0x0001) /* open for writing */ O_RDWR (0x0002) /* open for read & write */ O_APPEND (0x0008) /* append on each write */ O_CREAT (0x0200) /* open with file create */ O_TRUNC (0x0400) /* open with truncation */ O_BINARY (0x8000) /* open in binary mode */

    See POSIX for further explanation of the flags.

  • The llv_fd is treated as a suggested low-level file descriptor. This is a historical artifact; newly-defined device drivers should ignore this argument. This differs from the low-level I/O open function.

This function must arrange for information to be saved for each file descriptor, typically including a file position indicator and any significant flags. For the HOST version, all the bookkeeping is handled by the debugger running on the host machine. If the device uses an internal buffer, the buffer can be created when a file is opened, or the buffer can be created during a read or write.

Return Value

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason the file could not be opened; such as the file does not exist, could not be created, or there are too many files open. The value of errno may optionally be set to indicate the exact error (the HOST device does not set errno). Some devices might have special failure conditions; for instance, if a device is read-only, a file cannot be opened O_WRONLY.

On success, this function must return a non-negative file descriptor unique among all open files handled by the specific device. The file descriptor need not be unique across devices. The device file descriptor is used only by low-level functions when calling the device-driver-level functions. The low-level function open allocates its own unique file descriptor for the high-level functions to call the low-level functions. Code that uses only high-level I/O functions need not be aware of these file descriptors.

DEV_close
Close File for I/O
Syntax

int DEV_close (int dev_fd);

Description

This function closes a valid open file descriptor.

On some devices, DEV_close may need to be responsible for checking if this is the last file descriptor pointing to a file that was unlinked. If so, it is responsible for ensuring that the file is actually removed from the device and the resources reclaimed, if appropriate.

Return Value

This function should return -1 to indicate an error if the file descriptor is invalid in some way, such as being out of range or already closed, but this is not required. The user should not call close() with an invalid file descriptor.

DEV_read
Read Characters from a File
Syntax

int DEV_read (intdev_fd, char *buf, unsignedcount);

Description

The read function reads count bytes from the input file associated with dev_fd.

  • The dev_fd is the number assigned by open to an opened file.
  • The buf is where the read characters are placed.
  • The count is the number of characters to read from the file.
Return Value

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason no bytes could be read from the file. This could be because of an attempt to read from a O_WRONLY file, or for device-specific reasons.

If count is 0, no bytes are read and this function returns 0.

This function returns the number of bytes read, from 0 to count. 0 indicates that EOF was reached before any bytes were read. It is not an error to read less than count bytes; this is common if the are not enough bytes left in the file or the request was larger than an internal device buffer size.

DEV_write
Write Characters to a File
Syntax

int DEV_write (intdev_fd, const char *buf, unsignedcount);

Description

This function writes count bytes to the output file.

  • The dev_fd is the number assigned by open to an opened file.
  • The buffer is where the write characters are placed.
  • The count is the number of characters to write to the file.
Return Value

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason no bytes could be written to the file. This could be because of an attempt to read from a O_RDONLY file, or for device-specific reasons.

DEV_lseek
Set File Position Indicator
Syntax

off_t DEV_lseek (intdev_fd, off_toffset, intorigin);

Description

This function sets the file's position indicator for this file descriptor as lseek.

If lseek is supported, it should not allow a seek to before the beginning of the file, but it should support seeking past the end of the file. Such seeks do not change the size of the file, but if it is followed by a write, the file size will increase.

Return Value

If successful, this function returns the new value of the file position indicator.

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason no bytes could be written to the file. For many devices, the lseek operation is nonsensical (e.g. a computer monitor).

Delete File
Syntax

int DEV_unlink (const char *path);

Description

Remove the association of the pathname with the file. This means that the file may no longer be opened using this name, but the file may not actually be immediately removed.

Depending on the device, the file may be immediately removed, but for a device which allows open file descriptors to point to unlinked files, the file will not actually be deleted until the last file descriptor is closed. See Section 7.2.3.

Return Value

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason the file could not be unlinked (delayed removal does not count as a failure to unlink.)

If successful, this function returns 0.

DEV_rename
Rename File
Syntax

int DEV_rename (const char *old_name, const char *new_name);

Description

This function changes the name associated with the file.

  • The old_name is the current name of the file.
  • The new_name is the new name for the file.
Return Value

This function must return -1 to indicate an error if for some reason the file could not be renamed, such as the file doesn't exist, or the new name already exists.

NOTE

It is inadvisable to allow renaming a file so that it is on a different device. In general this would require a whole file copy, which may be more expensive than you expect.

If successful, this function returns 0.