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FMT_SCALED(3) Library Functions Manual FMT_SCALED(3)

fmt_scaled, scan_scaledhandle numbers with a human-readable scale

#include <util.h>

int
scan_scaled(char *number_w_scale, long long *result);

int
fmt_scaled(long long number, char *result);

The () function scans the given number and looks for a terminal scale multiplier of B, K, M, G, T, P or E (in either upper or lower case) for Byte, Kilobyte, Megabyte, Gigabyte, Terabyte, Petabyte, Exabyte (computed using powers of two, i.e., Megabyte = 1024*1024). The number can have a decimal point, as in 1.5K, which returns 1536 (1024+512). If no scale factor is found, B is assumed.

The () function formats a number for display using the same "human-readable" format, that is, a number with one of the above scale factors. Numbers will be printed with a maximum of four digits (preceded by a minus sign if the value is negative); values such as 0B, 100B, 1023B, 1K, 1.5K, 5.5M, and so on, will be generated. The "result" buffer must be allocated with at least FMT_SCALED_STRSIZE bytes. The result will be left-justified in the given space, and NUL-terminated.

The scan_scaled() and fmt_scaled() functions return 0 on success. In case of error, they return -1, leave *result as is, and set errno to one of the following values: ERANGE if the input string represents a number that is too large to represent. EINVAL if an unknown character was used as scale factor, or if the input to scan_scaled() was malformed, e.g., too many '.' characters.

char *cinput = "1.5K";
long long result;
if (scan_scaled(cinput, &result) == 0)
	printf("%s -> %ld\n", cinput, result);
else
	fprintf(stderr, "%s - invalid\n", cinput);

char buf[FMT_SCALED_STRSIZE];
long long ninput = 10483892;
if (fmt_scaled(ninput, buf) == 0)
	printf("%lld -> %s\n", ninput, buf);
else
	fprintf(stderr, "fmt scaled failed (errno %d)", errno);

printf(3), scanf(3)

The functions fmt_scaled() and scan_scaled() first appeared in OpenBSD 3.4.

Ken Stailey wrote the first version of the code that became fmt_scaled(), originally inside OpenBSD df(1). Ian Darwin excerpted this and made it into a library routine (with significant help from Paul Janzen), and wrote scan_scaled().

Some of the scale factors have misleading meanings in lower case (p for P is incorrect; p should be pico- and P for Peta-). However, we bend the SI rules in favor of common sense here. A person creating a disk partition of "100m" is unlikely to require 100 millibytes (i.e., 0.1 byte) of storage in the partition; 100 megabytes is the only reasonable interpretation.

Cannot represent the larger scale factors on all architectures.

Ignores the current locale.

July 29, 2008 OpenBSD-5.3