GETCWD(3) | Library Functions Manual | GETCWD(3) |
getcwd
, getwd
— get working directory pathname
#include
<unistd.h>
char *
getcwd
(char
*buf, size_t
size);
char *
getwd
(char
*buf);
The
getcwd
()
function copies the absolute pathname of the current working directory into
the memory referenced by buf and returns a pointer to
buf. The size argument is the
size, in bytes, of the array referenced by buf.
If buf is NULL
,
space is allocated as necessary to store the pathname. This space may later
be free(3)'d.
The function
getwd
() is a
compatibility routine which calls getcwd
() with its
buf argument and a size of
PATH_MAX
(as defined in the include file
<limits.h>
). Obviously,
buf should be at least
PATH_MAX
bytes in length.
These routines have traditionally been used by programs to save the name of a working directory for the purpose of returning to it. A much faster and less error-prone method of accomplishing this is to open the current directory (.) and use the fchdir(2) function to return.
Upon successful completion, a pointer to the pathname is returned.
Otherwise a null pointer is returned and the global variable
errno is set to indicate the error. In addition,
getwd
() copies the error message associated with
errno into the memory referenced by
buf.
The getwd
() function will fail if:
EACCES
]EINVAL
]ENOENT
]ENOMEM
]ERANGE
]The getcwd
() function conforms to
IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”). The
ability to specify a null pointer and have getcwd
()
allocate memory as necessary is an extension.
The getwd
() function first appeared in
4.0BSD, and getcwd
() in
4.3BSD-Net2.
The getwd
() function does not do
sufficient error checking and is not able to return very long, but valid,
paths. It is provided for compatibility.
January 21, 2014 | OpenBSD-5.5 |