GETGRENT(3) | Library Functions Manual | GETGRENT(3) |
getgrent
,
getgrnam
, getgrnam_r
,
getgrgid
, getgrgid_r
,
getgruuid
, getgruuid_r
,
setgroupent
, setgrent
,
endgrent
— group database
operations
Standard system libraries.
#include <grp.h>
#include <uuid/uuid.h>
struct group *
getgrent
(void);
struct group *
getgrnam
(const
char *name);
int
getgrnam_r
(const
char *name, struct group
*grp, char *buffer,
size_t bufsize,
struct group
**result);
struct group *
getgrgid
(gid_t
gid);
int
getgrgid_r
(gid_t
gid, struct group
*grp, char *buffer,
size_t bufsize,
struct group
**result);
int
getgruuid
(uuid_t
uuid);
int
getgruuid_r
(uuid_t
uuid, struct group
*grp, char *buffer,
size_t bufsize,
struct group
**result);
int
setgroupent
(int
stayopen);
void
setgrent
(void);
void
endgrent
(void);
These functions obtain information from
opendirectoryd(8), including records in
/etc/group which is described in
group(5). Each line of the database is defined by the
structure group found in the include file
<grp.h>
:
struct group { char *gr_name; /* group name */ char *gr_passwd; /* group password */ gid_t gr_gid; /* group id */ char **gr_mem; /* group members */ };
The functions
getgrnam
(),
getgrgid
(),
and
getgruuid
()
search the group database for the given group name pointed to by
name, the group id given by gid,
or the UUID given by uuid respectively, returning the
first one encountered. Identical group names, group gids, or uuids may
result in undefined behavior.
Note that the groups file
/etc/group does not contain group UUIDs. The UUID
for a group may be found using
mbr_gid_to_uuid
().
On OS X, these routines are thread-safe and return a pointer to a thread-specific data structure. The contents of this data structure are automatically released by subsequent calls to any of these routines on the same thread, or when the thread exits. These routines are therefore unsuitable for use in libraries or frameworks, from where they may overwrite the per-thread data that the calling application expects to find as a result of its own calls to these routines. Library and framework code should use the alternative reentrant variants detailed below.
The
getgrent
()
function searches all available directory services on it's first invocation.
It caches the returned entries in a list and returns group entries one at a
time.
NOTE
that
getgrent
()
may cause a very lengthy search for group records by
opendirectoryd
and may result in a large number of
group records being cached by the calling process. Use of this function is
not advised.
The functions
getgrnam_r
(),
getgrgid_r
(),
and
getgruuid_r
()
are alternative versions of getgrnam
(),
getgrgid
(), and getgruuid
()
respectively. The caller must provide storage for the results of the search
in the grp, buffer,
bufsize, and result arguments.
When these functions are successful, the grp argument
will be filled-in, and a pointer to that argument will be stored in
result. If an entry is not found or an error occurs,
result will be set to
NULL
.
These functions will open the group file for reading, if necessary.
The
setgroupent
()
function causes getgrent
() to ``rewind'' to the
beginning of the list of entries cached by a previous
getgrent
() call. The cache is not cleared. The
stayopen parameter value is unused on OS X.
The
setgrent
()
and
endgrent
()
functions clear the cached results from a previous
getgrent
() call.
The functions getgrent
(),
getgrnam
(), and getgrgid
(),
return a pointer to a group structure on success or
NULL
if the entry is not found or if an error
occurs. If an error does occur, errno will be set.
Note that programs must explicitly set errno to zero
before calling any of these functions if they need to distinguish between a
non-existent entry and an error. The functions
getgrnam_r
(), getgrgid_r
(),
and getgruuid_r
() return 0 if no error occurred, or
an error number to indicate failure. It is not an error if a matching entry
is not found. (Thus, if result is set to
NULL
and the return value is 0, no matching entry
exists.)
setgroupent
() returns the value 1 if
successful, otherwise the value 0 is returned. The functions
setgrent
(), endgrent
(), and
setgrfile
() have no return value.
The historic function setgrfile
(), which
allowed the specification of alternate group databases, has been deprecated
and is no longer available.
getpwent(3), group(5), mbr_gid_to_uuid(3,) opendirectory(8), yp(8)
The getgrent
(),
getgrnam
(), getgrnam_r
(),
getgrgid
(), getgrgid_r
() and
endgrent
() functions conform to
ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996 (“POSIX.1”). The
setgrent
() function differs from that standard in
that its return type is int rather than
void.
The functions endgrent
(),
getgrent
(), getgrnam
(),
getgrgid
(), and setgrent
()
appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. The
functions setgrfile
() and
setgroupent
() appeared in
4.3BSD-Reno. The functions
getgrnam_r
() and
getgrgid_r
() appeared in FreeBSD
5.1. The functions getgruuid
() and
getgruuid_r
() appeared in Mac OS X 10.8.
The functions getgrent
(),
getgrnam
(), getgrgid
(),
getgruuid
(), setgroupent
()
and setgrent
() leave their results in an internal
thread-specific memory and return a pointer to that object. Subsequent calls
to the same function will modify the same object.
October 26, 2011 | Mac OS X 12 |