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diff --git a/winsup/doc/textbinary.xml b/winsup/doc/textbinary.xml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..112042f82 --- /dev/null +++ b/winsup/doc/textbinary.xml @@ -0,0 +1,196 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding='UTF-8'?> +<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook V4.5//EN" + "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd"> + +<sect1 id="using-textbinary"><title>Text and Binary modes</title> + +<sect2 id="textbin-issue"> <title>The Issue</title> + +<para>On a UNIX system, when an application reads from a file it gets +exactly what's in the file on disk and the converse is true for writing. +The situation is different in the DOS/Windows world where a file can +be opened in one of two modes, binary or text. In the binary mode the +system behaves exactly as in UNIX. However on writing in text mode, a +NL (\n, ^J) is transformed into the sequence CR (\r, ^M) NL. +</para> + +<para>This can wreak havoc with the seek/fseek calls since the number +of bytes actually in the file may differ from that seen by the +application.</para> + +<para>The mode can be specified explicitly as explained in the Programming +section below. In an ideal DOS/Windows world, all programs using lines as +records (such as <command>bash</command>, <command>make</command>, +<command>sed</command> ...) would open files (and change the mode of their +standard input and output) as text. All other programs (such as +<command>cat</command>, <command>cmp</command>, <command>tr</command> ...) +would use binary mode. In practice with Cygwin, programs that deal +explicitly with object files specify binary mode (this is the case of +<command>od</command>, which is helpful to diagnose CR problems). Most +other programs (such as <command>sed</command>, <command>cmp</command>, +<command>tr</command>) use the default mode.</para> + +</sect2> + +<sect2 id="textbin-default"><title>The default Cygwin behavior</title> + +<para>The Cygwin system gives us some flexibility in deciding how files +are to be opened when the mode is not specified explicitly. +The rules are evolving, this section gives the design goals.</para> + +<orderedlist numeration="loweralpha"> +<listitem> +<para>If the filename is specified as a POSIX path and it appears to +reside on a file system that is mounted (i.e. if its pathname starts +with a directory displayed by <command>mount</command>), then the +default is specified by the mount flag. If the file is a symbolic link, +the mode of the target file system applies.</para> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<para>If the file is specified via a MS-DOS pathname (i.e., it contains a +backslash or a colon), the default is binary. +</para> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<para>Pipes, sockets and non-file devices are opened in binary mode. +For pipes opened through the pipe() system call you can use the setmode() +function (see <xref linkend="textbin-devel"></xref> to switch to textmode. +For pipes opened through popen(), you can simply specify text or binary +mode just like in calls to fopen().</para> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<para>Sockets and other non-file devices are always opened in binary mode. +</para> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<para> When redirecting, the Cygwin shells uses rules (a-d). +Non-Cygwin shells always pipe and redirect with binary mode. With +non-Cygwin shells the commands <command> cat filename | program </command> +and <command> program < filename </command> are not equivalent when +<filename>filename</filename> is on a text-mounted partition. </para> +<para>The programs <command>u2d</command> and <command>d2u</command> can +be used to add or remove CR's from a file. <command>u2d</command> add's CR's before a NL. +<command>d2u</command> removes CR's. Use the --help option to these commands +for more information. +</para> +</listitem> +</orderedlist> +</sect2> + +<sect2 id="textbin-question"><title>Binary or text?</title> + +<para>UNIX programs that have been written for maximum portability +will know the difference between text and binary files and act +appropriately under Cygwin. Most programs included in the official +Cygwin distributions should work well in the default mode. </para> + +<para>Binmode is the best choice usually since it's faster and +easier to handle, unless you want to exchange files with native Win32 +applications. It makes most sense to keep the Cygwin distribution +and your Cygwin home directory in binmode and generate text files in +binmode (with UNIX LF lineendings). Most Windows applications can +handle binmode files just fine. A notable exception is the mini-editor +<command>Notepad</command>, which handles UNIX lineendings incorrectly +and only produces output files with DOS CRLF lineendings.</para> + +<para>You can convert files between CRLF and LF lineendings by using +certain tools in the Cygwin distribution like <command>d2u</command> and +<command>u2d</command> from the cygutils package. You can also specify +a directory in the mount table to be mounted in textmode so you can use +that directory for exchange purposes.</para> + +<para>As application programmer you can decide on a file by file base, +or you can specify default open modes depending on the purpose for which +the application open files. See the next section for a description of +your choices.</para> + +</sect2> + +<sect2 id="textbin-devel"><title>Programming</title> + +<para>In the <function>open()</function> function call, binary mode can be +specified with the flag <literal>O_BINARY</literal> and text mode with +<literal>O_TEXT</literal>. These symbols are defined in +<filename>fcntl.h</filename>.</para> + +<para>The <function>mkstemp()</function> and <function>mkstemps()</function> +calls force binary mode. Use <function>mkostemp()</function> or +<function>mkostemps()</function> with the same flags +as <function>open()</function> for more control on temporary files.</para> + +<para>In the <function>fopen()</function> and <function>popen()</function> +function calls, binary mode can be specified by adding a <literal>b</literal> +to the mode string. Text mode is specified by adding a <literal>t</literal> +to the mode string.</para> + +<para>The mode of a file can be changed by the call +<function>setmode(fd,mode)</function> where <literal>fd</literal> is a file +descriptor (an integer) and <literal>mode</literal> is +<literal>O_BINARY</literal> or <literal>O_TEXT</literal>. The function +returns <literal>O_BINARY</literal> or <literal>O_TEXT</literal> depending +on the mode before the call, and <literal>EOF</literal> on error.</para> + +<para>There's also a convenient way to set the default open modes used +in an application by just linking against various object files provided +by Cygwin. For instance, if you want to make sure that all files are +always opened in binary mode by an application, regardless of the mode +of the underlying mount point, just add the file +<filename>/lib/binmode.o</filename> to the link stage of the application +in your project, like this:</para> + +<screen> + $ gcc my_tiny_app.c /lib/binmode.o -o my_tiny_app +</screen> + +<para>Starting with Cygwin 1.7.7, you can use the even simpler:</para> + +<screen> + $ gcc my_tiny_app.c -lbinmode -o my_tiny_app +</screen> + +<para>This adds code which sets the default open mode for all files +opened by <command>my_tiny_app</command> to binary for reading and +writing.</para> + +<para>Cygwin provides the following libraries and object files to set the +default open mode just by linking an application against them:</para> + +<itemizedlist mark="bullet"> + +<listitem> +<screen> +/lib/libautomode.a - Open files for reading in textmode, +/lib/automode.o open files for writing in binary mode +</screen> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<screen> +/lib/libbinmode.a - Open files for reading and writing in binary mode +/lib/binmode.o +</screen> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<screen> +/lib/libtextmode.a - Open files for reading and writing in textmode +/lib/textmode.o +</screen> +</listitem> + +<listitem> +<screen> +/lib/libtextreadmode.a - Open files for reading in textmode, +/lib/textreadmode.o keep default behaviour for writing. +</screen> +</listitem> + +</itemizedlist> + +</sect2> + +</sect1> |