*** UNIX MANUAL PAGE BROWSER ***

A Nergahak database for man pages research.

Navigation

Directory Browser

1Browse 4.4BSD4.4BSD
1Browse Digital UNIXDigital UNIX 4.0e
1Browse FreeBSDFreeBSD 14.3
1Browse MINIXMINIX 3.4.0rc6-d5e4fc0
1Browse NetBSDNetBSD 10.1
1Browse OpenBSDOpenBSD 7.7
1Browse UNIX v7Version 7 UNIX
1Browse UNIX v10Version 10 UNIX

Manual Page Search

Manual Page Result

0 Command: realpath | Section: 3 | Source: FreeBSD | File: realpath.3.gz
REALPATH(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual REALPATH(3) NAME realpath - returns the canonicalized absolute pathname LIBRARY Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS #include <stdlib.h> char * realpath(const char * restrict pathname, char * restrict resolved_path); DESCRIPTION The realpath() function resolves all symbolic links, extra "/" characters and references to /./ and /../ in pathname, and copies the resulting absolute pathname into the memory pointed to by resolved_path. The resolved_path argument must point to a buffer capable of storing at least PATH_MAX characters, or be NULL. The realpath() function will resolve both absolute and relative paths and return the absolute pathname corresponding to pathname. All components of pathname must exist when realpath() is called, and all but the last component must name either directories or symlinks pointing to the directories. RETURN VALUES The realpath() function returns resolved_path on success. If the function was supplied NULL as resolved_path, and operation did not cause errors, the returned value is a null-terminated string in a buffer allocated by a call to malloc(3). If an error occurs, realpath() returns NULL, and if resolved_path is not NULL, the array that it points to contains the pathname which caused the problem. ERRORS The function realpath() may fail and set the external variable errno for any of the errors specified for the library functions lstat(2), readlink(2) and getcwd(3). SEE ALSO getcwd(3) HISTORY The realpath() function first appeared in 4.4BSD. CAVEATS This implementation of realpath() differs slightly from the Solaris implementation. The 4.4BSD version always returns absolute pathnames, whereas the Solaris implementation will, under certain circumstances, return a relative resolved_path when given a relative pathname. FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 May 11, 2012 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8

Navigation Options