diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'tempfile.h')
-rw-r--r-- | tempfile.h | 25 |
1 files changed, 13 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/tempfile.h b/tempfile.h index 2f0038decd..d854dcdd3e 100644 --- a/tempfile.h +++ b/tempfile.h @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ * control of the file. * * * Close the file descriptor without removing or renaming the - * temporary file by calling `close_tempfile()`, and later call + * temporary file by calling `close_tempfile_gently()`, and later call * `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()`. * * Even after the temporary file is renamed or deleted, the `tempfile` @@ -59,7 +59,7 @@ * and remove the temporary file. * * If you need to close the file descriptor yourself, do so by calling - * `close_tempfile()`. You should never call `close(2)` or `fclose(3)` + * `close_tempfile_gently()`. You should never call `close(2)` or `fclose(3)` * yourself, otherwise the `struct tempfile` structure would still * think that the file descriptor needs to be closed, and a later * cleanup would result in duplicate calls to `close(2)`. Worse yet, @@ -74,9 +74,10 @@ * `create_tempfile()` returns a file descriptor on success or -1 on * failure. On errors, `errno` describes the reason for failure. * - * `delete_tempfile()`, `rename_tempfile()`, and `close_tempfile()` - * return 0 on success. On failure they set `errno` appropriately, do - * their best to delete the temporary file, and return -1. + * `delete_tempfile()`, `rename_tempfile()`, and `close_tempfile_gently()` + * return 0 on success. On failure they set `errno` appropriately and return + * -1. `delete` and `rename` (but not `close`) do their best to delete the + * temporary file before returning. */ struct tempfile { @@ -203,7 +204,7 @@ static inline int xmks_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, /* * Associate a stdio stream with the temporary file (which must still * be open). Return `NULL` (*without* deleting the file) on error. The - * stream is closed automatically when `close_tempfile()` is called or + * stream is closed automatically when `close_tempfile_gently()` is called or * when the file is deleted or renamed. */ extern FILE *fdopen_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile, const char *mode); @@ -226,20 +227,20 @@ extern FILE *get_tempfile_fp(struct tempfile *tempfile); * If the temporary file is still open, close it (and the file pointer * too, if it has been opened using `fdopen_tempfile()`) without * deleting the file. Return 0 upon success. On failure to `close(2)`, - * return a negative value and delete the file. Usually - * `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()` should eventually be - * called if `close_tempfile()` succeeds. + * return a negative value. Usually `delete_tempfile()` or `rename_tempfile()` + * should eventually be called regardless of whether `close_tempfile_gently()` + * succeeds. */ -extern int close_tempfile(struct tempfile *tempfile); +extern int close_tempfile_gently(struct tempfile *tempfile); /* * Re-open a temporary file that has been closed using - * `close_tempfile()` but not yet deleted or renamed. This can be used + * `close_tempfile_gently()` but not yet deleted or renamed. This can be used * to implement a sequence of operations like the following: * * * Create temporary file. * - * * Write new contents to file, then `close_tempfile()` to cause the + * * Write new contents to file, then `close_tempfile_gently()` to cause the * contents to be written to disk. * * * Pass the name of the temporary file to another program to allow |