A Gentle Programming Primer

Using MateVFS in an existing application, or writing a new application with it, is actually very simple since MateVFS tries to mimic POSIX file access syntax and semantics. That means that most "standard unix calls" have a MateVFS equivalent that operates in a fairly similar manner. There are a few differences to keep in mind.

By way of example, consider the basic read command:

	ssize_t read (int fd, void *buf, size_t count);
      

The MateVFS equivalent is very similar, but you will notice slightly different data types. The consistent returning of a MateVFSResult also necessitated moving the return value of read into a pass-back-value pointer bytes_read:

	MateVFSResult mate_vfs_read (MateVFSHandle *handle,
	                               gpointer buffer,
                                       MateVFSFileSize bytes,
                                       MateVFSFileSize *bytes_read);
      

So mate_vfs_read takes a MateVFSHandle, which functions like a file descriptor, and attempts to read bytes bytes out of handle into buffer. The number of bytes succesfully read into buffer is returned in the pointer bytes_read. The return value of the function, a MateVFSResult indicates the success of the operation or any errors that might have occurred (for example, permission denied). MateVFSResult is just an enumeration.

Simple Sample Program

Now lets write a simple program to copy a fixed number of bytes from one file and append it to another file.


#include <stdio.h>
#include <libmatevfs/mate-vfs.h>
#include <libmatevfs/mate-vfs-utils.h>

#define BYTES_TO_PROCESS 256

int print_error (MateVFSResult result, const char *uri_string);

int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
  MateVFSHandle *read_handle, *write_handle;
  char *input_uri_string;
  char *output_uri_string = argv[2];
  MateVFSFileSize bytes_read, bytes_written;
  guint buffer[BYTES_TO_PROCESS];
  MateVFSResult result;

  /* remember to initialize MateVFS! */
  if (!mate_vfs_init ()) {
    printf ("Could not initialize MateVFS\n");
    return 1;
  }

  /* Convert the user supplied filenames into proper MateVFS URIs */
  input_uri_string = mate_vfs_make_uri_from_shell_arg (argv[1]);
  output_uri_string = mate_vfs_make_uri_from_shell_arg (argv[2]);

  /* open the input file for read access */
  result = mate_vfs_open (&read_handle, input_uri_string, MATE_VFS_OPEN_READ);
  /* if the operation was not successful, print the error and abort */
  if (result != MATE_VFS_OK) return print_error (result, input_uri_string);

  /* we use create instead of open, because open will not create the file if it does
     not already exist. The last argument is the permissions to use if the file is created,
     the second to last tells MateVFS that its ok if the file already exists, and just open it */
  result = mate_vfs_create (&write_handle, output_uri_string, MATE_VFS_OPEN_WRITE, FALSE, 0777);
  if (result != MATE_VFS_OK) return print_error (result, output_uri_string);

  /* read data from the input uri */
  result = mate_vfs_read (read_handle, buffer, BYTES_TO_PROCESS, &bytes_read);
  if (result != MATE_VFS_OK) return print_error (result, input_uri_string);

  /* seek to the end of the output uri so we will append rather than overwrite */
  /* therefore, we seek 0 bytes relative to the end of the file */
  result = mate_vfs_seek (write_handle, MATE_VFS_SEEK_END, 0);

  /* now write the data we read out to the output uri */
  result = mate_vfs_write (write_handle, buffer, bytes_read, &bytes_written);
  if (result != MATE_VFS_OK) return print_error (result, output_uri_string);

  g_free (input_uri_string);
  g_free (output_uri_string);

  return 0;
}

int
print_error (MateVFSResult result, const char *uri_string)
{
  const char *error_string;
  /* get the string corresponding to this MateVFSResult value */
  error_string = mate_vfs_result_to_string (result);
  printf ("Error %s occured opening location %s\n", error_string, uri_string);
  return 1;
}

	

Conversion of a Sample Code Block