HP C
Run-Time Library Reference Manual for 
OpenVMS Systems
1.3.4 Extended File Specifications
The ODS-5 volume structure provides enhanced support for mixed UNIX and 
OpenVMS style filenames. It supports long filenames, allows the use of 
a wider range of characters within filenames, and preserves case within 
filenames. With OpenVMS Alpha Version 7.3-1, the C RTL has greatly 
improved support of ODS-5 characters, with 250 of the 256 characters 
supported, as opposed to only 214 supported previously. Also, filenames 
without file types can now be accessed.
To enable the new support, you must define one or more C RTL feature 
logical names. These names include the following:
  DECC$EFS_CHARSET
  
DECC$DISABLE_TO_VMS_LOGNAME_TRANSLATION
  
DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_NO_VERSION
  
DECC$FILENAME_UNIX_REPORT
  
DECC$READDIR_DROPDOTNOTYPE
  
DECC$RENAME_NO_INHERIT
See Section 1.5 for more information on these and other feature 
logical names.
1.3.5 Symbolic Links and POSIX Pathnames
OpenVMS provides support for Open Group compliant symbolic links and 
POSIX pathname processing. See Chapter 12 for more information.
1.4 Feature-Test Macros for Header-File Control
Feature-test macros provide a means for writing portable programs. They 
ensure that the HP C RTL symbolic names used by a program do 
not clash with the symbolic names supplied by the implementation.
The HP C RTL header files are coded to support the use of a 
number of feature-test macros. When an application defines a 
feature-test macro, the HP C RTL header files supply the 
symbols and prototypes defined by that feature-test macro and nothing 
else. If a program does not define such a macro, the HP C RTL 
header files define symbols without restriction.
The feature-test macros supported by the HP C RTL fall into 
the following broad categories for controlling the visibility of 
symbols in header files according to the following:
  - Standards
  
 - Multiple-version support
  
 - Compatibility
 
1.4.1 Standards Macros
The HP C RTL implements parts of the following standards:
  - X/Open CAE Specification, System Interfaces and Headers, Issue 4, 
  Version 2, also known as XPG4 V2.
  
 - X/Open CAE Specification, System Interfaces and Headers, Issue 4, 
  also known as XPG4.
  
 - Standard for Information Technology - Portable Operating System 
  Interface (POSIX) - Part 1: System Application Program Interface 
  (API)---Amendment 2: Threads Extension [C Language], also known as 
  POSIX 1003.1c-1995 or IEEE 1003.1c-1995.
  
 - ISO/IEC 9945-2:1993 - Information Technology - Portable Operating 
  System Interface (POSIX) - Part 2: Shell and Utilities, also known as 
  ISO POSIX-2.
  
 - ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990 - Information Technology - Portable Operating 
  System Interface (POSIX) - Part 1: System Application Programming 
  Interface (API) (C Language), also known as ISO POSIX-1.
  
 - ANSI/ISO/IEC 9899:1999 - The C99 standard, published by ISO in 
  December, 1999 and adopted as an ANSI standard in April, 2000.
  
 - ISO/IEC 9899:1990-1994 - Programming Languages - C, Amendment 1: 
  Integrity, also known as ISO C, Amendment 1.
  
 - ISO/IEC 9899:1990 - Programming Languages - C, also known as ISO C. 
  The normative part is the same as X3.159-1989, American National 
  Standard for Information Systems - Programming Language C, also known 
  as ANSI C.
 
1.4.2 Selecting a Standard
You can define a feature-test macro to select each standard. You can do 
this either with a
#define
 preprocessor directive in your C source before the inclusion of any 
 header file, or with the /DEFINE qualifier on the CC command line.
Table 1-3 lists and describes the HP C RTL feature-test 
macros that control standards support. 
  Table 1-3 Feature Test Macros - Standards
  
    | Macro Name  | 
    Standard Selected  | 
    Other Standards Implied  | 
    Description  | 
  
  
    | 
      _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED
     | 
    
      XPG4 V2
     | 
    
      XPG4, ISO POSIX-2, ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
      Makes visible XPG4-extended features, including traditional UNIX based 
      interfaces not previously adopted by X/Open.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _XOPEN_SOURCE
     | 
    
       XPG4 (X/Open Issue 4)
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-2, ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
      Makes visible XPG4 standard symbols and causes _POSIX_C_SOURCE to be 
      set to 2 if it is not already defined with a value greater than 2.
      1
      2
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _XOPEN_SOURCE=500
     | 
    
      X/Open Issue 5
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-2, ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
      Makes visible X/Open Issue 5 standard symbols and causes 
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE to be set to 2 if it is not already defined with a 
      value greater than 2.
      1
      2
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _XOPEN_SOURCE=600
     | 
    
      X/Open Issue 6
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-2, ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
      Makes visible X/Open Issue 6 standard symbols and causes 
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE to be set to 2 if it is not already defined with a 
      value greater than 2.
      1
      2
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE==199506
     | 
    
      IEEE 1003.1c-1995
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-2, ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
       Header files defined by ANSI C make visible those symbols required by 
       IEEE 1003.1c-1995.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE==2
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-2
     | 
    
       ISO POSIX-1, ANSI C
     | 
    
       Header files defined by ANSI C make visible those symbols required by 
       ISO POSIX-2 plus those required by ISO POSIX-1.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _POSIX_C_SOURCE==1
     | 
    
      ISO POSIX-1
     | 
    
      ANSI C
     | 
    
       Header files defined by ANSI C make visible those symbols required by 
       ISO POSIX-1.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      __STDC_VERSION__==199409
     | 
    
      ISO C amdt 1
     | 
    
      ANSI C
     | 
    
       Makes ISO C Amendment 1 symbols visible.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      _ANSI_C_SOURCE
     | 
    
      ANSI C
     | 
    
      ---
     | 
    
       Makes ANSI C standard symbols visible.
     | 
  
  
    | 
      __HIDE_FORBIDDEN_NAMES
     | 
    
       
     | 
    
       
     | 
    
       When defined to the value 1, causes the C RTL headers that are named in 
       the C standard to be configured such that they define only those 
       identifiers that are specified as being defined by those headers under 
       the version of the C standard in effect for the compilation, unless 
       additional features are explicitly requested by other configuration 
       macros (_XOPEN_SOURCE, for example).
       The C and C++ compilers will predefine this macro when certain 
      language standard conformance features are selected, but the user can 
      override any such predefinition by specifying 
      /UNDEFINE=__HIDE_FORBIDDEN_NAMES on the command line (or using
      
      #undef
      
               before including any headers). Conversely, the user can explicitly 
               define the macro before including any headers, regardless of the 
               language standard selected for the compiler.
      | 
  
1Where the ISO C Amendment 1 includes symbols not specified 
by XPG4, defining __STDC_VERSION__ == 199409 and _XOPEN_SOURCE (or 
_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED) selects both ISO C and XPG4 APIs. Conflicts 
that arise when compiling with both XPG4 and ISO C Amendment 1 resolve 
in favor of ISO C Amendment 1.
2Where XPG4 extends the ISO C Amendment 1, defining 
_XOPEN_SOURCE or _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED selects ISO C APIs as well as 
the XPG4 extensions available in the header file. This mode of 
compilation makes XPG4 extensions visible.
Features not defined by one of the previously named standards are 
considered HP C extensions and are selected by not defining 
any standards-related, feature-test macros.
If you do not explicitly define feature test macros to control header 
file definitions, you implicitly include all defined symbols as well as 
HP C extensions.
1.4.3 Interactions with the /STANDARD Qualifier
The /STANDARD qualifier selects the dialect of the C language supported.
With the exception of /STANDARD=ANSI89 and /STANDARD=ISOC94, the 
selection of C dialect and the selection of HP C RTL APIs to 
use are independent choices. All other values for /STANDARD cause the 
entire set of APIs to be available, including extensions.
Specifying /STANDARD=ANSI89 restricts the default API set to the ANSI C 
set. In this case, to select a broader set of APIs, you must also 
specify the appropriate feature-test macro. To select the ANSI C 
dialect and all APIs, including extensions, undefine 
__HIDE_FORBIDDEN_NAMES before including any header file.
Compiling with /STANDARD=ISOC94 sets __STDC_VERSION__ to 199409. 
Conflicts that arise when compiling with both XPG4 and ISO C Amendment 
1 resolve in favor of ISO C Amendment 1. XPG4 extensions to ISO C 
Amendment 1 are selected by defining _XOPEN_SOURCE.
The following examples help clarify these rules:
  - The
fdopen
 function is an ISO POSIX-1 extension to
<stdio.h>
. Therefore,
<stdio.h>
 defines
fdopen
 only if one or more of the following is true:
  
    - The program including it is not compiled in strict ANSI C mode 
    (/STANDARD=ANSI89).
    
 - _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined as 1 or greater.
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined.
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is defined.
  
 
   - The
popen
 function is an ISO POSIX-2 extension to
<stdio.h>
. Therefore,
<stdio.h>
defines
popen
 only if one or more of the following is true:
  
    - The program including it is not compiled in strict ANSI C mode 
    (/STANDARD=ANSI89).
    
 - _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined as 2 or greater.
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined.
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is defined.
  
 
   - The
getw
 function is an X/Open extension to
<stdio.h>
. Therefore,
<stdio.h>
defines
getw
 only if one or more of the following is true:
  
    - The program is not compiled in strict ANSI C mode 
    (/STANDARD=ANSI89).
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE is defined.
    
 - _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is defined.
  
 
   - The X/Open Extended symbolic constants _SC_PAGESIZE, _SC_PAGE_SIZE, 
  _SC_ATEXIT_MAX, and _SC_IOV_MAX were added to
<unistd.h>
 to support the
sysconf
function. However, these constants are not defined by _POSIX_C_SOURCE. 
The
<unistd.h>
 header file defines these constants only if a program does not define 
 _POSIX_C_SOURCE and does define _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED. 
If 
 _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined, these constants are not visible in
<unistd.h>
. Note that _POSIX_C_SOURCE is defined only for programs compiled in 
strict ANSI C mode.
   - The
fgetname
 function is a HP C RTL extension to
<stdio.h>
. Therefore,
<stdio.h>
defines
fgetname
 only if the program is not compiled in strict ANSI C mode 
 (/STANDARD=ANSI89).
  
 - The macro _PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX is defined by POSIX 1003.1c-1995. This 
  macro is made visible in
<limits.h>
 when compiling for this standard with _POSIX_C_SOURCE == 199506 
 defined, or by default when compiling without any standards-defining, 
 feature-test macros.
  
 - The macro WCHAR_MAX defined in
<wchar.h>
 is required by ISO C Amendment 1 but not by XPG4. Therefore:
  
    - Compiling for ISO C Amendment 1 makes this symbol visible, but 
    compiling for XPG4 compliance does not.
    
 - Compiling for both ISO C Amendment 1 and XPG4 makes this symbol 
    visible.
  
 
    
Similarly, the functions
wcsftime
 and
wcstok
 in
<wchar.h>
 are defined slightly differently by the ISO C Amendment 1 and XPG4:
  
    - Compiling for ISO C Amendment 1 makes the ISO C Amendment 1 
    prototypes visible.
    
 - Compiling for XPG4 compliance makes the XPG4 prototypes visible.
    
 - Compiling for both ISO C Amendment 1 and XPG4 selects the ISO C 
    prototypes because conflicts resulting from this mode of compilation 
    resolve in favor of ISO C.
    
 - Compiling without any standard selecting feature test macros makes 
    ISO C Amendment 1 features visible.
  
 
    
In this example, compiling with no standard-selecting feature-test 
    macros makes WCHAR_MAX and the ISO C Amendment 1 prototypes for
wcsftime
 and
wcstok
 visible.
   - The
wcswidth
 and
wcwidth
 functions are XPG4 extensions to ISO C Amendment 1. Their prototypes 
 are in
<wchar.h>
. 
These symbols are visible if:
  
    - Compiling for XPG4 compliance by defining _XOPEN_SOURCE or 
    _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED.
    
 - Compiling for DEC C Version 4.0 compatibility or on pre-OpenVMS 
    Version 7.0 systems.
    
 - Compiling with no standard-selecting feature-test macros.
    
 - Compiling for both ISO C Amendment 1 and XPG4 compilance because 
    these symbols are XPG4 extensions to ISO C Amendment 1.
  
 
    
Compiling for strict ISO C Amendment 1 does not make them visible.
 
1.4.4 Multiple-Version-Support Macro
By default, the header files enable APIs in the HP C RTL 
provided by the version of the operating system on which the 
compilation occurs. This is accomplished by the predefined setting of 
the __VMS_VER macro, as described in the HP C User's Guide for OpenVMS Systems. For example, 
compiling on OpenVMS Version 6.2 causes only HP C RTL APIs 
from Version 6.2 and earlier to be made available.
Another example of the use of the __VMS_VER macro is support for the 
64-bit versions of HP C RTL functions available with OpenVMS 
Alpha Version 7.0 and higher. In all header files, functions that 
provide 64-bit support are conditionalized so that they are visible 
only if __VMS_VER indicates a version of OpenVMS that is greater than 
or equal to 7.0.
To target an older version of the operating system, do the following:
  - Define a logical DECC$SHR to point to the old version of DECC$SHR. 
  The compiler uses a table from DECC$SHR to perform routine name 
  prefixing.
  
 - Define __VMS_VER appropriately, either with the /DEFINE qualifier 
  or with a combination of the
#undef
 and
#define
 preprocessor directives. With /DEFINE, you may need to disable the 
 warning regarding redefinition of a predefined macro.
 
Targeting a newer version of the operating system might not always be 
possible. For some versions, you can expect that the new DECC$SHR.EXE 
will require new features of the operating system that are not present. 
For such versions, the defining if the logical DECC$SHR in Step 1 would 
cause the compilation to fail.
To override the value of __VMS_VER, define
__VMS_VER_OVERRIDE on the compiler command line. Defining 
__VMS_VER_OVERRIDE without a value sets __VMS_VER to the maximum value.
1.4.5 Compatibility Modes
The following predefined macros are used to select header-file 
compatibility with previous versions of DEC C) or the OpenVMS operating 
system:
  - _DECC_V4_SOURCE
  
 - _VMS_V6_SOURCE
 
There are two types of incompatibilities that can be controlled in the 
header files:
  - To conform to standards, some changes are source-code incompatible 
  but binary compatible. To select DEC C Version 4.0 source 
  compatibility, use the _DECC_V4_SOURCE macro.
  
 - Other changes to conform to standards introduce a binary or 
  run-time incompatibility. 
In general, programs that recompile get 
  new behaviors.
In these cases, use the _VMS_V6_SOURCE feature test macro to retain 
previous behaviors. 
However, for the
exit
,
kill
, and
wait
 functions, the OpenVMS Version 7.0 changes to make these routines ISO 
 POSIX-1 compliant were considered too incompatible to become the 
 default. Therefore, in these cases the default behavior is the same as 
 on pre-OpenVMS Version 7.0 systems. To access the versions of these 
 routines that comply with ISO POSIX-1, use the _POSIX_EXIT feature test 
 macro.
 
The following examples help clarify the use of these macros:
  - To conform to the ISO POSIX-1 standard,
typedefs
 for the following have been added to
<types.h>
:
  
    
       
      
   dev_t         off_t 
   gid_t         pid_t 
   ino_t         size_t 
   mode_t        ssize_t 
   nlink_t       uid_t 
 
 | 
    
Previous development environments using a version of DEC C earlier 
    than Version 5.2 may have compensated for the lack of these
typedef
s in
<types.h>
 by adding them to another module. If this is the case on your system, 
 then compiling with the
<types.h>
 provided with DEC C Version 5.2 might cause compilation errors. 
To 
 maintain your current environment and include the DEC C Version 5.2
<types.h>
, compile with _DECC_V4_SOURCE defined. This will omit incompatible 
references from the DEC C Version 5.2 headers. In
<types.h>
, for example, the previously listed
typedefs
 will not be visible.
   - As of OpenVMS Version 7.0, the HP C RTL
getuid
 and
geteuid
 functions are defined to return an OpenVMS UIC (user identification 
 code) that contains both the group and member portions of the UIC. In 
 previous versions of the DEC C RTL, these functions returned only the 
 member number from the UIC code. 
Note that the prototypes for
getuid
 and
geteuid
 in
<unistd.h>
 (as required by the ISO POSIX-1 standard) and in
<unixlib.h>
 (for HP C RTL compatibility) have not changed. By default, 
 newly compiled programs that call
getuid
 and
geteuid
 get the new definitions. That is, these functions will return an 
 OpenVMS UIC. 
To let programs retain the pre-OpenVMS Version 7.0 
 behavior of
getuid
 and
geteuid
, compile with the _VMS_V6_SOURCE feature-test macro defined.
   - As of OpenVMS Version 7.0, the HP C RTL
exit
 function is defined with ISO POSIX-1 semantics. As a result, the input 
 status argument to
exit
 takes a number between 0 and 255. (Prior to this,
exit
 could take an OpenVMS condition code in its status parameter.) 
By 
 default, the behavior for
exit
 on OpenVMS systems is the same as before:
exit
 accepts an OpenVMS condition code. To enable the ISO POSIX-1 compatible
exit
 function, compile with the _POSIX_EXIT feature-test macro defined.
 
1.4.6 Curses and Socket Compatibility Macros
The following feature-test macros are used to control the Curses and 
Socket subsets of the HP C RTL library:
  - _BSD44_CURSES
    
This macro selects the Curses package from the 4.4BSD Berkeley 
    Software Distribution.
   - _VMS_CURSES
    
This macro selects a Curses package based on the VAX C compiler. 
    This is the default Curses package.
   - _SOCKADDR_LEN
    
This macro is used to select 4.4BSD-compatible and XPG4 
    V2-compatible socket interfaces. These interfaces require support in 
    your underlying TCP/IP software. Contact your TCP/IP vendor to inquire 
    if the version of TCP/IP software you run supports 4.4BSD sockets.
 
Strict XPG4 V2 compliance requires the 4.4BSD-compatible socket 
interface. Therefore, if _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is defined on OpenVMS 
Version 7.0 or higher, _SOCKADDR_LEN is defined to be 1.
The following examples help clarify the use of these macros:
  - Symbolic constants like AE, AL, AS, AM, BC, which represent 
  pointers to termcap fields used by the BSD Curses package, are only 
  visible in
<curses.h>
 if _BSD44_CURSES is defined.
  
 - The
<socket.h>
 header file defines a 4.4BSD
sockaddr
 structure only if _SOCKADDR_LEN or _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is defined. 
 Otherwise,
<socket.h>
 defines a pre-4.4BSD
sockaddr
structure. If _SOCKADDR_LEN is defined and _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED is 
not defined, 
The
<socket.h>
 header file also defines an
osockaddr
 structure, which is a 4.3BSD
sockaddr
structure to be used for compatibility purposes. Since XPG4 V2 does not 
define an
osockaddr
 structure, it is not visible in _XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED mode.
 
1.4.7 2 GB File Size Macro
The C RTL provides support for compiling applications to use file sizes 
and offsets that are 2 GB and larger. This is accomplished by allowing 
file offsets of 64-bit integers.
The
fseeko
 and
ftello
 functions, which have the same behavior as
fseek
 and
ftell
, accept or return values of type
off_t
, which allows for a 64-bit variant of
off_t
 to be used.
C RTL functions
lseek
,
mmap
,
ftuncate
,
truncate
,
stat
,
fstat
, and
ftw
can also accommodate a 64-bit file offset.
The new 64-bit interfaces can be selected at compile time by defining 
the _LARGEFILE feature macro.
1.4.8 32-Bit UID and GID Macro (INTEGRITY SERVERS, ALPHA)  
The C RTL supports 32-bit User Identification (UID) and Group 
Identification (GID). When an application is compiled to use 32-bit 
UID/GID, the UID and GID are derived from the UIC as in previous 
versions of the operating system.
To compile an application for 16-bit UID/GID support on systems that by 
default use 32-bit UIDs/GIDs, define the _DECC_SHORT_GID_T macro to 1.
Not specifying _DECC_SHORT_GID_T provides long (32-bit) UID/GID.
Compiling on older OpenVMS systems where long UID/GID is not supported, 
or compiling for legacy compatibility (_DECC_V4_SOURCE for HP C Version 
4 or _VMS_V6_SOURCE for OpenVMS Version 6), forces use of short 
(16-bit) UID/GID.