gcobol-io - Man Page

GCC COBOL Front-end I/O function API

Library

libgcobol

Synopsis

#include <symbols.h>
#include <io.h>
#include <gcobolio.h>

gcobol_io_t
gcobol_fileops();

class gcobol_io_t {
public:
  static const char constexpr marquee[64];
  typedef void (open_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                         char *filename,
                         int mode_char,
                         int is_quoted );
  typedef void (close_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                          int how );
  typedef void (start_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                          int relop, // needs enum
                          int first_last_key,
                          size_t length );
  typedef void (read_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                         int where );
  typedef void (write_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                          unsigned char  *data,
                          size_t length,
                          int after,
                          int lines,
                          int is_random );
  typedef void (rewrite_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                            size_t length, bool is_random );
  typedef void (delete_t)( cblc_file_t *file,
                          bool is_random );
  open_t      *Open;
  close_t     *Close;
  start_t     *Start;
  read_t      *Read;
  write_t     *Write;
  rewrite_t   *Rewrite;
  delete_t    *Delete;
  ...
};

Description

gcobol supplies replaceable I/O functionality via gcobol_fileops(). It returns a pointer to a structure of C function pointers that implement sequential, relative, and indexed file operations over files whose On Disk Format (ODF) is defined by gcobol. A user wishing to use another library that implements the same functionality over a different ODF must supply a different implementation of gcobol_fileops(), plus 7 functions, as described in this document. The pointers to those user-implemented functions are placed in a C++ object of type gcobol_io_t and an instantiation of that type is returned by gcobol_fileops(). The compiled program initializes I/O operations by calling that function the first time any file is opened.

Each function takes as its first argument a pointer to a cblc_file_t object, which is analogous to a FILE object used in the C stdio functions. The cblc_file_t structure acts as a communication area between the compiled program and the I/O library. Any information needed about the file is kept there. Notably, the outcome of any operation is stored in that structure in the file_status member, not as a return code. Information about the operation (as opposed to the file) appear as parameters to the function.

cblc_file_t has one member, not used by gcobol, that is reserved for the user:

void * implementation.

User-supplied I/O functions may assign and dereference implementation. gcobol will preserve the value, but never references it.

The 7 function pointers in gcobol_io_t are

Open

void open_t(cblc_file_t *file, char *filename, int mode_char, int is_quoted)
parameters:

filename

is the filename, as known to the OS

mode_char

is one of

‘r’

OPEN INPUT: read-only mode

‘w’

OPEN OUTPUT: create a new file or overwrite an existing one

‘a’

EXTEND: append to sequential file

‘+’

modify existing file

is_quoted

If true, filename is taken literally. If false, filename is interpreted as the name of an environment variable, the contents of which, if extant, are taken as the name of the file to be opened. If no such variable exists, then filename is used verbatim.

Close

void close_t(cblc_file_t *file, int how)
parameters:

how

A value of 0x08 closes a “REEL unit”. Because no such thing is supported, the function sets the file status to “07”, meaning not a tape.

Start

void start_t(cblc_file_t *file, int relop, int first_last_key, size_t length)
parameters:

relop

is one of

0

means ‘<’

1

means ‘<=’

2

means ‘=’

3

means ‘!=’

4

means ‘>=’

5

means ‘>’

first_last_key

is the key number (starting at 1) of the key within the cblc_file_t structure.

length

is the size of the key (TODO: per the START statement?)

Read

void read_t(cblc_file_t *file, int where) parameters:

where
-2

PREVIOUS

-1

NEXT

 N

represents a key number, starting with 1, in the cblc_file_t structure. The value of that key is used to find the record, and read it.

Write

void write_t(cblc_file_t *file, unsigned char *data, size_t length, int after, int lines, int is_random)
parameters:

data

address of in-memory buffer to write

length

length of in-memory buffer to write

after

has the value 1 if the

AFTER ADVANCING n LINES

phrase was present in the WRITE statement, else 0

lines

may be one of

-666

ADVANCING PAGE

  -1

no ADVANCING phrase appeared

   0

ADVANCING 0 LINES is valid

  >0

the value of n in ADVANCING n LINES

is_random

is true if the access mode is RANDOM

Rewrite

void rewrite_t(cblc_file_t *file, size_t length, bool is_random) parameters:

length

number of bytes to write

is_random

true if access mode is RANDOM

Delete

void delete_t(cblc_file_t *file, bool is_random) parameters:

is_random

true if access mode is RANDOM

The library implements one function that the gcobol-produced binary calls directly:

Return Values

I/O functions return void. gcobol_fileops() returns gcobol_io_t*.

Standards

The I/O library supplied by gcobol, libgcobolio.so, supports the I/O semantics defined by ISO COBOL. It is not intended to be compatible with any other ODF. That is, libgcobolio.so cannot be used to exchange data with any other COBOL implementation.

The purpose of the gcobol_io_t structure is to allow the use of other I/O implementations with other ODF representations.

Caveats

The library is not well tested, not least because it is not implemented.

Bugs

The future is yet to come.

Info

March 2024