Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
2227 lines (2020 loc) · 84.4 KB

physfs.h

File metadata and controls

2227 lines (2020 loc) · 84.4 KB
 
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
1
2
/** \file physfs.h */
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
3
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
4
5
6
7
8
* \mainpage PhysicsFS
*
* The latest version of PhysicsFS can be found at:
* http://icculus.org/physfs/
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
* PhysicsFS; a portable, flexible file i/o abstraction.
*
* This API gives you access to a system file system in ways superior to the
* stdio or system i/o calls. The brief benefits:
*
* - It's portable.
* - It's safe. No file access is permitted outside the specified dirs.
* - It's flexible. Archives (.ZIP files) can be used transparently as
* directory structures.
*
* This system is largely inspired by Quake 3's PK3 files and the related
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
20
* fs_* cvars. If you've ever tinkered with these, then this API will be
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
21
22
* familiar to you.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
23
24
25
26
27
28
* With PhysicsFS, you have a single writing directory and multiple
* directories (the "search path") for reading. You can think of this as a
* filesystem within a filesystem. If (on Windows) you were to set the
* writing directory to "C:\MyGame\MyWritingDirectory", then no PHYSFS calls
* could touch anything above this directory, including the "C:\MyGame" and
* "C:\" directories. This prevents an application's internal scripting
Jan 8, 2004
Jan 8, 2004
29
* language from piddling over c:\\config.sys, for example. If you'd rather
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
30
31
* give PHYSFS full access to the system's REAL file system, set the writing
* dir to "C:\", but that's generally A Bad Thing for several reasons.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
32
33
*
* Drive letters are hidden in PhysicsFS once you set up your initial paths.
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
34
* The search path creates a single, hierarchical directory structure.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
* Not only does this lend itself well to general abstraction with archives,
* it also gives better support to operating systems like MacOS and Unix.
* Generally speaking, you shouldn't ever hardcode a drive letter; not only
* does this hurt portability to non-Microsoft OSes, but it limits your win32
* users to a single drive, too. Use the PhysicsFS abstraction functions and
* allow user-defined configuration options, too. When opening a file, you
* specify it like it was on a Unix filesystem: if you want to write to
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
42
* "C:\MyGame\MyConfigFiles\game.cfg", then you might set the write dir to
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
43
* "C:\MyGame" and then open "MyConfigFiles/game.cfg". This gives an
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
44
* abstraction across all platforms. Specifying a file in this way is termed
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
* "platform-independent notation" in this documentation. Specifying a
* a filename in a form such as "C:\mydir\myfile" or
* "MacOS hard drive:My Directory:My File" is termed "platform-dependent
* notation". The only time you use platform-dependent notation is when
* setting up your write directory and search path; after that, all file
* access into those directories are done with platform-independent notation.
*
* All files opened for writing are opened in relation to the write directory,
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
53
* which is the root of the writable filesystem. When opening a file for
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
54
* reading, PhysicsFS goes through the search path. This is NOT the
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
55
56
57
58
59
60
* same thing as the PATH environment variable. An application using
* PhysicsFS specifies directories to be searched which may be actual
* directories, or archive files that contain files and subdirectories of
* their own. See the end of these docs for currently supported archive
* formats.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
61
* Once the search path is defined, you may open files for reading. If you've
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
62
63
* got the following search path defined (to use a win32 example again):
*
Jan 8, 2004
Jan 8, 2004
64
65
66
67
* - C:\\mygame
* - C:\\mygame\\myuserfiles
* - D:\\mygamescdromdatafiles
* - C:\\mygame\\installeddatafiles.zip
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
68
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
69
* Then a call to PHYSFS_openRead("textfiles/myfile.txt") (note the directory
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
70
71
* separator, lack of drive letter, and lack of dir separator at the start of
* the string; this is platform-independent notation) will check for
Jan 8, 2004
Jan 8, 2004
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
* C:\\mygame\\textfiles\\myfile.txt, then
* C:\\mygame\\myuserfiles\\textfiles\\myfile.txt, then
* D:\\mygamescdromdatafiles\\textfiles\\myfile.txt, then, finally, for
* textfiles\\myfile.txt inside of C:\\mygame\\installeddatafiles.zip.
* Remember that most archive types and platform filesystems store their
* filenames in a case-sensitive manner, so you should be careful to specify
* it correctly.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
79
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
80
* Files opened through PhysicsFS may NOT contain "." or ".." or ":" as dir
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
* elements. Not only are these meaningless on MacOS Classic and/or Unix,
* they are a security hole. Also, symbolic links (which can be found in
* some archive types and directly in the filesystem on Unix platforms) are
* NOT followed until you call PHYSFS_permitSymbolicLinks(). That's left to
* your own discretion, as following a symlink can allow for access outside
* the write dir and search paths. For portability, there is no mechanism for
* creating new symlinks in PhysicsFS.
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
88
89
90
91
92
93
*
* The write dir is not included in the search path unless you specifically
* add it. While you CAN change the write dir as many times as you like,
* you should probably set it once and stick to it. Remember that your
* program will not have permission to write in every directory on Unix and
* NT systems.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
94
95
96
*
* All files are opened in binary mode; there is no endline conversion for
* textfiles. Other than that, PhysicsFS has some convenience functions for
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
97
* platform-independence. There is a function to tell you the current
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
98
* platform's dir separator ("\\" on windows, "/" on Unix, ":" on MacOS),
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
99
100
101
* which is needed only to set up your search/write paths. There is a
* function to tell you what CD-ROM drives contain accessible discs, and a
* function to recommend a good search path, etc.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
102
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
103
104
* A recommended order for the search path is the write dir, then the base dir,
* then the cdrom dir, then any archives discovered. Quake 3 does something
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
105
106
* like this, but moves the archives to the start of the search path. Build
* Engine games, like Duke Nukem 3D and Blood, place the archives last, and
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
107
108
* use the base dir for both searching and writing. There is a helper
* function (PHYSFS_setSaneConfig()) that puts together a basic configuration
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
109
* for you, based on a few parameters. Also see the comments on
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
110
111
112
* PHYSFS_getBaseDir(), and PHYSFS_getUserDir() for info on what those
* are and how they can help you determine an optimal search path.
*
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
* PhysicsFS 2.0 adds the concept of "mounting" archives to arbitrary points
* in the search path. If a zipfile contains "maps/level.map" and you mount
* that archive at "mods/mymod", then you would have to open
* "mods/mymod/maps/level.map" to access the file, even though "mods/mymod"
* isn't actually specified in the .zip file. Unlike the Unix mentality of
* mounting a filesystem, "mods/mymod" doesn't actually have to exist when
* mounting the zipfile. It's a "virtual" directory. The mounting mechanism
* allows the developer to seperate archives in the tree and avoid trampling
* over files when added new archives, such as including mod support in a
* game...keeping external content on a tight leash in this manner can be of
* utmost importance to some applications.
*
Mar 30, 2002
Mar 30, 2002
125
126
127
128
129
130
* PhysicsFS is mostly thread safe. The error messages returned by
* PHYSFS_getLastError are unique by thread, and library-state-setting
* functions are mutex'd. For efficiency, individual file accesses are
* not locked, so you can not safely read/write/seek/close/etc the same
* file from two threads at the same time. Other race conditions are bugs
* that should be reported/patched.
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
131
132
133
*
* While you CAN use stdio/syscall file access in a program that has PHYSFS_*
* calls, doing so is not recommended, and you can not use system
Mar 30, 2002
Mar 30, 2002
134
* filehandles with PhysicsFS and vice versa.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
135
136
*
* Note that archives need not be named as such: if you have a ZIP file and
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
137
* rename it with a .PKG extension, the file will still be recognized as a
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
138
* ZIP archive by PhysicsFS; the file's contents are used to determine its
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
139
* type where possible.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
140
141
142
*
* Currently supported archive types:
* - .ZIP (pkZip/WinZip/Info-ZIP compatible)
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
143
* - .GRP (Build Engine groupfile archives)
Mar 30, 2003
Mar 30, 2003
144
* - .PAK (Quake I/II archive format)
Mar 30, 2003
Mar 30, 2003
145
146
* - .HOG (Descent I/II HOG file archives)
* - .MVL (Descent II movielib archives)
Dec 15, 2003
Dec 15, 2003
147
* - .WAD (DOOM engine archives)
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
148
*
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
149
150
151
*
* String policy for PhysicsFS 2.0 and later:
*
Mar 11, 2007
Mar 11, 2007
152
153
154
155
156
* PhysicsFS 1.0 could only deal with null-terminated ASCII strings. All high
* ASCII chars resulted in undefined behaviour, and there was no Unicode
* support at all. PhysicsFS 2.0 supports Unicode without breaking binary
* compatibility with the 1.0 API by using UTF-8 encoding of all strings
* passed in and out of the library.
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
*
* All strings passed through PhysicsFS are in null-terminated UTF-8 format.
* This means that if all you care about is English (ASCII characters <= 127)
* then you just use regular C strings. If you care about Unicode (and you
* should!) then you need to figure out what your platform wants, needs, and
* offers. If you are on Windows and build with Unicode support, your TCHAR
* strings are two bytes per character (this is called "UCS-2 encoding"). You
* should convert them to UTF-8 before handing them to PhysicsFS with
Mar 16, 2007
Mar 16, 2007
165
* PHYSFS_utf8FromUcs2(). If you're using Unix or Mac OS X, your wchar_t
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
166
* strings are four bytes per character ("UCS-4 encoding"). Use
Mar 16, 2007
Mar 16, 2007
167
* PHYSFS_utf8FromUcs4(). Mac OS X can give you UTF-8 directly from a
Mar 8, 2007
Mar 8, 2007
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
* CFString, and many Unixes generally give you C strings in UTF-8 format
* everywhere. If you have a single-byte high ASCII charset, like so-many
* European "codepages" you may be out of luck. We'll convert from "Latin1"
* to UTF-8 only, and never back to Latin1. If you're above ASCII 127, all
* bets are off: move to Unicode or use your platform's facilities. Passing a
* C string with high-ASCII data that isn't UTF-8 encoded will NOT do what
* you expect!
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
175
*
Mar 16, 2007
Mar 16, 2007
176
* Naturally, there's also PHYSFS_utf8ToUcs2() and PHYSFS_utf8ToUcs4() to get
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
* data back into a format you like. Behind the scenes, PhysicsFS will use
* Unicode where possible: the UTF-8 strings on Windows will be converted
* and used with the multibyte Windows APIs, for example.
*
* PhysicsFS offers basic encoding conversion support, but not a whole string
* library. Get your stuff into whatever format you can work with.
*
Mar 11, 2007
Mar 11, 2007
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
* Some platforms and archivers don't offer full Unicode support behind the
* scenes. For example, OS/2 only offers "codepages" and the filesystem
* itself doesn't support multibyte encodings. We make an earnest effort to
* convert to/from the current locale here, but all bets are off if
* you want to hand an arbitrary Japanese character through to these systems.
* Modern OSes (Mac OS X, Linux, Windows, PocketPC, etc) should all be fine.
* Many game-specific archivers are seriously unprepared for Unicode (the
* Descent HOG/MVL and Build Engine GRP archivers, for example, only offer a
* DOS 8.3 filename, for example). Nothing can be done for these, but they
* tend to be legacy formats for existing content that was all ASCII (and
* thus, valid UTF-8) anyhow. Other formats, like .ZIP, don't explicitly
* offer Unicode support, but unofficially expect filenames to be UTF-8
* encoded, and thus Just Work. Most everything does the right thing without
* bothering you, but it's good to be aware of these nuances in case they
* don't.
*
Nov 5, 2006
Nov 5, 2006
200
201
202
*
* Other stuff:
*
Mar 11, 2007
Mar 11, 2007
203
* Please see the file LICENSE.txt in the source's root directory for licensing
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
204
* and redistribution rights.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
205
*
Mar 11, 2007
Mar 11, 2007
206
* Please see the file CREDITS.txt in the source's root directory for a more or
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
207
* less complete list of who's responsible for this.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
208
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
209
* \author Ryan C. Gordon.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
*/
#ifndef _INCLUDE_PHYSFS_H_
#define _INCLUDE_PHYSFS_H_
#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
219
#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
220
221
#if (defined _MSC_VER)
#define __EXPORT__ __declspec(dllexport)
Mar 23, 2006
Mar 23, 2006
222
#elif (__GNUC__ >= 3)
Mar 23, 2006
Mar 23, 2006
223
#define __EXPORT__ __attribute__((visibility("default")))
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
224
225
226
#else
#define __EXPORT__
#endif
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
227
#endif /* DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS */
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
228
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
229
230
231
232
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_uint8
* \brief An unsigned, 8-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
233
typedef unsigned char PHYSFS_uint8;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
234
235
236
237
238
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_sint8
* \brief A signed, 8-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
239
typedef signed char PHYSFS_sint8;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
240
241
242
243
244
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_uint16
* \brief An unsigned, 16-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
245
typedef unsigned short PHYSFS_uint16;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
246
247
248
249
250
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_sint16
* \brief A signed, 16-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
251
typedef signed short PHYSFS_sint16;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
252
253
254
255
256
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_uint32
* \brief An unsigned, 32-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
257
typedef unsigned int PHYSFS_uint32;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
258
259
260
261
262
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_sint32
* \brief A signed, 32-bit integer type.
*/
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
263
264
typedef signed int PHYSFS_sint32;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_uint64
* \brief An unsigned, 64-bit integer type.
* \warning on platforms without any sort of 64-bit datatype, this is
* equivalent to PHYSFS_uint32!
*/
/**
* \typedef PHYSFS_sint64
* \brief A signed, 64-bit integer type.
* \warning on platforms without any sort of 64-bit datatype, this is
* equivalent to PHYSFS_sint32!
*/
Apr 12, 2002
Apr 12, 2002
280
#if (defined PHYSFS_NO_64BIT_SUPPORT) /* oh well. */
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
281
282
typedef PHYSFS_uint32 PHYSFS_uint64;
typedef PHYSFS_sint32 PHYSFS_sint64;
Apr 12, 2002
Apr 12, 2002
283
284
285
#elif (defined _MSC_VER)
typedef signed __int64 PHYSFS_sint64;
typedef unsigned __int64 PHYSFS_uint64;
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
286
287
288
289
290
#else
typedef unsigned long long PHYSFS_uint64;
typedef signed long long PHYSFS_sint64;
#endif
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
291
292
#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
/* Make sure the types really have the right sizes */
#define PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(name, x) \
typedef int PHYSFS_dummy_ ## name[(x) * 2 - 1]
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(uint8, sizeof(PHYSFS_uint8) == 1);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(sint8, sizeof(PHYSFS_sint8) == 1);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(uint16, sizeof(PHYSFS_uint16) == 2);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(sint16, sizeof(PHYSFS_sint16) == 2);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(uint32, sizeof(PHYSFS_uint32) == 4);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(sint32, sizeof(PHYSFS_sint32) == 4);
#ifndef PHYSFS_NO_64BIT_SUPPORT
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(uint64, sizeof(PHYSFS_uint64) == 8);
PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(sint64, sizeof(PHYSFS_sint64) == 8);
#endif
#undef PHYSFS_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
311
#endif /* DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS */
Mar 24, 2002
Mar 24, 2002
312
313
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
314
/**
Sep 26, 2004
Sep 26, 2004
315
* \struct PHYSFS_File
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
* \brief A PhysicsFS file handle.
*
* You get a pointer to one of these when you open a file for reading,
* writing, or appending via PhysicsFS.
*
* As you can see from the lack of meaningful fields, you should treat this
* as opaque data. Don't try to manipulate the file handle, just pass the
* pointer you got, unmolested, to various PhysicsFS APIs.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_openRead
* \sa PHYSFS_openWrite
* \sa PHYSFS_openAppend
* \sa PHYSFS_close
* \sa PHYSFS_read
* \sa PHYSFS_write
* \sa PHYSFS_seek
* \sa PHYSFS_tell
* \sa PHYSFS_eof
Dec 1, 2002
Dec 1, 2002
334
335
* \sa PHYSFS_setBuffer
* \sa PHYSFS_flush
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
336
337
*/
typedef struct
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
338
{
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
339
void *opaque; /**< That's all you get. Don't touch. */
Sep 26, 2004
Sep 26, 2004
340
} PHYSFS_File;
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
341
Mar 16, 2007
Mar 16, 2007
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
/**
* \def PHYSFS_file
* \brief 1.0 API compatibility define.
*
* PHYSFS_file is identical to PHYSFS_File. This #define is here for backwards
* compatibility with the 1.0 API, which had an inconsistent capitalization
* convention in this case. New code should use PHYSFS_File, as this #define
* may go away someday.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_File
*/
#define PHYSFS_file PHYSFS_File
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
355
356
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
/**
* \struct PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo
* \brief Information on various PhysicsFS-supported archives.
*
* This structure gives you details on what sort of archives are supported
* by this implementation of PhysicsFS. Archives tend to be things like
* ZIP files and such.
*
* \warning Not all binaries are created equal! PhysicsFS can be built with
* or without support for various archives. You can check with
* PHYSFS_supportedArchiveTypes() to see if your archive type is
* supported.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_supportedArchiveTypes
*/
typedef struct
{
const char *extension; /**< Archive file extension: "ZIP", for example. */
const char *description; /**< Human-readable archive description. */
const char *author; /**< Person who did support for this archive. */
const char *url; /**< URL related to this archive */
} PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo;
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
379
Dec 1, 2002
Dec 1, 2002
380
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
/**
* \struct PHYSFS_Version
* \brief Information the version of PhysicsFS in use.
*
* Represents the library's version as three levels: major revision
* (increments with massive changes, additions, and enhancements),
* minor revision (increments with backwards-compatible changes to the
* major revision), and patchlevel (increments with fixes to the minor
* revision).
*
* \sa PHYSFS_VERSION
Sep 23, 2006
Sep 23, 2006
392
* \sa PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
393
394
*/
typedef struct
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
395
{
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
396
397
398
PHYSFS_uint8 major; /**< major revision */
PHYSFS_uint8 minor; /**< minor revision */
PHYSFS_uint8 patch; /**< patchlevel */
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
399
400
} PHYSFS_Version;
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
401
#ifndef DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS
Jan 8, 2004
Jan 8, 2004
402
#define PHYSFS_VER_MAJOR 1
Jul 23, 2005
Jul 23, 2005
403
#define PHYSFS_VER_MINOR 1
Mar 26, 2007
Mar 26, 2007
404
#define PHYSFS_VER_PATCH 1
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
405
406
#endif /* DOXYGEN_SHOULD_IGNORE_THIS */
Dec 1, 2002
Dec 1, 2002
407
408
409
/* PhysicsFS state stuff ... */
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
/**
* \def PHYSFS_VERSION(x)
* \brief Macro to determine PhysicsFS version program was compiled against.
*
* This macro fills in a PHYSFS_Version structure with the version of the
* library you compiled against. This is determined by what header the
* compiler uses. Note that if you dynamically linked the library, you might
* have a slightly newer or older version at runtime. That version can be
* determined with PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion(), which, unlike PHYSFS_VERSION,
* is not a macro.
*
* \param x A pointer to a PHYSFS_Version struct to initialize.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_Version
* \sa PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion
*/
#define PHYSFS_VERSION(x) \
{ \
(x)->major = PHYSFS_VER_MAJOR; \
(x)->minor = PHYSFS_VER_MINOR; \
(x)->patch = PHYSFS_VER_PATCH; \
}
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
432
433
434
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
435
436
437
438
439
* \fn void PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion(PHYSFS_Version *ver)
* \brief Get the version of PhysicsFS that is linked against your program.
*
* If you are using a shared library (DLL) version of PhysFS, then it is
* possible that it will be different than the version you compiled against.
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
440
441
442
443
*
* This is a real function; the macro PHYSFS_VERSION tells you what version
* of PhysFS you compiled against:
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
444
* \code
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
* PHYSFS_Version compiled;
* PHYSFS_Version linked;
*
* PHYSFS_VERSION(&compiled);
* PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion(&linked);
* printf("We compiled against PhysFS version %d.%d.%d ...\n",
* compiled.major, compiled.minor, compiled.patch);
* printf("But we linked against PhysFS version %d.%d.%d.\n",
* linked.major, linked.minor, linked.patch);
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
454
* \endcode
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
455
456
*
* This function may be called safely at any time, even before PHYSFS_init().
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
457
458
*
* \sa PHYSFS_VERSION
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
459
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
460
__EXPORT__ void PHYSFS_getLinkedVersion(PHYSFS_Version *ver);
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
461
462
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
463
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
464
465
466
467
* \fn int PHYSFS_init(const char *argv0)
* \brief Initialize the PhysicsFS library.
*
* This must be called before any other PhysicsFS function.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
468
*
Jul 8, 2001
Jul 8, 2001
469
470
471
* This should be called prior to any attempts to change your process's
* current working directory.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
472
473
474
475
476
477
* \param argv0 the argv[0] string passed to your program's mainline.
* This may be NULL on most platforms (such as ones without a
* standard main() function), but you should always try to pass
* something in here. Unix-like systems such as Linux _need_ to
* pass argv[0] from main() in here.
* \return nonzero on success, zero on error. Specifics of the error can be
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
478
* gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
479
480
*
* \sa PHYSFS_deinit
Apr 1, 2007
Apr 1, 2007
481
* \sa PHYSFS_isInit
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
482
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
483
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_init(const char *argv0);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
484
485
486
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
487
488
489
490
491
* \fn int PHYSFS_deinit(void)
* \brief Deinitialize the PhysicsFS library.
*
* This closes any files opened via PhysicsFS, blanks the search/write paths,
* frees memory, and invalidates all of your file handles.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
492
*
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
493
494
495
496
497
498
* Note that this call can FAIL if there's a file open for writing that
* refuses to close (for example, the underlying operating system was
* buffering writes to network filesystem, and the fileserver has crashed,
* or a hard drive has failed, etc). It is usually best to close all write
* handles yourself before calling this function, so that you can gracefully
* handle a specific failure.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
499
*
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
500
501
502
* Once successfully deinitialized, PHYSFS_init() can be called again to
* restart the subsystem. All defaults API states are restored at this
* point.
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
503
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
504
* \return nonzero on success, zero on error. Specifics of the error can be
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
505
506
* gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError(). If failure, state of PhysFS is
* undefined, and probably badly screwed up.
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
507
508
*
* \sa PHYSFS_init
Apr 1, 2007
Apr 1, 2007
509
* \sa PHYSFS_isInit
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
510
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
511
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_deinit(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
512
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
513
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
514
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
515
516
517
* \fn const PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo **PHYSFS_supportedArchiveTypes(void)
* \brief Get a list of supported archive types.
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
518
519
520
521
522
523
* Get a list of archive types supported by this implementation of PhysicFS.
* These are the file formats usable for search path entries. This is for
* informational purposes only. Note that the extension listed is merely
* convention: if we list "ZIP", you can open a PkZip-compatible archive
* with an extension of "XYZ", if you like.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
524
525
* The returned value is an array of pointers to PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo structures,
* with a NULL entry to signify the end of the list:
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
526
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
527
* \code
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
* PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo **i;
*
* for (i = PHYSFS_supportedArchiveTypes(); *i != NULL; i++)
* {
* printf("Supported archive: [%s], which is [%s].\n",
* i->extension, i->description);
* }
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
535
* \endcode
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
536
537
538
539
*
* The return values are pointers to static internal memory, and should
* be considered READ ONLY, and never freed.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
540
* \return READ ONLY Null-terminated array of READ ONLY structures.
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
541
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
542
__EXPORT__ const PHYSFS_ArchiveInfo **PHYSFS_supportedArchiveTypes(void);
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
543
544
545
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
546
547
548
* \fn void PHYSFS_freeList(void *listVar)
* \brief Deallocate resources of lists returned by PhysicsFS.
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
549
550
551
* Certain PhysicsFS functions return lists of information that are
* dynamically allocated. Use this function to free those resources.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
552
553
554
555
556
* \param listVar List of information specified as freeable by this function.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_getCdRomDirs
* \sa PHYSFS_enumerateFiles
* \sa PHYSFS_getSearchPath
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
557
*/
Mar 21, 2002
Mar 21, 2002
558
__EXPORT__ void PHYSFS_freeList(void *listVar);
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
559
560
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
561
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
562
563
564
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getLastError(void)
* \brief Get human-readable error information.
*
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
* Get the last PhysicsFS error message as a human-readable, null-terminated
* string. This will be NULL if there's been no error since the last call to
* this function. The pointer returned by this call points to an internal
* buffer. Each thread has a unique error state associated with it, but each
* time a new error message is set, it will overwrite the previous one
* associated with that thread. It is safe to call this function at anytime,
* even before PHYSFS_init().
*
* It is not wise to expect a specific string of characters here, since the
* error message may be localized into an unfamiliar language. These strings
* are meant to be passed on directly to the user.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
576
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
577
* \return READ ONLY string of last error message.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
578
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
579
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getLastError(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
580
581
582
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
583
584
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getDirSeparator(void)
* \brief Get platform-dependent dir separator string.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
585
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
* This returns "\\\\" on win32, "/" on Unix, and ":" on MacOS. It may be more
* than one character, depending on the platform, and your code should take
* that into account. Note that this is only useful for setting up the
* search/write paths, since access into those dirs always use '/'
* (platform-independent notation) to separate directories. This is also
* handy for getting platform-independent access when using stdio calls.
*
* \return READ ONLY null-terminated string of platform's dir separator.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
594
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
595
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getDirSeparator(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
596
597
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
598
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
599
600
601
602
603
604
* \fn void PHYSFS_permitSymbolicLinks(int allow)
* \brief Enable or disable following of symbolic links.
*
* Some physical filesystems and archives contain files that are just pointers
* to other files. On the physical filesystem, opening such a link will
* (transparently) open the file that is pointed to.
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
*
* By default, PhysicsFS will check if a file is really a symlink during open
* calls and fail if it is. Otherwise, the link could take you outside the
* write and search paths, and compromise security.
*
* If you want to take that risk, call this function with a non-zero parameter.
* Note that this is more for sandboxing a program's scripting language, in
* case untrusted scripts try to compromise the system. Generally speaking,
* a user could very well have a legitimate reason to set up a symlink, so
* unless you feel there's a specific danger in allowing them, you should
* permit them.
*
Jul 16, 2001
Jul 16, 2001
617
618
619
620
* Symlinks are only explicitly checked when dealing with filenames
* in platform-independent notation. That is, when setting up your
* search and write paths, etc, symlinks are never checked for.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
621
622
* Symbolic link permission can be enabled or disabled at any time after
* you've called PHYSFS_init(), and is disabled by default.
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
623
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
624
* \param allow nonzero to permit symlinks, zero to deny linking.
Apr 1, 2007
Apr 1, 2007
625
626
*
* \sa PHYSFS_symbolicLinksPermitted
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
627
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
628
__EXPORT__ void PHYSFS_permitSymbolicLinks(int allow);
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
629
630
Apr 2, 2007
Apr 2, 2007
631
/* !!! FIXME: const this? */
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
632
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
633
634
* \fn char **PHYSFS_getCdRomDirs(void)
* \brief Get an array of paths to available CD-ROM drives.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
635
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
636
637
* The dirs returned are platform-dependent ("D:\" on Win32, "/cdrom" or
* whatnot on Unix). Dirs are only returned if there is a disc ready and
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
* accessible in the drive. So if you've got two drives (D: and E:), and only
* E: has a disc in it, then that's all you get. If the user inserts a disc
* in D: and you call this function again, you get both drives. If, on a
* Unix box, the user unmounts a disc and remounts it elsewhere, the next
* call to this function will reflect that change. Fun.
*
* The returned value is an array of strings, with a NULL entry to signify the
* end of the list:
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
647
* \code
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
648
* char **cds = PHYSFS_getCdRomDirs();
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
649
650
* char **i;
*
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
651
* for (i = cds; *i != NULL; i++)
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
652
* printf("cdrom dir [%s] is available.\n", *i);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
653
*
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
654
* PHYSFS_freeList(cds);
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
655
* \endcode
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
656
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
657
658
* This call may block while drives spin up. Be forewarned.
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
659
660
661
* When you are done with the returned information, you may dispose of the
* resources by calling PHYSFS_freeList() with the returned pointer.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
662
* \return Null-terminated array of null-terminated strings.
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
663
664
*
* \sa PHYSFS_getCdRomDirsCallback
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
665
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
666
__EXPORT__ char **PHYSFS_getCdRomDirs(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
667
668
669
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
670
671
672
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getBaseDir(void)
* \brief Get the path where the application resides.
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
673
674
* Helper function.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
675
* Get the "base dir". This is the directory where the application was run
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
676
677
* from, which is probably the installation directory, and may or may not
* be the process's current working directory.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
678
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
679
* You should probably use the base dir in your search path.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
680
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
681
682
683
* \return READ ONLY string of base dir in platform-dependent notation.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_getUserDir
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
684
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
685
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getBaseDir(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
686
687
688
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
689
690
691
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getUserDir(void)
* \brief Get the path where user's home directory resides.
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
692
693
* Helper function.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
694
* Get the "user dir". This is meant to be a suggestion of where a specific
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
695
* user of the system can store files. On Unix, this is her home directory.
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
696
* On systems with no concept of multiple home directories (MacOS, win95),
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
697
* this will default to something like "C:\mybasedir\users\username"
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
698
699
* where "username" will either be the login name, or "default" if the
* platform doesn't support multiple users, either.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
700
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
701
* You should probably use the user dir as the basis for your write dir, and
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
702
703
* also put it near the beginning of your search path.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
704
705
706
* \return READ ONLY string of user dir in platform-dependent notation.
*
* \sa PHYSFS_getBaseDir
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
707
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
708
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getUserDir(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
709
710
711
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
712
713
714
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getWriteDir(void)
* \brief Get path where PhysicsFS will allow file writing.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
715
* Get the current write dir. The default write dir is NULL.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
716
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
717
* \return READ ONLY string of write dir in platform-dependent notation,
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
718
* OR NULL IF NO WRITE PATH IS CURRENTLY SET.
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
719
720
*
* \sa PHYSFS_setWriteDir
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
721
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
722
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getWriteDir(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
723
724
725
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
726
727
728
* \fn int PHYSFS_setWriteDir(const char *newDir)
* \brief Tell PhysicsFS where it may write files.
*
Nov 28, 2005
Nov 28, 2005
729
* Set a new write dir. This will override the previous setting.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
730
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
731
732
* This call will fail (and fail to change the write dir) if the current
* write dir still has files open in it.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
733
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
734
* \param newDir The new directory to be the root of the write dir,
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
735
* specified in platform-dependent notation. Setting to NULL
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
736
* disables the write dir, so no files can be opened for
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
737
* writing via PhysicsFS.
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
738
* \return non-zero on success, zero on failure. All attempts to open a file
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
739
740
741
* for writing via PhysicsFS will fail until this call succeeds.
* Specifics of the error can be gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
742
* \sa PHYSFS_getWriteDir
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
743
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
744
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_setWriteDir(const char *newDir);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
745
746
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
747
748
749
750
/**
* \fn int PHYSFS_addToSearchPath(const char *newDir, int appendToPath)
* \brief Add an archive or directory to the search path.
*
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
751
* This is a legacy call in PhysicsFS 2.0, equivalent to:
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
752
* PHYSFS_mount(newDir, NULL, appendToPath);
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
753
*
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
754
755
756
* You must use this and not PHYSFS_mount if binary compatibility with
* PhysicsFS 1.0 is important (which it may not be for many people).
*
Mar 13, 2005
Mar 13, 2005
757
* \sa PHYSFS_mount
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
758
759
* \sa PHYSFS_removeFromSearchPath
* \sa PHYSFS_getSearchPath
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
760
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
761
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_addToSearchPath(const char *newDir, int appendToPath);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
762
763
764
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
765
766
* \fn int PHYSFS_removeFromSearchPath(const char *oldDir)
* \brief Remove a directory or archive from the search path.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
*
* This must be a (case-sensitive) match to a dir or archive already in the
* search path, specified in platform-dependent notation.
*
* This call will fail (and fail to remove from the path) if the element still
* has files open in it.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
774
775
* \param oldDir dir/archive to remove.
* \return nonzero on success, zero on failure.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
776
* Specifics of the error can be gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
777
778
779
*
* \sa PHYSFS_addToSearchPath
* \sa PHYSFS_getSearchPath
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
780
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
781
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_removeFromSearchPath(const char *oldDir);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
782
783
784
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
785
786
787
788
* \fn char **PHYSFS_getSearchPath(void)
* \brief Get the current search path.
*
* The default search path is an empty list.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
789
790
791
792
*
* The returned value is an array of strings, with a NULL entry to signify the
* end of the list:
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
793
* \code
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
794
795
796
797
* char **i;
*
* for (i = PHYSFS_getSearchPath(); *i != NULL; i++)
* printf("[%s] is in the search path.\n", *i);
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
798
* \endcode
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
799
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
800
801
* When you are done with the returned information, you may dispose of the
* resources by calling PHYSFS_freeList() with the returned pointer.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
802
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
803
* \return Null-terminated array of null-terminated strings. NULL if there
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
804
* was a problem (read: OUT OF MEMORY).
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
805
*
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
806
* \sa PHYSFS_getSearchPathCallback
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
807
808
* \sa PHYSFS_addToSearchPath
* \sa PHYSFS_removeFromSearchPath
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
809
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
810
__EXPORT__ char **PHYSFS_getSearchPath(void);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
811
812
813
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
814
815
816
* \fn int PHYSFS_setSaneConfig(const char *organization, const char *appName, const char *archiveExt, int includeCdRoms, int archivesFirst)
* \brief Set up sane, default paths.
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
817
818
* Helper function.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
819
820
* The write dir will be set to "userdir/.organization/appName", which is
* created if it doesn't exist.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
*
* The above is sufficient to make sure your program's configuration directory
* is separated from other clutter, and platform-independent. The period
* before "mygame" even hides the directory on Unix systems.
*
* The search path will be:
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
828
829
830
* - The Write Dir (created if it doesn't exist)
* - The Base Dir (PHYSFS_getBaseDir())
* - All found CD-ROM dirs (optionally)
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
*
* These directories are then searched for files ending with the extension
* (archiveExt), which, if they are valid and supported archives, will also
* be added to the search path. If you specified "PKG" for (archiveExt), and
* there's a file named data.PKG in the base dir, it'll be checked. Archives
* can either be appended or prepended to the search path in alphabetical
* order, regardless of which directories they were found in.
*
* All of this can be accomplished from the application, but this just does it
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
840
* all for you. Feel free to add more to the search path manually, too.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
841
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
842
* \param organization Name of your company/group/etc to be used as a
Sep 26, 2001
Sep 26, 2001
843
844
* dirname, so keep it small, and no-frills.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
845
* \param appName Program-specific name of your program, to separate it
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
846
847
* from other programs using PhysicsFS.
*
Jul 26, 2002
Jul 26, 2002
848
* \param archiveExt File extension used by your program to specify an
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
849
850
* archive. For example, Quake 3 uses "pk3", even though
* they are just zipfiles. Specify NULL to not dig out
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
851
852
853
* archives automatically. Do not specify the '.' char;
* If you want to look for ZIP files, specify "ZIP" and
* not ".ZIP" ... the archive search is case-insensitive.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
854
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
855
* \param includeCdRoms Non-zero to include CD-ROMs in the search path, and
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
* (if (archiveExt) != NULL) search them for archives.
* This may cause a significant amount of blocking
* while discs are accessed, and if there are no discs
* in the drive (or even not mounted on Unix systems),
* then they may not be made available anyhow. You may
* want to specify zero and handle the disc setup
* yourself.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
863
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
864
* \param archivesFirst Non-zero to prepend the archives to the search path.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
865
* Zero to append them. Ignored if !(archiveExt).
Sep 26, 2001
Sep 26, 2001
866
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
867
* \return nonzero on success, zero on error. Specifics of the error can be
Jul 6, 2001
Jul 6, 2001
868
* gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
869
*/
Sep 26, 2001
Sep 26, 2001
870
871
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_setSaneConfig(const char *organization,
const char *appName,
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
872
873
874
const char *archiveExt,
int includeCdRoms,
int archivesFirst);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
875
876
Dec 1, 2002
Dec 1, 2002
877
878
/* Directory management stuff ... */
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
879
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
880
881
882
883
884
885
* \fn int PHYSFS_mkdir(const char *dirName)
* \brief Create a directory.
*
* This is specified in platform-independent notation in relation to the
* write dir. All missing parent directories are also created if they
* don't exist.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
886
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
887
* So if you've got the write dir set to "C:\mygame\writedir" and call
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
888
* PHYSFS_mkdir("downloads/maps") then the directories
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
889
* "C:\mygame\writedir\downloads" and "C:\mygame\writedir\downloads\maps"
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
890
891
892
* will be created if possible. If the creation of "maps" fails after we
* have successfully created "downloads", then the function leaves the
* created directory behind and reports failure.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
893
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
894
895
* \param dirName New dir to create.
* \return nonzero on success, zero on error. Specifics of the error can be
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
896
* gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
897
898
*
* \sa PHYSFS_delete
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
899
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
900
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_mkdir(const char *dirName);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
901
902
903
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
904
905
906
907
908
* \fn int PHYSFS_delete(const char *filename)
* \brief Delete a file or directory.
*
* (filename) is specified in platform-independent notation in relation to the
* write dir.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
909
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
910
* A directory must be empty before this call can delete it.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
911
*
Mar 25, 2002
Mar 25, 2002
912
913
914
* Deleting a symlink will remove the link, not what it points to, regardless
* of whether you "permitSymLinks" or not.
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
915
* So if you've got the write dir set to "C:\mygame\writedir" and call
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
916
* PHYSFS_delete("downloads/maps/level1.map") then the file
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
917
* "C:\mygame\writedir\downloads\maps\level1.map" is removed from the
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
918
919
920
* physical filesystem, if it exists and the operating system permits the
* deletion.
*
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
921
922
923
924
* Note that on Unix systems, deleting a file may be successful, but the
* actual file won't be removed until all processes that have an open
* filehandle to it (including your program) close their handles.
*
Mar 25, 2002
Mar 25, 2002
925
926
927
928
* Chances are, the bits that make up the file still exist, they are just
* made available to be written over at a later point. Don't consider this
* a security method or anything. :)
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
929
930
* \param filename Filename to delete.
* \return nonzero on success, zero on error. Specifics of the error can be
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
931
932
* gleaned from PHYSFS_getLastError().
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
933
__EXPORT__ int PHYSFS_delete(const char *filename);
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
934
935
936
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
* \fn const char *PHYSFS_getRealDir(const char *filename)
* \brief Figure out where in the search path a file resides.
*
* The file is specified in platform-independent notation. The returned
* filename will be the element of the search path where the file was found,
* which may be a directory, or an archive. Even if there are multiple
* matches in different parts of the search path, only the first one found
* is used, just like when opening a file.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
945
*
Jan 8, 2004
Jan 8, 2004
946
947
* So, if you look for "maps/level1.map", and C:\\mygame is in your search
* path and C:\\mygame\\maps\\level1.map exists, then "C:\mygame" is returned.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
948
*
Jul 7, 2001
Jul 7, 2001
949
950
951
* If a any part of a match is a symbolic link, and you've not explicitly
* permitted symlinks, then it will be ignored, and the search for a match
* will continue.
Jun 7, 2001
Jun 7, 2001
952
*
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
953
954
955
956
* If you specify a fake directory that only exists as a mount point, it'll
* be associated with the first archive mounted there, even though that
* directory isn't necessarily contained in a real archive.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
957
958
* \param filename file to look for.
* \return READ ONLY string of element of search path containing the
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
959
960
* the file in question. NULL if not found.
*/
Aug 23, 2001
Aug 23, 2001
961
__EXPORT__ const char *PHYSFS_getRealDir(const char *filename);
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
962
963
964
/**
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
* \fn char **PHYSFS_enumerateFiles(const char *dir)
* \brief Get a file listing of a search path's directory.
*
* Matching directories are interpolated. That is, if "C:\mydir" is in the
* search path and contains a directory "savegames" that contains "x.sav",
* "y.sav", and "z.sav", and there is also a "C:\userdir" in the search path
* that has a "savegames" subdirectory with "w.sav", then the following code:
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
972
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
973
* \code
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
974
975
976
977
* char **rc = PHYSFS_enumerateFiles("savegames");
* char **i;
*
* for (i = rc; *i != NULL; i++)
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
978
* printf(" * We've got [%s].\n", *i);
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
979
980
*
* PHYSFS_freeList(rc);
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
981
* \endcode
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
982
983
984
*
* ...will print:
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
985
* \verbatim
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
986
987
988
* We've got [x.sav].
* We've got [y.sav].
* We've got [z.sav].
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
989
* We've got [w.sav].\endverbatim
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
990
*
Jul 5, 2001
Jul 5, 2001
991
992
993
* Feel free to sort the list however you like. We only promise there will
* be no duplicates, but not what order the final list will come back in.
*
Jun 28, 2001
Jun 28, 2001
994
995
996
* Don't forget to call PHYSFS_freeList() with the return value from this
* function when you are done with it.
*
Jun 7, 2002
Jun 7, 2002
997
998
* \param dir directory in platform-independent notation to enumerate.
* \return Null-terminated array of null-terminated strings.
Mar 14, 2005
Mar 14, 2005
999
1000
*
* \sa PHYSFS_enumerateFilesCallback