NAME¶
gd_encoding — report the binary encoding of data in a dirfile
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <getdata.h>
unsigned long gd_encoding(DIRFILE *dirfile, int
fragment_index);
DESCRIPTION¶
The
gd_encoding() function queries a
dirfile(5) database specified by
dirfile and returns the binary encoding for the fragment indexed by
fragment_index. The binary encoding of a fragment indicate the encoding
of data stored in binary files associated with
RAW fields defined in
the specified fragment. The encoding of a fragment containing no
RAW
fields is ignored.
RETURN VALUE¶
Upon successful completion,
gd_encoding() returns the binary encoding of
the specified fragment, which will one of the following symbols:
- GD_UNENCODED, GD_TEXT_ENCODED, GD_SLIM_ENCODED,
GD_GZIP_ENCODED, GD_BZIP2_ENCODED, GD_LZMA_ENCODED,
GD_ENC_UNSUPPORTED.
See
gd_cbopen(3) and
dirfile-encoding(5) for the meanings of these
symbols and details on the supported encoding schemes. If the encoding scheme
specified in the dirfile metadata is unknown to GetData,
GD_ENC_UNSUPPORTED will be returned.
On error, it returns zero and sets the dirfile error to a non-zero error value.
Possible error values are:
- GD_E_BAD_DIRFILE
- The supplied dirfile was invalid.
- GD_E_BAD_INDEX
- The supplied index was out of range.
The dirfile error may be retrieved by calling
gd_error(3). A descriptive
error string for the last error encountered can be obtained from a call to
gd_error_string(3).
SEE ALSO¶
gd_alter_encoding(3),
gd_cbopen(3),
gd_error(3),
gd_error_string(3),
gd_getdata(3),
dirfile(5),
dirfile-format(5)