GETPROGNAME(3) | Library Functions Manual | GETPROGNAME(3) |
getprogname
,
setprogname
— get or set the
program name
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<stdlib.h>
const char *
getprogname
(void);
void
setprogname
(const
char *progname);
The
getprogname
()
and setprogname
() functions manipulate the name of
the current program. They are used by error-reporting routines to produce
consistent output.
The
getprogname
()
function returns the name of the program. If the name has not been set yet,
it will return NULL
.
The
setprogname
()
function sets the name of the program to be the last component of the
progname argument. Since a pointer to the given string
is kept as the program name, it should not be modified for the rest of the
program's lifetime.
In FreeBSD, the name of the
program is set by the start-up code that is run before
main
(); thus,
running setprogname
() is not necessary. Programs
that desire maximum portability should still call it; on another operating
system, these functions may be implemented in a portability library. Calling
setprogname
() allows the aforementioned library to
learn the program name without modifications to the start-up code.
These functions first appeared in NetBSD 1.6, and made their way into FreeBSD 4.4.
May 1, 2001 | macOS 15.2 |