SYS-DUP(2)                                             SYS-DUP(2)

     NAME
          dup, fildes - duplicate an open file descriptor

     SYNOPSIS
          include "sys.m";
          sys := load Sys Sys->PATH;

          dup:    fn(oldfd, newfd: int):  int;
          fildes: fn(fd: int):            ref FD;

     DESCRIPTION
          The Limbo programming language and its libraries manage I/O
          via references to instances of abstract data type, FD,
          called a Limbo file descriptor, or simply `file descriptor'
          when the context is understood.  FD holds an integer-valued
          file descriptor, the form used by the operating system, in a
          structure that can be reference counted and garbage col-
          lected.  When the FD value is reclaimed, the system automat-
          ically closes the associated integer file descriptor.  There
          are occasions when a program must access the underlying
          integer file descriptor, such as when rearranging the stan-
          dard input and output for a new subprocess.

          The dup call takes a valid integer file descriptor, oldfd,
          referring to an open file, and returns a new integer file
          descriptor referring to the same file.  If newfd is in the
          range of legal file descriptors, dup will use that for the
          new file descriptor (closing any old file associated with
          newfd); if newfd is -1 the system chooses the lowest avail-
          able file descriptor.  If a suitable file descriptor cannot
          be found, dup returns -1.

          Fildes duplicates the integer file descriptor fd, as if by
          sys->dup(fd,-1), and returns a reference to the new descrip-
          tor as an FD value, making it usable by other functions in
          Sys, such as sys-print(2) and sys-read(2). (Note that as
          described above, the newly-allocated file descriptor will be
          closed automatically when the FD value is reclaimed.)
          Fildes returns nil if it cannot duplicate fd.

     SEE ALSO
          sys-intro(2), sys-open(2)

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