HPlogo Accessing Files Programmer's Guide: HP 3000 MPE/iX Computer Systems > Chapter 7 Record Selection and Data Transfer

Record Pointers

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The file system uses record pointers to find specific records for your use. Physical record pointers (also referred to as block pointers) are used to locate specific blocks on disk; logical record pointers blocks and deblocks the logical records in a physical record and indicate specific logical records within a file. A file opened with the inhibit buffering option parameter set to BUF (the default) is accessed with a logical record pointer. A file opened with the inhibit buffering option parameter set to NOBUF is accessed with a physical record (or block) pointer.

Figure 7-1 “Record Pointers ” shows how the physical and logical record pointers operate together to locate any record in a file. For any record, the physical record pointer indicates the correct block, and the logical record pointer locates the logical record within the block.

The file system uses both the physical and the logical record pointers to locate records. Future references to "record pointer" in this manual will imply this combination.

When you open your file the HPFOPEN/FOPEN intrinsic sets the record pointer to record 0 (the first record in your file) for all operations. If you have opened the file with APPEND access, though (using the access type option parameter available in HPFOPEN/FOPEN), MPE/iX moves the record pointer to the end of the file prior to a write operation; this ensures that any data that you write to the file is added to the end of the file rather than written over existing data.

Figure 7-1 Record Pointers

[Record Pointers]

Following initialization, the record pointer may remain in position at the head of your file, or it may be moved by the intrinsics used in record selection.