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Creates, opens, reopens, or deletes a file.
HFILE OpenFile(
[in] LPCSTR lpFileName,
[out] LPOFSTRUCT lpReOpenBuff,
[in] UINT uStyle
);
[in] lpFileName
The name of the file.
The string must consist of characters from the 8-bit Windows character set. The OpenFile function does not support Unicode file names or opening named pipes.
[out] lpReOpenBuff
A pointer to the OFSTRUCT structure that receives information about a file when it is first opened.
The structure can be used in subsequent calls to the OpenFile function to see an open file.
The OFSTRUCT structure contains a path string member with a length that is limited to OFS_MAXPATHNAME characters, which is 128 characters. Because of this, you cannot use the OpenFile function to open a file with a path length that exceeds 128 characters. The CreateFile function does not have this path length limitation.
[in] uStyle
The action to be taken.
This parameter can be one or more of the following values.
Value | Meaning |
---|---|
|
Ignored.
To produce a dialog box containing a Cancel button, use OF_PROMPT. |
|
Creates a new file.
If the file exists, it is truncated to zero (0) length. |
|
Deletes a file. |
|
Opens a file and then closes it.
Use this to test for the existence of a file. |
|
Fills the OFSTRUCT structure, but does not do anything else. |
|
Displays a dialog box if a requested file does not exist.
A dialog box informs a user that the system cannot find a file, and it contains Retry and Cancel buttons. The Cancel button directs OpenFile to return a file-not-found error message. |
|
Opens a file for reading only. |
|
Opens a file with read/write permissions. |
|
Opens a file by using information in the reopen buffer. |
|
For MS-DOS–based file systems, opens a file with compatibility mode, allows any
process on a specified computer to open the file any number of times.
Other efforts to open a file with other sharing modes fail. This flag is mapped to the FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE flags of the CreateFile function. |
|
Opens a file without denying read or write access to other processes.
On MS-DOS-based file systems, if the file has been opened in compatibility mode by any other process, the function fails. This flag is mapped to the FILE_SHARE_READ|FILE_SHARE_WRITE flags of the CreateFile function. |
|
Opens a file and denies read access to other processes.
On MS-DOS-based file systems, if the file has been opened in compatibility mode, or for read access by any other process, the function fails. This flag is mapped to the FILE_SHARE_WRITE flag of the CreateFile function. |
|
Opens a file and denies write access to other processes.
On MS-DOS-based file systems, if a file has been opened in compatibility mode, or for write access by any other process, the function fails. This flag is mapped to the FILE_SHARE_READ flag of the CreateFile function. |
|
Opens a file with exclusive mode, and denies both read/write access to other processes. If a file has been opened in any other mode for read/write access, even by the current process, the function fails. |
|
Verifies that the date and time of a file are the same as when it was opened previously.
This is useful as an extra check for read-only files. |
|
Opens a file for write access only. |
If the function succeeds, the return value specifies a file handle to use when performing file I/O. To close the file, call the CloseHandle function using this handle.
If the function fails, the return value is HFILE_ERROR. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.
If the lpFileName parameter specifies a file name and extension only, this function searches for a matching file in the following directories and the order shown:
- The directory where an application is loaded.
- The current directory.
-
The Windows system directory.
Use the GetSystemDirectory function to get the path of this directory.
-
The 16-bit Windows system directory.
There is not a function that retrieves the path of this directory, but it is searched.
-
The Windows directory.
Use the GetWindowsDirectory function to get the path of this directory.
- The directories that are listed in the PATH environment variable.
The OpenFile function does not support the OF_SEARCH flag that the 16-bit Windows OpenFile function supports. The OF_SEARCH flag directs the system to search for a matching file even when a file name includes a full path. Use the SearchPath function to search for a file.
A sharing violation occurs if an attempt is made to open a file or directory for deletion on a remote machine when the value of the uStyle parameter is the OF_DELETE access flag OR'ed with any other access flag, and the remote file or directory has not been opened with FILE_SHARE_DELETE share access. To avoid the sharing violation in this scenario, open the remote file or directory with OF_DELETE access only, or call DeleteFile without first opening the file or directory for deletion.
In Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012, this function is supported by the following technologies.
Technology | Supported |
---|---|
Server Message Block (SMB) 3.0 protocol | Yes |
SMB 3.0 Transparent Failover (TFO) | Yes |
SMB 3.0 with Scale-out File Shares (SO) | Yes |
Cluster Shared Volume File System (CsvFS) | Yes |
Resilient File System (ReFS) | Yes |
CsvFs will do redirected IO for compressed files.
Requirement | Value |
---|---|
Minimum supported client | Windows XP [desktop apps only] |
Minimum supported server | Windows Server 2003 [desktop apps only] |
Target Platform | Windows |
Header | winbase.h (include Windows.h) |
Library | Kernel32.lib |
DLL | Kernel32.dll |