| REALPATH(3) | Library Functions Manual | REALPATH(3) | 
NAME
 realpath — returns the canonicalized absolute pathname
LIBRARY
 Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
SYNOPSIS
 #include <sys/param.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
char *
realpath(const char * restrict pathname, char * restrict resolvedname);
 
DESCRIPTION
 The 
realpath() function resolves all symbolic links, extra “/” characters and references to 
/./ and 
/../ in 
pathname, and copies the resulting absolute pathname into the memory referenced by 
resolvedname. The 
resolvedname argument 
must refer to a buffer capable of storing at least 
MAXPATHLEN characters.
The realpath() function will resolve both absolute and relative paths and return the absolute pathname corresponding to pathname.
 
RETURN VALUES
 If 
resolvednamed is 
NULL, it will be allocated and the returned pointer can be deallocated using 
free(3). The 
realpath() function returns 
resolvedname on success. If an error occurs, 
realpath() returns 
NULL, and 
resolvedname was not allocated by 
realpath, it will contain the pathname which caused the problem.
 
STANDARDS
 realpath() first appeared in X/Open Portability Guide Issue 4, Version 2 (“XPG4.2”) and is part of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (“POSIX.1”).
HISTORY
 The realpath() function call first appeared in 4.4BSD. In NetBSD 7.0 the function was updated to accept a NULL pointer for the resolvedname argument.
BUGS
 This implementation of realpath() differs slightly from the Solaris implementation. The 4.4BSD version always returns absolute pathnames, whereas the Solaris implementation will, under certain circumstances, return a relative resolvedname when given a relative pathname.