Platform SDK: Registry

GetPrivateProfileSectionNames

The GetPrivateProfileSectionNames function retrieves the names of all sections in an initialization file.

Note  This function is provided only for compatibility with 16-bit Windows-based applications. Win32-based applications should store initialization information in the registry.

DWORD GetPrivateProfileSectionNames(
  LPTSTR lpszReturnBuffer,  // return buffer
  DWORD nSize,              // size of return buffer
  LPCTSTR lpFileName        // initialization file name
);

Parameters

lpszReturnBuffer
[out] Pointer to a buffer that receives the section names associated with the named file. The buffer is filled with one or more null-terminated strings; the last string is followed by a second null character.
nSize
[in] Specifies the size, in TCHARs, of the buffer pointed to by the lpszReturnBuffer parameter.
lpFileName
[in] Pointer to a null-terminated string that specifies the name of the initialization file. If this parameter is NULL, the function searches the Win.ini file. If this parameter does not contain a full path to the file, the system searches for the file in the Windows directory.

Return Values

The return value specifies the number of characters copied to the specified buffer, not including the terminating null character. If the buffer is not large enough to contain all the section names associated with the specified initialization file, the return value is equal to the length specified by nSize minus two.

Remarks

This operation is atomic; no updates to the initialization file are allowed while the section names are being copied to the buffer.

Calls to profile functions might be mapped to the registry instead of to the initialization files. When the operation has been mapped, the GetPrivateProfileSectionNames function retrieves information from the registry, not from the initialization file; the change in the storage location has no effect on the function's behavior.

The Win32 profile functions (Get/WriteProfile*, Get/WritePrivateProfile*) use the following steps to locate initialization information:

  1. Look in the registry for the name of the initialization file, say MyFile.ini, under IniFileMapping:

    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\
            Windows NT\CurrentVersion\IniFileMapping\myfile.ini

  2. Look for the section name specified by lpAppName. This will be a named value under myfile.ini, or a subkey of myfile.ini, or will not exist.
  3. If the section name specified by lpAppName is a named value under myfile.ini, then that value specifies where in the registry you will find the keys for the section.
  4. If the section name specified by lpAppName is a subkey of myfile.ini, then named values under that subkey specify where in the registry you will find the keys for the section. If the key you are looking for does not exist as a named value, then there will be an unnamed value (shown as <No Name>) that specifies the default location in the registry where you will find the key.
  5. If the section name specified by lpAppName does not exist as a named value or as a subkey under myfile.ini, then there will be an unnamed value (shown as <No Name>) under myfile.ini that specifies the default location in the registry where you will find the keys for the section.
  6. If there is no subkey for MyFile.ini, or if there is no entry for the section name, then look for the actual MyFile.ini on the disk and read its contents.

When looking at values in the registry that specify other registry locations, there are several prefixes that change the behavior of the .ini file mapping:

Requirements

  Windows NT/2000: Requires Windows NT 3.1 or later.
  Windows 95/98: Requires Windows 95 or later.
  Header: Declared in Winbase.h; include Windows.h.
  Library: Use Kernel32.lib.
  Unicode: Implemented as Unicode and ANSI versions on Windows NT/2000.

See Also

Registry Overview, Registry Functions, GetPrivateProfileSection, WritePrivateProfileSection