On one hand, it's true that neither the C or C++ standard, taken in isolation, provides ways to do these things with guaranteed 100% portability to every conforming implementation of C or C++.
On the other hand, it's also true that part of the joy of standards is there are so many to choose from, including things like POSIX and SUS (both of which standardize interfaces to things like networking and file systems).
Yet another fact is that few people really care about writing code that's truly guaranteed to be 100% portable to every possible conforming implementation of C or C++.
That leads to the direct answer to the question you asked. There are really two choices: you can provide answers using things like Qt and/or Boost that are portable to a wide enough variety of systems that they're likely to meet most people's needs and/or you can leave a comment asking the OP what platforms/OSes he needs to support and what libraries he's using and/or willing to use.
It's always possible that the OP will reply that he needs code portable to absolutely everything, and can't use any libraries or other standards to help. In that (rare) case, you can pretty much point back at the language standard, and say: "sorry, that's all there is." Most people have a lot more flexibility than that though, so most such questions do have perfectly good and reasonable answers.