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Does printf always flush the buffer on encountering a newline?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-15 16:28 出处:网络
My machine is running ubuntu 10.10, and I\'m using the standard gnu C library. I was under the impression that printf flushed the buffer if there was a newline described in the format string, however

My machine is running ubuntu 10.10, and I'm using the standard gnu C library. I was under the impression that printf flushed the buffer if there was a newline described in the format string, however the following code repeatedly seemed to buck that trend. Could someone clarify why the buffer is not being flushed.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <sys/wait.h>

int main()
{
    int rc;
   开发者_运维问答 close(1);
    close(2);
    printf("HI 1\n");
    fprintf(stderr, "ERROR\n");

    open("newfile.txt", O_WRONLY | O_CREAT | O_TRUNC, 0600);
    printf("WHAT?\n");
    fprintf(stderr, "I SAID ERROR\n");

    rc = fork();

    if (rc == 0)
    {
        printf("SAY AGAIN?\n");
        fprintf(stderr, "ERROR ERROR\n");
    }
    else
    {
        wait(NULL);
    }

    printf("BYE\n");
    fprintf(stderr, "HI 2\n");

    return 0;
}

The contents of newfile.txt after running this program is as follows.

HI 1
WHAT?
SAY AGAIN?
BYE
HI 1
WHAT?
BYE


No, the standard says that stdout is initially fully buffered if the output device can be determined to be a non-interactive one.

It means that, if you redirect stdout to a file, it won't flush on newline. If you want to try and force it to line-buffered, use setbuf or setvbuf.

The relevant part of C99, 7.19.3 Files, paragraph 7, states:

At program startup, three text streams are predefined and need not be opened explicitly - standard input (for reading conventional input), standard output (for writing conventional output), and standard error (for writing diagnostic output). As initially opened, the standard error stream is not fully buffered; the standard input and standard output streams are fully buffered if and only if the stream can be determined not to refer to an interactive device.

Just keep in mind section 5.1.2.3/6:

What constitutes an interactive device is implementation-defined.


It is flushed if the output device is an interactive one e.g., a terminal.

You have to flush the output buffer in case the output device can be determined to be non-interactive e.g., a file. New line does not do that automatically.

For details see paxdiablo's answer.


You've got a strange sense of humor. :)

int main()
{
    int rc;
    close(1);
    close(2);
    printf("HI 1\n");
    fprintf(stderr, "ERROR\n");

You close the filedescriptors used for stdout and stderr, and then immediately try to use the C stdout and stderr FILE streams. Not a great idea, I'm not sure what the C library will do to report the error to you but crashing would be one acceptable possibility.

That oddity aside, when you're using the standard IO stream functions to write, the buffering depends in part upon the destination. If you're writing to a terminal, then usual behavior is line buffering. If you're writing to a pipe, a file, or a socket, then the usual behavior is block buffering. You can change the buffering behavior with the setvbuf(3) function. Full details of the buffering behavior are in the manpage.

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