Date: Mon, 22 Nov 1999 16:26:44 -0800 (PST) From: Alfred Perlstein <bright@wintelcom.net> To: Brian Fundakowski Feldman <green@FreeBSD.ORG> Cc: Zhihui Zhang <zzhang@cs.binghamton.edu>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: A file with holes - a bug? Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.4.21.9911221621320.4557-100000@fw.wintelcom.net> In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.10.9911221841190.34116-100000@green.myip.org>
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On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, Brian Fundakowski Feldman wrote: > On Mon, 22 Nov 1999, Zhihui Zhang wrote: > > > > > Please take a look at the following piece of code that creates a large > > hole in a file named hole.dat. It tries to write 0x30-0x39 both at the > > front and the tail of that file, the hole is therefore in the middle. > > > > main() > > { > > char c; > > FILE * fp; > > > > fp = fopen("hole.dat", "w"); > > > > for (c=0x30; c<0x3a; c++) fputc(c, fp); > > fputc('\n',fp); > > fflush(fp); /* XXX */ > > lseek(fileno(fp), 3 * 8192, SEEK_CUR); > > This should be fseek() and not lseek(). > > > for (c=0x30; c<0x3a; c++) fputc(c, fp); > > fputc('\n',fp); > > fclose(fp); > > } > > > > If I remove the fflush(fp), then the characters 0x30-0x39 will be all > > written at the end of the file (use hexdump to find out), not as expected > > (one at the beginning and the other at the end). It seems to me that the > > first for loop happens AFTER the lseek() statement without fflush(). Can > > anyone explain this to me? I am using FreeBSD 3.3-Release. > > That's because you're not using fseek() like your should be using > for FILE * IO. Don't mix FILE *fp and int fd operations callously. Brian is right, a long while back it took me _forever_ to figure out that the reason I was having a ton of trouble (nulls appearing in a file) was that one part of the program was using stdio and creating the file, then it would hand it off to another part which used direct io, however I wasn't fflush()'ing or fclose()'ing the FILE before handing it off. Did I mention that the problem was difficult to reproduce because the dataset would change thereby masking the problem more often than not? *doh* yah, don't mix stdio and direct io. :) -Alfred To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
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