I'm trying to read from a file in C and after I'm done reading want to write to the same file. I'm trying to use fread() for this. Does anyone know if fread advances the pointer after it encounters "\0"? I mean after I finish reading do I need to advance the pointer or do I need to straight-away start writing into the file using fwrite ?
fread will advance the file position (not pointer) until it hits EOF.
However, it will not stop reading simply because it encounters '\0'. In fact, even fgets will only stop reading when it encounters \n. No standard library function I know of stops reading a file at '\0'.
Yes, it does advance the pointer unless you meet EOF or encounter an error:
RETURN VALUES
The functions fread() and fwrite() advance the file position indicator for the stream by the number of bytes read or written. They return
the number of objects read or written. If an error occurs, or the end-of-file is reached, the return value is a short object count (or
zero).
Related
Fread apparently knows the place where it last stopped, by that I mean this:
while(fread(buffer, 1, 1, file))
{
…
}
This loop would continue the next time where it stopped the last time. I assume it just moves the file pointer forward, but could someone explain if it’s exactly like that?
The function fread reads from a stream, which is not necessarily a file. Streams can also be linked to consoles/terminals. Some streams are seekable and have a file position indicator, some do not. Streams which are linked to actual files usually do have a file position indicator.
The function fread itself does not advance any file position indicator (it does not call fseek). It just reads from the stream.
If a stream has a file position indicator, then the runtime library will advance the file position indicator, whenever a read takes place on the stream. It does this for all reads on the stream, not just for fread.
The manual for the standard c library function fseek says: "A successful call to the fseek()function clears the end-of-file indicator for the stream."
To me it sounds like saying if EOF is at 2 and I call fseek() to get the pointer at 4, that should work and eof will be now pointing to 5. But when I test this hypothesis, the pointer doesn't advance beyond current EOF(2 in above case), and hence my understanding of the line is wrong. What does this line mean then? Thanks!
You have to remember that the EOF flag is not set until you actually try to read from beyond the end of the file.
With fseek clearing the flag, it does this even if you seek to beyond the end of the file. And it works because the flag will be set again next time you read.
That is why it's a bad idea to have loops such as while (!feof(...)), as those will then loop once to many without detecting the actual end of the file condition.
I want to read from a file by using its file descriptor. I can't use its name because of assignment rules.
I obtain it by calling open and it works fine. At this moment I know that I have to use the read() function in order to read from it. My problem is that read() function requires as an argument the number of bytes to read, and I want to read a whole line from the file each time, so I don't know how many bytes to read.
If i use for example fscanf(), it works fine with a simple string and I take back the whole line as I want. So my question is:
Is there any function like fscanf() which can be called with file descriptor and not with a file pointer?
When you say "have to use read()" I can't tell if that's your understanding of the situation given a file descriptor from open() or a restriction on some kind of assignment.
If you have a file descriptor but you're more comfortable with fscanf() and friends, use fdopen() to get a FILE * from your fd and proceed to use stdio.
Internally it uses functions like read() into a buffer and then processes those buffers as you read them with fscanf() and friends.
What you could do is read one character at a time, until you've read the entire line, and detect a '/n'. As this is homework, I won't write it for you.
A few things to be warned of, however.
You need to check for EOF, otherwise, you might end up in an infinite loop.
You should declare some buffer which you read a character, then copy it into the buffer. Not knowing what your input is, I can't suggest a size, other than to say that for a homework assignment, [256] would probably be sufficient.
You need to make sure you don't overfill your buffer in the even that you do run over it's length.
Keep reading until you find a '/n' character. Then process the line that you have created, and start the next one.
I am struggling to know the difference between these functions. Which one of them can be used if i want to read one character at a time.
fread()
read()
getc()
Depending on how you want to do it you can use any of those functions.
The easier to use would probably be fgetc().
fread() : read a block of data from a stream (documentation)
read() : posix implementation of fread() (documentation)
getc() : get a character from a stream (documentation). Please consider using fgetc() (doc)instead since it's kind of saffer.
fread() is a standard C function for reading blocks of binary data from a file.
read() is a POSIX function for doing the same.
getc() is a standard C function (a macro, actually) for reading a single character from a file - i.e., it's what you are looking for.
In addition to the other answers, also note that read is unbuffered method to read from a file. fread provides an internal buffer and reading is buffered. The buffer size is determined by you. Also each time you call read a system call occurs which reads the amount of bytes you told it to. Where as with fread it will read a chunk in the internal buffer and return you only the bytes you need. For each call on fread it will first check if it can provide you with more data from the buffer, if not it makes a system call (read) and gets a chunk more data and returns you only the portion you wanted.
Also read directly handles the file descriptor number, where fread needs the file to be opened as a FILE pointer.
The answer depends on what you mean by "one character at a time".
If you want to ensure that only one character is consumed from the underlying file descriptor (which may refer to a non-seekable object like a pipe, socket, or terminal device) then the only solution is to use read with a length of 1. If you use strace (or similar) to monitor a shell script using the shell command read, you'll see that it repeatedly calls read with a length of 1. Otherwise it would risk reading too many bytes (past the newline it's looking for) and having subsequent processes fail to see the data on the "next line".
On the other hand, if the only program that should be performing further reads is your program itself, fread or getc will work just fine. Note that getc should be a lot faster than fread if you're just reading a single byte.
What I need to do is use the read function from unistd.h to read a file
line by line. I have this at the moment:
n = read(fd, str, size);
However, this reads to the end of the file, or up to size number of bytes.
Is there a way that I can make it read one line at a time, stopping at a newline?
The lines are all of variable length.
I am allowed only these two header files:
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
The point of the exercise is to read in a file line by line, and
output each line as it's read in. Basically, to mimic the fgets()
and fputs() functions.
You can read character by character into a buffer and check for the linebreak symbols (\r\n for Windows and \n for Unix systems).
You'll want to create a buffer twice the length of your longest line you'll support, and you'll need to keep track of your buffer state.
Basically, each time you're called for a new line you'll scan from your current buffer position looking for an end-of-line marker. If you find one, good, that's your line. Update your buffer pointers and return.
If you hit your maxlength then you return a truncated line and change your state to discard. Next time you're called you need to discard up to the next end of line, and then enter your normal read state.
If you hit the end of what you've read in, then you need to read in another maxline chars, wrapping to the start of the buffer if you hit the bottom (ie, you may need to make two read calls) and then continue scanning.
All of the above assumes you can set a max line length. If you can't then you have to work with dynamic memory and worry about what happens if a buffer malloc fails. Also, you'll need to always check the results of the read in case you've hit the end of the file while reading into your buffer.
Unfortunately the read function isn't really suitable for this sort of input. Assuming this is some sort of artificial requirement from interview/homework/exercise, you can attempt to simulate line-based input by reading the file in chunks and splitting it on the newline character yourself, maintaining state in some way between calls. You can get away with a static position indicator if you carefully document the function's use.
This is a good question, but allowing only the read function doesn't help! :P
Loop read calls to get a fixed number of bytes, and search the '\n' character, then return a part of the string (untill '\n'), and stores the rest (except '\n') to prepend to the next character file chunk.
Use dynamic memory.
Greater the size of the buffer, less read calls used (which is a system call, so no cheap but nowadays there are preemptive kernels).
...
Or simply fix a maximum line length, and use fgets, if you need to be quick...
If you need to read exactly 1 line (and not overstep) using read(), the only generally-applicable way to do that is by reading 1 byte at a time and looping until you get a newline byte. However, if your file descriptor refers to a terminal and it's in the default (canonical) mode, read will wait for a newline and return less than the requested size as soon as a line is available. It may however return more than one line, if data arrives very quickly, or less than 1 line if your program's buffer or the internal terminal buffer is shorter than the line length.
Unless you really need to avoid overstep (which is sometimes important, if you want another process/program to inherit the file descriptor and be able to pick up reading where you left off), I would suggest using stdio functions or your own buffering system. Using read for line-based or byte-by-byte IO is very painful and hard to get right.
Well, it will read line-by-line from a terminal.
Some choices you have are:
Write a function that uses read when it runs out of data but only returns one line at a time to the caller
Use the function in the library that does exactly that: fgets().
Read only one byte at a time, so you don't go too far.
If you open the file in text mode then Windows "\r\n" will be silently translated to "\n" as the file is read.
If you are on Unix you can use the non-standard1 gcc 'getline()' function.
1 The getline() function is standard in POSIX 2008.
Convert file descriptor to FILE pointer.
FILE* fp = fdopen(fd, "r");
Then you can use getline().