I have an embedded Linux app that writes to a file at a fairly slow rate (50 bytes/s or so). The file is on a hard drive, XFS filesystem. The file is being written to by calling write()
, not fwrite()
.
If I power-cycle the system and check the file, over a minute's worth of data is missing. I thought the default Linux behaviour was to sync the disk cache every 5s (I can tolerate 5s worth of missing data so they'd be no problem with this). What should I be checking to see why it isn't getting synced for a long time? /proc/sys/vm/dirty_writeback_centisecs
is 500. Are there other changeable things I should be checking? It definitely looks to be a disk cache issue - if i ls -l
the file, the size is as expected, and after the power cycle it is less than before.
write()
has it's own caching that's performed by the runtime library, so the OS never hears about those bytes untilflush()
is called. But I'm not sure ifwrite()
is different fromfwrite()
in this aspect.