I have a C++ program which opens files in /tmp (on a *nix system) and reads their contents.
To do this, I am using:
ofstream dest;
dest.open(abs_path.c_str(), ios::app);
where abs_path is a string containing the absolute path to the file.
The problem is that some *nix programs create named pipes as files in /tmp. For example,
/tmp/vgdb-pipe-to-vgdb-from-23732-by-myusername-on-???
Is a pipe created by a debugging utility I am using.
In the documentation for ofstream, the open method it says that the method sets an error bit when opening the file fails. However, in my tests it instead hangs trying to open the file (which is actually a pipe) indefinitely. I assume this is because the file is locked by another program (probably the debugger).
So, how can I force ofstream::open to block for a finite amount of time, or not at all? It's easy enough to clean up gracefully if it fails, but it needs to actually fail first..
open
call succeeds. Also, a named pipe is outside the scope of the C++ standard, so theofstream
documentation probably doesn't consider it.