I need my code (C++, on linux) to call a second executable, having previously written an output file which is read by the second program. Does the naïve approach,
std::ofstream out("myfile.txt");
// write output here
out.close();
system("secondprogram myfile.txt");
suffer from a potential race condition, where even though out.close() has executed, the file cannot immediately be read by secondprogram
? If so, what is the best practice for resolving this?
Three notes:
- If this is file-system-dependent, I'm interested in the behaviour on ext3 and tmpfs.
- Clearly there are other reasons (file permissions etc.) why the second program might fail to open the file; I'm just interested in the potential for a race condition.
- The hardcoded filename in the example above is for simplicity; in reality I use
mkstemp
.
strace
your program?close()
returns only after the relevant syscall forclose
ing a file has returned, the kernel has to guarantee that after the syscall returns, the file is openable and all changes made through the old handle are visible, and the VFS has to guarantee to handle the caches correctly. I'd agree with @BasileStarynkevitch : All of this should hold and you shouldn't run into problems.