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C programming print a certain amount of bytes to screen
I would like to read partSize amount of bytes from one file, which can be of any type, and print that same exact amount that was read to a new file which already exists. The program I wrote seems to write less than it is suppose to and gives a segmentation fault.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#define PERMS 0777
#include <errno.h>
int main()
{
int createDescriptor;
int openDescriptorOriginal;
int closeCreateDescriptor;
char fileNameOriginal[15]="picture.jpg";
//char fileNameOriginal[15]="myFile.txt";
//char fileNameNew[15]="NEWFILE.txt";
char fileName[15]="NEWFILE.jpg";
int parts;
int partSize;
parts=2;
int bytesRemaining;
int partNumber;
char BUFFER[512];
int readDescriptor;
int openDescriptor;
if ((openDescriptorOriginal = open(fileNameOriginal, O_RDONLY )) == -1)
{
printf("Error opening %s", fileNameOriginal);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
struct stat buf;
int r = fstat(openDescriptorOriginal, &buf);
if(r)
{
fprintf(stderr, "error: fstat: %s\n",(char *)strerror(errno));
exit(1);
}
int originalFileSize=buf.st_size;
printf("The file is %d Bytes large.\n",originalFileSize);
partSize=((originalFileSize+parts)-1)/parts;
printf("Each part is %.9f Kilobytes large.\n",(double)partSize/1024 );
partNumber=1;
printf("Part number: %d\n", partNumber);
if ((openDescriptor = open(fileName, O_WRONLY )) == -1)
{
printf("Error creating %s\n", fileName);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
ssize_t count, total;
total = 0;
char *bufff = BUFFER;
while (partSize) {
count = read(openDescriptorOriginal, bufff, partSize);
if (count < 0) {
// handle error
break;
}
if (count == 0)
break;
bufff += count;
total += count;
partSize -= count;
}
write (openDescriptor, BUFFER, total);
printf("\n");
return 0;
}
write()
function has a return value that you don't seem to be examining. Also if your input file is over 512 bytes large, it appears you will be overflowing yourBUFFER
.write()
call to be inside the same loop that holds theread()
) you can use any size buffer you like (as long as you re-use the buffer with each read() call, rather than advancing beyond it the way you currently are).