When does the Read System call terminates when taking input from STDIN ??
1 Answer
There are quite a few parts to this.
First, let's clarify the distinction between OS-level IO and stdio-level IO. read(2)
and write(2)
(POSIX IO) are specified by POSIX, and operate using file descriptors (numbers starting from 0); fread(3)
and fwrite(3)
(stdio IO) are specified by ISO C and operate on file handles, such as STDIN
, which on POSIX systems encapsulate file descriptors and add some things (such as output buffering) on top of them.
So, read(2)
and write(2)
don't do any buffering on their own. The buffering you see on standard input (file descriptor 0
, not STDIN
, which is one abstraction above that) is done by the terminal (or terminal emulation). Search for canonical mode to disable it.
At the stdio-level, fwrite(3)
(and printf(3)
, fprintf(3)
, et al.) does output buffering depending on what the output is connected to.
See also:
How to check if a key was pressed in Linux?
Single characters are not printed on the terminal
Does printing to the screen cause a switch to kernel mode and running OS code in Unix?