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I'm reading source code of the linux tool badblocks. They use the read() function there. Is there a difference to the standard C fread() function? (I'm not counting the arguments as a difference.)

7 Answers 7

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read() is a low level, unbuffered read. It makes a direct system call on UNIX.

fread() is part of the C library, and provides buffered reads. It is usually implemented by calling read() in order to fill its buffer.

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  • 5
    So there are 3 buffers? The harddrive has one, /dev/hda is buffered too and fread. Is this correct? Feb 24, 2009 at 23:52
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    yes. you can flush the third one using "fflush", the second one using fsync. i don't know of a way to flush the harddrive buffer. Feb 25, 2009 at 0:16
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    fflush() only really applies to fwrite(), which has the same relation to write() that fread() has to read().
    – Darron
    Feb 25, 2009 at 11:50
  • @Darron im more of a Linux guy and question was about Linux. It can differ per OS but in general one can assume that in Linux fread calls read. Jun 30, 2016 at 11:38
  • @JohannesSchaub-litb Is my understanding correct: read is not actually a completely "unbuffered" read, in the sense that it enjoys at least hard drive disk buffer and os-level buffer? The only buffer it misses, is the library-level buffer which is offered by fread?
    – torez233
    Oct 28, 2022 at 7:08
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Family read() -> open, close, read, write
Family fread() -> fopen, fclose, fread, fwrite

Family read:

  • are system calls
  • are not formatted IO: we have a non formatted byte stream

Family fread

  • are functions of the standard C library (libc)
  • use an internal buffer
  • are formatted IO (with the "%.." parameter) for some of them
  • use always the Linux buffer cache

More details here, although note that this post contains some incorrect information.

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    The last two bullet points in both the read and fread lists are nonsense. Both families use the buffer cache by default, and which one to use has nothing to do with whether you are accessing a character device, a block device, or a regular file.
    – Marcus
    Dec 17, 2015 at 15:47
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    AIB is confusing two layers of buffering -- the kernel buffering happens in both cases (what I would normally call the Linux buffer cache) but buffering that is done in userspace to reduce the total number of system calls I think only happens with fread. Jan 15, 2016 at 15:40
  • @Marcus I've removed most of the misconceptions from the answer.
    – user149341
    Mar 8, 2017 at 18:37
  • Technically family read are not syscalls. It's the standard C library (libc) too. read() is a bit "thinner" wrapper over the syscall than fread()
    – red0ct
    Oct 9, 2022 at 16:47
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As I remember it the read() level APIs do not do buffering - so if you read() 1 byte at a time you will have a huge perf penalty compared to doing the same thing with fread(). fread() will pull a block and dole it out as you ask for it. read() will drop to the kernel for each call.

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read is a syscall, whereas fread is a function in the C standard library.

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    @Jānis Gruzis, that depends on the implementation of fread. Mainly because there is no guarantee that the system call read is available. Wikipedia read page
    – bzeaman
    Oct 31, 2014 at 10:05
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    @JānisGruzis I just checked if it's the same on Windows and to my amazement I discovered that their read is deprecated. Presumably their fread calls _read and not read? In any case it seems that not every fread must call read.
    – rsp
    Jun 29, 2016 at 23:15
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One difference you should be aware of if you are converting code that uses one to using the other:

  • fread blocks until the number of bytes you asked for has been read, or the file ends, or an error occurs.
  • read also blocks, but if you ask for say 4kB it may return after reading just 1kB, even if the file has not ended.

This can cause subtle bugs, as it depends on where the file is stored, caches, etc.

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read() --> Directly using this system call to kernel and that performs the IO operation.

fread() --> Is a function provided in standard library.

Calling fread() is mainly used for binary file data where struct data are stored. The main difference between these two is the number of system calls in your application.

The fread() kind of standard IO library functions are optimized for system calls, rather your application making system calls.

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For Beginners like me in C/Systems programming domain. I am roughly quoting the answer from the lecture around this timestamp by Professor John Kubiatowicz.

fread is a high level C-API that internally uses the low-level read system call in an optimized way.

Imagine your system is optimized to read 4k bytes at a time. When you use fread to read from a file in a while loop, you will initiate read system call once to get a chunk of 4k bytes from the kernel and save it in user buffer. Now, all the subsequent reading for upto 4k bytes will happen from that user buffer. This is good because system calls are expensive.

This is also highlighted by the comment from @Joseph Garvin in his comment above.

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