I'm trying to use low level functions in C and wanting to read from the STDIN and store that information in a file.
int dash, c;
char buffer[1024];
if((dash = creat("file.txt", S_IRWXU)) < 0)
perror("creat error");
while ((c = read(STDIN_FILENO, buffer, sizeof(buffer))) > 0) {
if (write(dash, buffer, c) != c)
perror("write error");
I having a problem understanding how I can access 'file.txt' to read it to either print to the screen or store to another file. Would I just use 'read("file.txt", buffer, sizeof[buffer])'?
EDIT Now after creating "file.txt" I want to open another file, lets say file1 (argv[3]) and dump "file.txt" into file1 (agrv[3]). Would this work?
fd = open(argv[3], O_RDWR); //open 3rd arg for writing
fd_2 = open("file.txt", O_RDWR); //open created file
do {
n = read(fd_2, buffer, sizeof(buffer));
if (n < 0)
perror("read error argv[2]"); //greater 0=succesful
write(STDOUT_FILENO, buffer, n); // this is where I'm stuck
} while (n == sizeof(buffer));
close(fd);
I have both files open now but can't figure out how to write "file.txt" into argv[3].
creat()
, you zap the previous content of the file; it is empty. There's nothing to read.creat()
, there is nothing in the file to read until you have written some data to the file. POSIX definescreat()
saying: Thecreat()
function shall behave as if it is implemented as follows:int creat(const char *path, mode_t mode) { return open(path, O_WRONLY|O_CREAT|O_TRUNC, mode); }
so the file descriptor isn't readable when you've usedcreat()
.creat()
, the file is open for writing (only; you can't read from that file descriptor), and the file is empty (until you do write something into it). Generally, thecreat()
system call is not used these days; it survives because it was necessary beforeopen()
acquired theO_CREAT
and related flags — many years ago now.