I have opened a file
FILE *fp = fopen("file.txt","r");
fclose(fp);
scenario is that I forgot to assign null to fp
Now I want to check whether this file is open or not using same fp
pointer
You can't. The value of fp
after closing it is indeterminate: http://www.iso-9899.info/n1256.html#7.19.3p4
This means any operation on it results in undefined behaviour.
this might help --->
if(fp == NULL)
printf("Error in file opening\n")
fp
was passed to fclose()
?
Jan 30, 2014 at 8:03
Using fopen() returned pointer after closing it is indeterminate.
Instead if you use open() system call you can access using the fd to check if it open or not in /proc folder
/proc contains all the details regarding the process. you can access the current process using /proc/self inside which is a file fd /proc/self/fd each file in there is named after a fd.
(Use g_dir_open, g_dir_read_name and g_dir_close to do the listing)
If file not open then fopen
return null to fp
. Null check after fopen()
. Assign NULL after fclose
.
In your case you can check file open or not by checking fp
to NULL.
FILE *fp = fopen("file.txt","r");
if (fp == NULL) {
printf("not open\n");
return -1 ;
}
else
printf("File open\n");
if(fp != NULL) {
fclose(fp);
fp = NULL;
}
Upon successful completion fopen(), fdopen() and freopen() return a FILE pointer. Otherwise, NULL is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
fclose
.