I am writing a routine to check if a username has already been registered on an internal database. In particular the following function "should" return the length of only one single line of the database:
int line_bytes(int database, off_t line){
int c, len;
lseek(database, line, SEEK_CUR);
for(len = 0; read(database, &c, 1) == 1; len++)
if(c == '\n');
return len;
}
Though, it returns the whole file length (all the chars on the file). So the question: is the problem read()? The low-input function read all the file in one single cycle and return the whole file length?
To help, the database format is:
username \t password\n
...\n
...\n
last-username \t last-passwotd\n
int
, and then checking the whole (4-byte?)int
. Did you meanchar c
?;
was to correct a typo, or to fix the error. It's thrown the code posted into doubt. Always copy/paste the exact code.char
into a 4 byteint
, left memory not initialized (hence garbage) on so the char'\n'
was never found?char
at a time is extremely slow. System calls are very expensive (especially on modern x86-64 Linux with Spectre and Meltdown mitigation), tens of thousands of times slower then the amortized per-char cost ofmemchr(buf, '\n', read_len)
to search in chunks of up to 8kiB for example, depending on how much data is in the rest of the file. (32kiB would be even more efficient for bulk I/O, but most lines are much shorter than that so if you only want a single line at a given seek position, 4k or 8k is very likely to get it. But not guaranteed, so it needs more code.)-Wall -Wextra -Werror
. Always use{}
even when not required. Always check and print/log errors of any IO (except stdout/stderr output) functions (herelseek
andread
).