问题
I am implementing a low weight application where I have to open and read the /proc/pid or tid/task/stat details very often. If the application is multithreaded I have to read more stat files. So opening, reading and closing makes my monitoring application really slow. Is there a solution to avoid opening the file repeatedly and still able to read the updated content?
I ran the following experiment but I don't see success. I change the data in "test.txt" but the new data is not read. Is it because the file is not updated in memory? What happens when i modify and save "test.txt"?
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
FILE * pFile;
char mystring [100];
pFile = fopen ("test.txt" , "r");
while(1){
if (pFile == NULL) perror ("Error opening file");
if ( fgets (mystring , 100 , pFile) != NULL ){
puts (mystring);
fseek ( pFile , 0 , SEEK_SET );
}
sleep(1);
}
fclose (pFile);
return 0;
}
回答1:
Try something like this:
for (;;) {
while ((ch = getc(fp)) != EOF) {
if (putchar(ch) == EOF)
perror("Output error");
}
if (ferror(fp)) {
printf("Input error: %s", errno);
return;
}
(void)fflush(stdout);
sleep(1); // Or use select
}
You can find a full example by studying the source code for tail. The code above is a modified excerpt from forward.c.
You can use select
to monitor several files for new data (you need to keep them open).
回答2:
Give a try with rewind()
and don't close your file.
once you complete read operation,close your file there.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19538785/reading-already-opened-file-continuously-using-c