C read binary stdin

旧街凉风 提交于 2019-11-27 04:05:22

What you need is freopen(). From the manpage:

If filename is a null pointer, the freopen() function shall attempt to change the mode of the stream to that specified by mode, as if the name of the file currently associated with the stream had been used. In this case, the file descriptor associated with the stream need not be closed if the call to freopen() succeeds. It is implementation-defined which changes of mode are permitted (if any), and under what circumstances.

Basically, the best you can really do is this:

freopen(NULL, "rb", stdin);

This will reopen stdin to be the same input stream, but in binary mode. In the normal mode, reading from stdin on Windows will convert \r\n (Windows newline) to the single character ASCII 10. Using the "rb" mode disables this conversion so that you can properly read in binary data.

freopen() returns a filehandle, but it's the previous value (before we put it in binary mode), so don't use it for anything. After that, use fread() as has been mentioned.

As to your concerns, however, you may not be reading in "32 bits" but if you use fread() you will be reading in 4 chars (which is the best you can do in C - char is guaranteed to be at least 8 bits but some historical and embedded platforms have 16 bit chars (some even have 18 or worse)). If you use fgets() you will never read in 4 bytes. You will read in at least 3 (depending on whether any of them are newlines), and the 4th byte will be '\0' because C strings are nul-terminated and fgets() nul-terminates what it reads (like a good function). Obviously, this is not what you want, so you should use fread().

Adrian

Consider using SET_BINARY_MODE macro and setmode:

#ifdef _WIN32
# include <io.h>
# include <fcntl.h>
# define SET_BINARY_MODE(handle) setmode(handle, O_BINARY)
#else
# define SET_BINARY_MODE(handle) ((void)0)
#endif

More details about SET_BINARY_MODE macro here: "Handling binary files via standard I/O"

More details about setmode here: "_setmode"

fgets() is all wrong here. It's aimed at human-readable ASCII text terminated by end-of-line characters, not binary data, and won't get you what you need.

I recently did exactly what you want using the read() call. Unless your program has explicitly closed stdin, for the first argument (the file descriptor), you can use a constant value of 0 for stdin. Or, if you're on a POSIX system (Linux, Mac OS X, or some other modern variant of Unix), you can use STDIN_FILENO.

I had to piece the answer together from the various comments from the kind people above, so here is a fully-working sample that works - only for Windows, but you can probably translate the windows-specific stuff to your platform.

#include "stdafx.h"
#include "stdio.h"
#include "stdlib.h"
#include "windows.h"
#include <io.h>
#include <fcntl.h>

int main()
{
    char rbuf[4096];
    char *deffile = "c:\\temp\\outvideo.bin";
    size_t r;
    char *outfilename = deffile;
    FILE *newin;

    freopen(NULL, "rb", stdin);
    _setmode(_fileno(stdin), _O_BINARY);

    FILE *f = fopen(outfilename, "w+b");
    if (f == NULL)
    {
        printf("unable to open %s\n", outfilename);
        exit(1);
    }

    for (;; )
    {
        r = fread(rbuf, 1, sizeof(rbuf), stdin);
        if (r > 0)
        {
            size_t w;
            for (size_t nleft = r; nleft > 0; )
            {
                w = fwrite(rbuf, 1, nleft, f);
                if (w == 0)
                {
                    printf("error: unable to write %d bytes to %s\n", nleft, outfilename);
                    exit(1);
                }
                nleft -= w;
                fflush(f);
            }
        }
        else
        {
            Sleep(10); // wait for more input, but not in a tight loop
        }
    }

    return 0;
}

I don't know what OS you are running, but you typically cannot "open stdin in binary". You can try things like

int fd = fdreopen (fileno (stdin), outfname, O_RDONLY | OPEN_O_BINARY);

to try to force it. Then use

uint32_t opcode;
read(fd, &opcode, sizeof (opcode));

But I have no actually tried it myself. :)

fread() suits best for reading binary data.

Yes, char array is OK, if you are planning to process them bytewise.

rlb.usa

I had it right the first time, except, I needed ntohl ... C Endian Conversion : bit by bit

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