setvbuf

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File input/output


Functions
File access
setvbuf
Direct input/output
Unformatted input/output
(C95)(C95)
(C95)
(C95)(C95)
(C95)
(C95)
Formatted input
Formatted output
File positioning
Error handling
Operations on files
 
Defined in header <stdio.h>
int setvbuf( FILE *         stream, char *         buffer,
             int mode, size_t size );
(until C99)
int setvbuf( FILE *restrict stream, char *restrict buffer,
             int mode, size_t size );
(since C99)

Changes the the buffering mode of the given file stream stream as indicated by the argument mode. In addition,

  • If buffer is a null pointer, resizes of the internal buffer to size.
  • If buffer is not a null pointer, instructs the stream to use the user-provided buffer of size size beginning at buffer. The stream must be closed (with fclose) before the lifetime of the array pointed to by buffer ends. The contents of the array after a successful call to setvbuf are indeterminate and any attempt to use it is undefined behavior.

Parameters

stream - the file stream to set the buffer to or null pointer to change size and mode only
buffer - pointer to a buffer for the stream to use
mode - buffering mode to use. It can be one of the following values:
_IOFBF full buffering
_IOLBF line buffering
_IONBF no buffering
size - size of the buffer

Return value

0 on success or nonzero on failure.

Notes

This function may only be used after stream has been associated with an open file, but before any other operation (other than a failed call to setbuf/setvbuf).

Not all size bytes will necessarily be used for buffering: the actual buffer size is usually rounded down to a multiple of 2, a multiple of page size, etc.

On many implementations, line buffering is only available for terminal input streams.

A common error is setting the buffer of stdin or stdout to an array whose lifetime ends before the program terminates:

int main(void) {
    char buf[BUFSIZ];
    setbuf(stdin, buf);
} // lifetime of buf ends, undefined behavior

The default buffer size BUFSIZ is expected to be the most efficient buffer size for file I/O on the implementation, but POSIX fstat often provides a better estimate.

Example

One use case for changing buffer size is when a better size is known.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
 
int main(void)
{
    FILE* fp = fopen("test.txt", "r");
    if(fp == NULL) {
       perror("fopen"); return 1;
    }
 
    struct stat stats;
    if(fstat(fileno(fp), &stats) == -1) { // POSIX only
        perror("fstat"); return 1;
    }
 
    printf("BUFSIZ is %d, but optimal block size is %ld\n", BUFSIZ, stats.st_blksize);
    if(setvbuf(fp, NULL, _IOFBF, stats.st_blksize) != 0) {
       perror("setvbuf failed"); // POSIX version sets errno
       return 1;
    }
 
    int ch;
    while((ch=fgetc(fp)) != EOF); // read entire file: use truss/strace to
                                  // observe the read(2) syscalls used
 
    fclose(fp);
}

Possible output:

BUFSIZ is 8192, but optimal block size is 65536

References

  • C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
  • 7.21.5.6 The setvbuf function (p: 308)
  • C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
  • 7.19.5.6 The setvbuf function (p: 273-274)
  • C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
  • 4.9.5.6 The setvbuf function

See also

sets the buffer for a file stream
(function)
C++ documentation for setvbuf