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Full Discussion: Info about col command
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Info about col command Post 302076141 by sunilsbjoshi on Friday 9th of June 2006 06:11:20 AM
Old 06-09-2006
MySQL changing col(1) command stdout as fully buffered?

Hi All,

I am talking about unix col(1) command used for some reverse line filtering etc.
And I notice that the stdout of this command is line buffered i.e. the stdout will flush the data in its buffer line by line. So the number of writes performed by stdout are more.

So now if I make stdout as fully buffered it will reduce the write hits. Smilie

But if I do these changes I think there will some problems
-> when slow terminals use col(1) as command , then the turn around time will get reduce for it self.
eg: cat file | col -b | lp
Here lp will receive data in terms of buffer size but before it was receving in terms of each lines.

So can I change change col(1) command's stdout to fully buffered?

So do any of you know some more problems related with this change , and can I see some link about col(1) command design stating that it should be either line buffered or fully buffered etc.


Waiting for positive replay,
Sunil kumar.



--
Thanks & Regards,

Sunil Kumar S
 

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LIBSTDBUF(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 					      LIBSTDBUF(3)

NAME
libstdbuf -- preloaded library to change standard streams initial buffering DESCRIPTION
The libstdbuf library is meant to be preloaded with the LD_PRELOAD environment variable to as to change the initial buffering of standard input, standard output and standard error streams. Although you may load and configure this library manually, an utility, stdbuf(1), can be used to run a command with the appropriate environ- ment variables. ENVIRONMENT
Each stream can be configured independently through the following environment variables (values are defined below): _STDBUF_I Initial buffering definition for the standard input stream _STDBUF_O Initial buffering definition for the standard output stream _STDBUF_E Initial buffering definition for the standard error stream Each variable may take one of the following values: "0" unbuffered "L" line buffered "B" fully buffered with the default buffer size size fully buffered with a buffer of size bytes (suffixes 'k', 'M' and 'G' are accepted) EXAMPLE
In the following example, the stdout stream of the awk(1) command will be fully buffered by default because it does not refer to a terminal. libstdbuf is used to force it to be line-buffered so vmstat(8)'s output will not stall until the full buffer fills. # vmstat 1 | LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/libstdbuf.so STDBUF_1=L awk '$2 > 1 || $3 > 1' | cat -n See also the manpage of stdbuf(1) for a simpler way to do this. HISTORY
The libstdbuf library first appeared in FreeBSD 8.4. AUTHORS
The original idea of the libstdbuf command comes from Padraig Brady who implemented it in the GNU coreutils. Jeremie Le Hen implemented it on FreeBSD. BSD
April 28, 2012 BSD
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