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Full Discussion: fgets problems
Top Forums Programming fgets problems Post 302397207 by achenle on Sunday 21st of February 2010 10:49:56 AM
Old 02-21-2010
Let me get this straight: you have a custom memory management library, and your code using that library crashes?

OK.

You need all the help you can get. But there's not much out there.

Your only hope is to do something like download a demo copy of Purify and use it. And then pray that you don't have any bugs in your custom library.

And good luck.

You're going to need it.

There's a reason why nobody writes their own memory management libraries. First off, the multiple libraries available for free on your OS of choice are almost certainly fast enough. If they're not, you're most likely doing something wrong, like an over-reliance on malloc()/free() and/or new/delete. And if the OS libaries truly aren't fast enough (and if you're not multithreaded on a massively parallel application, they ARE fast enough!), there are third-party memory management libraries available.

Go price something like Smartheap. Then calculate all the hours spent on your custom memory library and how much those hours cost. Want to bet Smartheap is cheaper? If you even need it in the first place.

There are probably literally thousands of man-years invested by many absolutely brilliant computer scientists and programmers in all the memory-management libraries available in today's operating systems. And those products have been thoroughly tested - for literally decades.

You want a car analogy? Writing your own memory management library is like chiseling out a stone wheel for a sports car. The only reason to do it is for the sake of doing it - as a hobby or academic learning experience. Because there's no way you can duplicate the engineering history behind a "normal" wheel. Even if you do manage to chisel out a wheel that manages to outperform a "normal" wheel in a tiny operating range, you'll never really know how durable your wheel is because it's totally untested.
 

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gets(3) 						     Library Functions Manual							   gets(3)

NAME
gets, fgets - Get a string from a stream LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc.so, libc.a) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> char *gets( char *string); char *fgets( char *string, int n, FILE *stream); STANDARDS
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to industry standards as follows: gets(), fgets(): XPG4, XPG4-UNIX Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information about industry standards and associated tags. PARAMETERS
Points to a string to receive bytes. Specifies an upper bound on the number of bytes to read. Points to the FILE structure of an open file. DESCRIPTION
The gets() function reads bytes from the standard input stream, stdin, into the array pointed to by the string parameter. Data is read until a newline character is read or an end-of-file condition is encountered. If reading is stopped due to a newline character, the newline character is discarded and the string is terminated with a null byte. The fgets() function reads bytes from the data pointed to by the stream parameter into the array pointed to by the string parameter. Data is read until n-1 bytes have been read, until a newline character is read and transferred to string, or until an end-of-file condition is encountered. The string is then terminated with a null byte. NOTES
The gets() function does not check the input for a maximum size. Consequently, if more bytes are entered than will fit in the space allo- cated for the string parameter, gets() will write beyond the end of the allocated space, producing indeterminate results. To avoid this condition, use fgets() instead of gets(). RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, the gets() and fgets() functions return string. If the stream is at end-of-file, the end-of-file indicator for the stream is set and a null pointer is returned. If a read error occurs, the error indicator for the stream is set, a null pointer is returned, and errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
The fgets() and gets() functions set errno to the specified value for the following conditions: The O_NONBLOCK flag is set for the underly- ing stream and the process would be delayed by the read operation. The file descriptor underlying the stream is not a valid file descrip- tor or is not open for reading. The read operation was interrupted by a signal which was caught and no data was transferred. The call is attempting to read from the process's controlling terminal and either the process is ignoring or blocking the SIGTTIN signal or the process group is orphaned. Insufficient memory is available for the operation. The device associated with stream does not exist. RELATED INFORMATION
Functions: clearerr(3), feof(3), ferror(3), fgetws(3), fileno(3), fopen(3), fputws(3), fread(3), getc(3), getwc(3), puts(3), scanf(3) Standards: standards(5) delim off gets(3)
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