NAME setbuf, setvbuf - assign buffering to a stream SYNTAX #include void setbuf (stream, buf) FILE *stream; char *buf; int setvbuf (stream, buf, type, size) FILE *stream; char *buf; int type, size; DESCRIPTION Setbuf may be used after a stream has been opened but before it is read or written. It causes the array pointed to by buf to be used instead of an automatically allocated buffer. If buf is the NULL pointer input/output will be completely unbuffered. A constant BUFSIZ, defined in the header file, tells how big an array is needed: char buf[BUFSIZ]; Setvbuf may be used after a stream has been opened but before it is read or written. Type determines how stream will be buffered. Legal values for type (defined in stdio.h) are: _IOFBF causes input/output to be fully buffered. _IOLBF causes output to be line buffered; the buffer will be flushed when a newline is written, the buffer is full, or input is requested. _IONBF causes input/output to be completely unbuffered. If buf is not the NULL pointer, the array it points to will be used for buffering, instead of an automatically allocated buffer. Size specifies the size of the buffer to be used. The constant BUFSIZ in is suggested as a good buffer size. If input/output is unbuffered, buf and size are ignored. By default, output to a terminal is line buffered and all other input/output is fully buffered. SEE ALSO fopen(3S), getc(3S), malloc(3C), putc(3S), stdio(3S). DIAGNOSTICS If an illegal value for type or size is provided, setvbuf returns a non-zero value. Otherwise, the value returned will be zero. NOTE A common source of error is allocating buffer space as an ``automatic'' variable in a code block, and then failing to close the stream in the same block.