Ye...I know of tee.
But the issue here is I have a HUGE Compiler (an Simulation tool) in which thousands of places there are "printf" statements to print messages to STDOUT stream. Now, a requirement came up which needs all those messages thrown to STDOUT also to be logged in a LOGFILE (in addition to STDOUT). Yes, this can be done through tee...but the usage model of the compiler doesn't leave that possibility open for me.
So, am looking for a solution inside the Compiler code.
Thanks,
Arijit
-----Original Message-----
From: Bodo Eggert [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 18, 2005 6:00 PM
To: Arijit Das; [email protected]
Subject: Re: Does Linux has File Stream mapping support...?
Arijit Das <[email protected]> wrote:
> Is it possible to have File Stream Mapping in Linux? What I mean is
> this...
>
> FILE * fp1 = fopen("/foo", "w");
> FILE * fp2 = fopen("/bar", "w");
> FILE * fp_common = <Stream_Mapping_Func>(fp1, fp2);
>
> fprint(fp_common, "This should be written to both files ... /foo and
> /bar");
It's a userspace problem. man "tee".
Doing this in the kernel would be horrible.
--
Ich danke GMX dafür, die Verwendung meiner Adressen mittels per SPF
verbreiteten Lügen zu sabotieren.
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