Hi Wouter, On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 2:48 AM, Wouter Simons <lkml@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi all, > > This might be a silly question, but I want to make sure I understand > things correctly. > > I have a driver with a sysfs entry to get the next data sample every > time I read the file. Used like below it works wonderful: > > # cat next > 0x15814 > # cat next > 0x1682B > > The last 12 bits are the sample and the first (20) bits are the channel > the sample is from (some ADC hardware board with 24 inputs). > > Now I have some C code that will loop periodically to collect the > samples and do some magic with them and I was hoping I could simply keep > a FILE * open with a loop like this: > > for (i = 0; i < count; i++) { > if (fscanf(fd_next, "0x%X", &sample) != 1) { /* No data */ > continue; > } I would change this to use unbuffered I/O routines (i.e. open/read/lseek/close) and use sscanf rather than fscanf. fopen/fread/fseek/fclose use buffering by default. That would eliminate any buffering that the user side runtime library is doing. I suspect that because the data is buffered by the FILE * routines, even doing the seek is just re-returning the data that was read the first time around. Dave Hylands _______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies