I have a very large binary file and I need to create separate files based on the id within the input file. There are 146 output files and I am using cstdlib and fopen and fwrite. FOPEN_MAX is 20, so I can’t keep all 146 output files open at the same time. I also want to minimize the number of times I open and close an output file.
How can I write to the output files effectively?
I also must use the cstdlib library due to legacy code.
The executable must also be UNIX and windows cross-platform compatible.
A couple possible approaches you might take:
keep a cache of opened output file handles that’s less than FOPEN_MAX – if a write needs to occur on a files that already open, then just do the write. Otherwise, close one of the handles in the cache and open the output file. If your data is generally clumped together in terms of the data for a particular set of files is grouped together in the input file, this should work nicely with an LRU policy for the file handle cache.
Handle the output buffering yourself instead of letting the library do it for you: keep your own set of 146 (or however many you might need) output buffers and buffer the output to those, and perform an open/flush/close when a particular output buffer gets filled. You could even combine this with the above approach to really minimize the open/close operations.
Just be sure you test well for the edge conditions that can happen on filling or nearly filling an output buffer.