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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T01:36:26+00:00 2026-06-17T01:36:26+00:00

I wrote a small program in C where I opened a file successfuly, then

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I wrote a small program in C where I opened a file successfuly, then called sleep for 20 sec. In that 20 sec I deleted the open file using rm from shell. After sleep the program reads the data successfully and prints it on screen.

int bytes_read;
FILE *fp = fopen("/tmp/file", "r");
sleep(20);
bytes_read = fread(buf, 1, 5, fp);
buf[bytes_read] = '\0';
printf("%s", buf);

I expected it to read 0 bytes, but it prints the actual data in the file. What is the explanation behind this behaviour.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T01:36:27+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 1:36 am

    In linux and other POSIX systems you don’t delete files. You just remove an inode from a directory. As long as there is a file descriptor open on a file it will not be deleted. Only when the last link to the inode and the last open file descriptor went away.

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