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Home/ Questions/Q 818395
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T02:08:47+00:00 2026-05-15T02:08:47+00:00

Using the standard Win32 file I/O API’s (CreateFile/ReadFile/etc), I’m trying to wait for a

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Using the standard Win32 file I/O API’s (CreateFile/ReadFile/etc), I’m trying to wait for a file to become readable, or for an exception to occur on the file. If Windows had any decent POSIX support, I could just do:

select(file_count, files_waiting_for_read, NULL, files_waiting_for_excpt, NULL, NULL);

And select will return when there’s anything interesting on some of the files. Windows doesn’t support select or poll. Fine. I figured I could take the file and do something like:

while(eof(file_descriptor))
{
    Sleep(100);
}

The above loop would exit when more data is available to be read. But nope, Windows doesn’t have an equivalent of eof() either! I could possibly call ReadFile() on the file, and determine if it’s at the eof that way. But, then I’d have to handle the reading at that point in time — I’m hoping to simply be able to figure out that a file is readable, without actually reading it.

What are my options?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T02:08:48+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 2:08 am

    Windows has a completely different architecture for asynchronous I/O. You will need to use overlapped I/O with or without the related I/O completion ports.

    Note that the standard Winsock interface does have a POSIX-like select() function, but that only works with network sockets.

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