I'm using a library that has quite a few functions that write to a FILE
but none that seem to conveniently dump the same data to an object in memory. Is there any way to create a FILE
object (or override it) that stores the data in memory instead of writing to disk -- I'd like to avoid the performance hit of opening/writing/reading from files over and over again.
UPDATE: per Rob's suggestion, trying stringstream:
ss.put(c);
std::string myval = ss.str();
printf("Value: %s\n after writing: %i length %lu\n",myval.c_str(),c, myval.length());
But, now trying to get the data (binary) out of the stringstream has me stuck -- how do I grab the binary data I've been adding?
Beside the already mentioned GNU's fmemopen()
, which is known in POSIX as open_memstream, similar solution can be obtained combining mmap()
(using MAP_ANONYMOUS) or any other OS-specific function that returns a file descriptor to a block of memory, and fdopen()
.
EDIT: that was wrong, mmap doesn't create a file descriptor.