I would like to use splice
to zero-copy data from STDIN_FILENO
to a file descriptor (which could be to a regular file, char or block device, FIFO, or anything that can be opened with open
). In order to use splice
, either the from file descriptor or to file descriptor must be the appropriate end of a pipe, so generally a pipe is created to serve as an intermediary buffer when the programmer wants to zero-copy data from non-pipe to non-pipe. However, if STDIN_FILENO
is already the read end of a pipe, then I could skip that step and attempt to splice directly from STDIN_FILENO
to the other file descriptor. Therefore, I would like to be able to determine whether STDIN_FILENO
is the read end of a pipe.
Is there a Linux system call that can determine whether STDIN_FILENO
is the read end of a pipe?
To get information about an open fd, you can use fstat(). I'd guess that st_mode of the result should be S_IFIFO for a pipe. Alternatively, /proc/self/fd/ and /proc/self/fdinfo/ also provide some information about a file descriptor. Keep in mind that /proc is linux-specific.
However, I think it might be easier to just try to use splice() first and if it fails (with EINVAL?) fall back to your magic.