ID: Q99794
The information in this article applies to:
The FILE_FLAG_WRITE_THROUGH flag for CreateFile() causes any writes made to that handle to be written directly to the file without being buffered. The data is cached (stored in the disk cache); however, it is still written directly to the file. This method allows a read operation on that data to satisfy the read request from cached data (if it's still there), rather than having to do a file read to get the data. The write call doesn't return until the data is written to the file. This applies to remote writes as well--the network redirector passes the FILE_FLAG_WRITE_THROUGH flag to the server so that the server knows not to satisfy the write request until the data is written to the file.
The FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING takes this concept one step further and eliminates all read-ahead file buffering and disk caching as well, so that all reads are guaranteed to come from the file and not from any system buffer or disk cache. When using FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING, disk reads and writes must be done on sector boundaries, and buffer addresses must be aligned on disk sector boundaries in memory.
These restrictions are necessary because the buffer that you pass to the read or write API is used directly for I/O at the device level; at that level, your buffer addresses and sector sizes must satisfy any processor and media alignment restrictions of the hardware you are running on.
The Windows 95 CDFS (CD-ROM File System) does not support the FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING flag for CreateFile(). While a Windows 95 FSD, such as VFAT, may implement it, FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING is not a required flag for file system drivers, and it is not supported by CDFS.
This code fragment demonstrates how to sector-align data in a buffer and pass it to CreateFile():
char buf[2 * SECTOR_SIZE - 1], *p;
p = (char *) ((DWORD) (buf + SECTOR_SIZE - 1) & ~(SECTOR_SIZE - 1));
h = CreateFile(argv[1], GENERIC_READ | GENERIC_WRITE,
FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE, NULL, CREATE_ALWAYS,
FILE_ATTRIBUTE_NORMAL | FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING, NULL);
WriteFile(h, p, SECTOR_SIZE, &dwWritten, NULL);
The pointer p is sector-aligned and points within the buffer.
If you have a situation where you want to flush all open files on the current logical drive, this can be done by:
hFile = CreateFile("\\\\.\\c:", ....);
FlushFileBuffers(hFile);
This method causes all buffered write data for all open files on the C:
partition to be flushed and written to the disk. Note that any buffering
done by anything other than the system is not affected by this flush; any
possible file buffering that the C Run-time is doing on files opened with C
Run-time routines is unaffected.
When opening a remote file over the network, the server always caches and ignores the no buffering flag specified by the client. This is by design. The redirector and server cannot properly implement the full semantics of FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING over the network. In particular, the requirement for sector-sized, sector-aligned I/O cannot be met. Therefore, when a Win32- based application asks for FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING, the redirector and server treat this as a request for FILE_FLAG_WRITE_THROUGH. The file is not cached at the client, writes go directly to the server and to the disk on the server, and the read/write sizes on the network are exactly what the application asks for. However, the file is cached on the server.
Not caching the client can have a different effect, depending on the type of I/O. You eliminate the cache hits or read ahead, but you also may reduce the size of transmits and receives. In general, for sequential I/O, it is a good idea to cache on the client. For small, random access I/O, it is often best not to cache.
Keywords : kbAPI kbKernBase kbGrpKernBase
Version : winnt:3.1,3.5,3.51,4.0;
Platform : Win95 winnt
Issue type : kbinfo
Last Reviewed: November 28, 1997