/* closeout.c - close standard output
- Copyright (C) 1998 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+ Copyright (C) 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
#include "closeout.h"
#include "error.h"
-/* Close standard output, exiting with status STATUS on failure. */
+/* Close standard output, exiting with status STATUS on failure.
+ If a program writes *anything* to stdout, that program should close
+ stdout and make sure that the close succeeds. Otherwise, suppose that
+ you go to the extreme of checking the return status of every function
+ that does an explicit write to stdout. The last printf can succeed in
+ writing to the internal stream buffer, and yet the fclose(stdout) could
+ still fail (due e.g., to a disk full error) when it tries to write
+ out that buffered data. Thus, you would be left with an incomplete
+ output file and the offending program would exit successfully.
+
+ Besides, it's wasteful to check the return value from every call
+ that writes to stdout -- just let the internal stream state record
+ the failure. That's what the ferror test is checking below.
+
+ It's important to detect such failures and exit nonzero because many
+ tools (most notably `make' and other build-management systems) depend
+ on being able to detect failure in other tools via their exit status. */
void
close_stdout_status (int status)
{