Sorry, this was a typo. I meant fflush(). However, it's still not called. It's fixed in my program now, however I'm not sure what to do in this case. Do I just call ffush() on stdin, stdout, and stderr or do I send a patch to fgets()? On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 12:08 PM Rich Felker wrote: > On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 10:31:36AM -0600, A. Wilcox wrote: > > On 02/21/19 09:22, Rich Felker wrote: > > > On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 10:09:03AM -0500, James Larrowe wrote: > > >> I'm writing a program that prints a dialogue to the screen and then > asks > > >> for input. In musl, the dialogue does not show before fgets() is > called, > > >> however in glibc it does. That causes a blank prompt and also some > > >> confusion. Attached is a minimal example and a log. > > > > > > This difference is intentional. The specification allows but does not > > > require that attempting to read from a line-buffered input stream > > > causes all line-buffered output streams to be flushed. This behavior > > > was somewhat convenient for old-style input-prompt idioms, but it > > > doesn't scale with large numbers of files open and deadlocks with some > > > multi-threaded usage. The portable solution here for applications is > > > to fflush (not fsync) the particular stream you want flushed. > > > > > > Rich > > > > > > FWIW, the only package we've come across where this is a problem is > > mac-fdisk (which hasn't been updated since 1997 - yes, 22 years ago). > > > > We have a patch: > > > > > https://code.foxkit.us/adelie/packages/blob/master/user/mac-fdisk/flush-stdout.patch > > I think it's more of an issue for the early examples in C books and > tutorials, which invariably but inexplicably use a 1970s-era "prompt > for input" model rather than argv[] or something that would be a lot > more familiar (and amenable to testing) to modern readers. > > Rich >