FLUSH — Flush I/O unit(s)CALL FLUSH(UNIT)
| UNIT | (Optional) The type shall be INTEGER.
|
FLUSH
statement that should be preferred over the FLUSH intrinsic.
The FLUSH intrinsic and the Fortran 2003 FLUSH statement
have identical effect: they flush the runtime library's I/O buffer so
that the data becomes visible to other processes. This does not guarantee
that the data is committed to disk.
On POSIX systems, you can request that all data is transferred to the
storage device by calling the fsync function, with the POSIX file
descriptor of the I/O unit as argument (retrieved with GNU intrinsic
FNUM). The following example shows how:
! Declare the interface for POSIX fsync function
interface
function fsync (fd) bind(c,name="fsync")
use iso_c_binding, only: c_int
integer(c_int), value :: fd
integer(c_int) :: fsync
end function fsync
end interface
! Variable declaration
integer :: ret
! Opening unit 10
open (10,file="foo")
! ...
! Perform I/O on unit 10
! ...
! Flush and sync
flush(10)
ret = fsync(fnum(10))
! Handle possible error
if (ret /= 0) stop "Error calling FSYNC"