Platform SDK: Files and I/O |
The FlushFileBuffers function clears the buffers for the specified file and causes all buffered data to be written to the file.
BOOL FlushFileBuffers( HANDLE hFile // handle to file );
If hFile is a handle to a communications device, the function only flushes the transmit buffer.
If hFile is a handle to the server end of a named pipe, the function does not return until the client has read all buffered data from the pipe.
Windows NT/2000: The function fails if hFile is a handle to console output. That is because console output is not buffered. The function returns FALSE, and GetLastError returns ERROR_INVALID_HANDLE.
Windows 95: The function does nothing if hFile is a handle to console output. That is because console output is not buffered. The function returns TRUE, but it does nothing.
If the function succeeds, the return value is nonzero.
If the function fails, the return value is zero. To get extended error information, call GetLastError.
The WriteFile and WriteFileEx functions typically write data to an internal buffer that the operating system writes to disk on a regular basis. The FlushFileBuffers function writes all of the buffered information for the specified file to disk.
You can pass the same file handle used with the _lread, _lwrite, _lcreat, and related functions to FlushFileBuffers.
Windows NT/2000: Requires Windows NT 3.1 or later.
Windows 95/98: Requires Windows 95 or later.
Header: Declared in Winbase.h; include Windows.h.
Library: Use Kernel32.lib.
File I/O Overview, File I/O Functions, _lread, _lwrite, _lcreat, WriteFile, WriteFileEx