I think the ISO C standard is actually the governing spec for exit() now.  
However, it more or less says the same thing as POSIX.1.

I actually recall some of the early input to POSIX discussions about exit() and 
flushing behavior (fflush() got lumped in to the same conversation).  It was 
somewhat of a hot topic with the X/Open work group especially because ICL 
mainframes were "virtual" enough that the meaning of flushing was somewhat in 
question (for files at any rate) when there weren't actual disks to receive the 
flush.

In any case the C standard now seems quite clear to my eye: you ought to get 
your message on standard out or error regardless of newline or not.  That 
should apply as I read the spec whether you have code that does an explicit 
exit() from main(), or a return or even if execution just reaches the closing 
brace on the main() function.  Not knowing anything else, I'd say you are 
seeing a bug in the implementation.

--
Cheers,

Mark.

From: devel@edk2.groups.io <devel@edk2.groups.io> On Behalf Of Tim Lewis
Sent: Friday, October 18, 2019 2:13 PM
To: devel@edk2.groups.io
Subject: [edk2-devel] Flush on main exit?

I have noticed recently, when porting BSD applications, that if main exits 
normally, the buffers are not flushed. This is most obvious when using StdLib 
along with printf or fprintf to stdout.

Has anyone else noticed this? If there is a \n in the output, it gets flushed 
to stdout, but if the string does not contain a \n then often nothing happens. 
This is most obvious with 1-line help or logo strings that never show up. Of 
course, most BSD apps use stderr for their usage, but even this doesn't go 
anywhere

static void
usage(void)
{

               (void)fprintf(stderr, "usage: which [-as] program ...\n");
               exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}

Per the posix standard:

OpenGroup says:
https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/exit.html

The exit() function shall then flush all open streams with unwritten buffered 
data, close all open streams, and remove all files created by 
tmpfile()<https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/tmpfile.html>.
 Finally, control shall be terminated with the consequences described below.

I have seen similar behavior with CURL and printf.

Any thoughts here?

Tim



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