1 |
|
2 |
|
3 |
f=_tmp/process-sub.txt
|
4 |
{ echo 1; echo 2; echo 3; } > $f
|
5 |
cat <(head -n 2 $f) <(tail -n 2 $f)
|
6 |
## STDOUT:
|
7 |
1
|
8 |
2
|
9 |
2
|
10 |
3
|
11 |
## END
|
12 |
|
13 |
|
14 |
seq 3 > >(tac)
|
15 |
## STDOUT:
|
16 |
3
|
17 |
2
|
18 |
1
|
19 |
## END
|
20 |
|
21 |
|
22 |
{ echo 1; echo 2; echo 3; } > >(tac)
|
23 |
## STDOUT:
|
24 |
3
|
25 |
2
|
26 |
1
|
27 |
## END
|
28 |
|
29 |
|
30 |
stdout_stderr() {
|
31 |
echo o1
|
32 |
echo o2
|
33 |
|
34 |
sleep 0.1 # Does not change order
|
35 |
|
36 |
{ echo e1;
|
37 |
echo warning: e2
|
38 |
echo e3;
|
39 |
} >& 2
|
40 |
}
|
41 |
stdout_stderr 2> >(grep warning) | tac >$TMP/out.txt
|
42 |
wait $! # this does nothing in bash 4.3, but probably does in bash 4.4.
|
43 |
echo OUT
|
44 |
cat $TMP/out.txt
|
45 |
# PROBLEM -- OUT comes first, and then 'warning: e2', and then 'o2 o1'. It
|
46 |
# looks like it's because nobody waits for the proc sub.
|
47 |
# http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-bash/2017-06/msg00018.html
|
48 |
## STDOUT:
|
49 |
OUT
|
50 |
warning: e2
|
51 |
o2
|
52 |
o1
|
53 |
## END
|
54 |
|
55 |
|
56 |
echo FOO >foo
|
57 |
|
58 |
# works in bash and zsh
|
59 |
echo $(<foo)
|
60 |
|
61 |
# this works in zsh, but not in bash
|
62 |
tr A-Z a-z < <(<foo)
|
63 |
|
64 |
cat < <(<foo; echo hi)
|
65 |
|
66 |
## STDOUT:
|
67 |
FOO
|
68 |
hi
|
69 |
## END
|
70 |
## OK zsh STDOUT:
|
71 |
FOO
|
72 |
foo
|
73 |
FOO
|
74 |
hi
|
75 |
## END
|
76 |
|
77 |
|
78 |
|
79 |
shopt --set parse_at
|
80 |
|
81 |
cat <(seq 2; exit 2) <(seq 3; exit 3)
|
82 |
|
83 |
case $SH in bash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
84 |
|
85 |
echo status @_process_sub_status
|
86 |
echo done
|
87 |
|
88 |
## STDOUT:
|
89 |
1
|
90 |
2
|
91 |
1
|
92 |
2
|
93 |
3
|
94 |
status 2 3
|
95 |
done
|
96 |
## END
|
97 |
## N-I bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
98 |
1
|
99 |
2
|
100 |
1
|
101 |
2
|
102 |
3
|
103 |
## END
|
104 |
|
105 |
|
106 |
|
107 |
case $SH in bash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
108 |
|
109 |
shopt --set parse_at
|
110 |
|
111 |
cat <(echo a; exit 2) <(echo b; exit 3)
|
112 |
echo status=$? ps @_process_sub_status
|
113 |
|
114 |
echo __
|
115 |
shopt -s process_sub_fail
|
116 |
|
117 |
cat <(echo a; exit 2) <(echo b; exit 3)
|
118 |
echo status=$? ps @_process_sub_status
|
119 |
|
120 |
# Now exit because of it
|
121 |
set -o errexit
|
122 |
|
123 |
cat <(echo a; exit 2) <(echo b; exit 3)
|
124 |
echo status=$? ps @_process_sub_status
|
125 |
|
126 |
## status: 3
|
127 |
## STDOUT:
|
128 |
a
|
129 |
b
|
130 |
status=0 ps 2 3
|
131 |
__
|
132 |
a
|
133 |
b
|
134 |
status=3 ps 2 3
|
135 |
a
|
136 |
b
|
137 |
## END
|
138 |
## N-I bash/zsh status: 0
|
139 |
## N-I bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
140 |
## END
|
141 |
|
142 |
|
143 |
|
144 |
# zsh is very similar to bash, but don't bother with the assertions
|
145 |
case $SH in bash|zsh) exit ;; esac
|
146 |
|
147 |
shopt --set parse_at
|
148 |
|
149 |
f() {
|
150 |
cat <(seq 1; exit 1) | {
|
151 |
cat <(seq 2; exit 2) <(seq 3; exit 3)
|
152 |
|
153 |
# 2022-11 workaround for race condition: sometimes we get pipeline=141 4
|
154 |
# instead of pipeline=0 4, which means that the first 'cat' got SIGPIPE.
|
155 |
# If we make this part of the pipeline take longer, then 'cat' should have
|
156 |
# a chance to finish.
|
157 |
|
158 |
sleep 0.01
|
159 |
|
160 |
(exit 4)
|
161 |
}
|
162 |
echo status=$?
|
163 |
echo process_sub @_process_sub_status
|
164 |
echo pipeline @_pipeline_status
|
165 |
echo __
|
166 |
}
|
167 |
|
168 |
f
|
169 |
|
170 |
## STDOUT:
|
171 |
1
|
172 |
2
|
173 |
1
|
174 |
2
|
175 |
3
|
176 |
status=4
|
177 |
process_sub 2 3
|
178 |
pipeline 0 4
|
179 |
__
|
180 |
## END
|
181 |
## N-I bash/zsh STDOUT:
|
182 |
## END
|
183 |
|
184 |
|
185 |
|
186 |
cat <(seq 3; sleep 0.1) & wait
|
187 |
|
188 |
echo sync
|
189 |
|
190 |
# This one escapes, and the shell should still exit
|
191 |
cat <(sleep 0.1) &
|
192 |
|
193 |
echo fork
|
194 |
|
195 |
## STDOUT:
|
196 |
1
|
197 |
2
|
198 |
3
|
199 |
sync
|
200 |
fork
|
201 |
## END
|