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Re: read -t 0 fails to detect input.
From: |
Robert Elz |
Subject: |
Re: read -t 0 fails to detect input. |
Date: |
Thu, 19 Dec 2019 08:39:28 +0700 |
Date: Wed, 18 Dec 2019 19:40:45 -0400
From: Bize Ma <binaryzebra@gmail.com>
Message-ID:
<CAFra36gNku2DTCyivz+caMGnTf7GvGJUTiWicUnBZatcckXGcQ@mail.gmail.com>
| A little delay seems to get it working:
|
| $ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
| 0
It might, but that is adding no significant delay, and the
results are unpredictable.
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
1
jinx$ echo value | { read -t 0 var; } ; echo $?
0
It is all just a race condition - there's nothing specifying which
side of the pipe starts running first.
kre