I have a C program which takes a file as an argument, cleans up the file and writes the cleansed data to a new temp file. It then accepts some stdin, cleans it up and sends it stdout.
I have a second file which performs operations on this temp file and on the stdin again.
./file_cleanse <file1.txt> | ./file_operation <temp.txt>
I either get no or nonsensical stdout from the ./file_operation and I believe this is because it is reading from a file that's still being written/doesn't exist at this point.
Is there any way to make ./file_operation wait until ./file_cleanse has returned a value in bash?
file_operation
reading whatfile_cleanse
wrote on its standard output (a pipe), or is it reading more data from the standard input that goes intofile_cleanse
? Your description is at least ambiguous about that. How doesfile_cleanse
determine the temporary file name? Why isn't it told which file to write to?