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I'm looking to call a subprocess with a file descriptor opened to a given pipe such that the open() call does not hang waiting for the other side of the pipe to receive a connection.

To demonstrate:

$ mkfifo /tmp/foobar.pipe
$ some_program --command-fd=5 5</tmp/foobar.pipe

In this case, some_program is not run until some process has /tmp/foobar.pipe open for write; however, some_program has useful effects even when it isn't receiving commands, so desired behavior is for some_program to be immediately executed.

Mechanisms to do this by exec'ing through an alternate scripting language (python, perl, etc) or a C wrapper which open /tmp/foobar.pipe with the O_NONBLOCK flag are obvious; I'm looking for a pure-bash solution, should one be possible.

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3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

Opening the FD read/write rather than read-only when setting up the pipeline prevents blocking.

To be a bit more specific:

$ mkfifo /tmp/foobar.pipe
$ some_program --command-fd=5 5<>/tmp/foobar.pipe

prevents the undesired blocking behavior, as 5<>/tmp/foobar.pipe opens in RW mode (as opposed to opening in read-only mode as with 5</tmp/foobar.pipe) although O_NONBLOCK is still set. Thanks to waldner on irc://irc.freenode.org/#bash for this pointer.

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The only way I know getting this kind of result is a hack:

mkfifo /tmp/foobar.in
mkfifo /tmp/foobar.out
( cat </tmp/foobar.in ) >/tmp/foobar.out &
some_program --command-fd=5 5</tmp/foobar.out

perhaps this helps :-)

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you're right it was a typo. just edited it. And yes the background process is ugly, this is why I called it a hack :) – Sec Oct 7 '08 at 17:01
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What language is some_program written in? Unless it is written in shell itself, or is not intended to be aware that it is sometimes connected to a FIFO, then the program should probably deal with the issue. In C or Perl (and probably Python and the rest), you can gain enough control over the open not to block when you open a FIFO.

In general, programs that need to interact accurately with a FIFO need to be aware that they are dealing with a FIFO, especially if they need to interact without blocking unexpectedly,

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The program can't "deal with the issue" (or do anything else) until after it has been invoked. The shell calls open(), which is blocking, while setting up the pipeline, so some_program has not yet been started. – Charles Duffy Oct 7 '08 at 21:07
To expand on why this is being done by the caller -- there are privilege issues going on here; some_program is actually run in a very restrictive jail, and is unable to set up the fifo itself. – Charles Duffy Oct 7 '08 at 21:09
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