I have a Perl script which forks and daemonizes itself. It's run by cron, so in order to not leave a zombie around, I shut down STDIN,STDOUT, and STDERR:
open STDIN, '/dev/null' or die "Can't read /dev/null: $!";
open STDOUT, '>>/dev/null' or die "Can't write to /dev/null: $!";
open STDERR, '>>/dev/null' or die "Can't write to /dev/null: $!";
if (!fork()) {
do_some_fork_stuff();
}
The question I have is: I'd like to restore at least STDOUT after this point (it would be nice to restore the other 2). But what magic symbols do I need to use to re-open STDOUT as what STDOUT used to be?
I know that I could use "/dev/tty" if I was running from a tty (but I'm running from cron and depending on stdout elsewhere). I've also read tricks where you can put STDOUT aside with open SAVEOUT,">&STDOUT"
, but just the act of making this copy doesn't solve the original problem of leaving a zombie around.
I'm looking to see if there's some magic like open STDOUT,"|-"
(which I know isn't it) to open STDOUT the way it's supposed to be opened.
crond
, then STDOUT is a fifo thatcrond
monitors for error messages and then emails to you. If your process forks away from crond, and closes that file descriptor, then crond no longer monitors that fifo, and so there's simply no way to get it back. You could arrange to send the mail yourself, if you like.