#!/bin/sh # Check that a write failure with errno == EPIPE # doesn't cause grep to issue multiple "write error" diagnostics. . "${srcdir=.}/init.sh"; path_prepend_ ../src if # Use awk to output a bounded amount of data to the grep in question, # so that the test doesn't loop forever if grep is buggy. # Use an explicit /dev/null for the benefit of older (pre-POSIX) awks. # # Carefully close fd 3 when not needed, as a sanity check. # # Do not use "trap - PIPE" or "trap 'something' PIPE" here, since we may # be running in an environment where SIGPIPE is ignored, and in such an # environment POSIX says that "trap '' PIPE" is all we can do portably. ( ${AWK-awk} 'BEGIN { for (i=0; i<1000000; i++) print i; }' /dev/null 3>&- | (trap '' PIPE; exec grep . 2>&3 3>&-) | : ) 3>&1 | ( read line1 && echo >&2 "$line1" && read line2 && echo >&2 "$line2" ) then fail=1 else fail=0 fi Exit $fail