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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers fuser: difference with bin/sh and bin/ksh shell script Post 302320960 by Perderabo on Friday 29th of May 2009 11:55:21 AM
Old 05-29-2009
What OS? With Solaris 8, the /bin/sh version shows the file open during execution.

But I guess that some version of sh on some system might realize that it had read the entire file and decided to close it prior to running it. There is no standard that I can think of that requires sh to keep the file open. I would not be very surprised by behavior like that.
 

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dup2(2) 							System Calls Manual							   dup2(2)

NAME
dup2 - duplicate an open file descriptor to a specific slot SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
fildes is a file descriptor obtained from a or system call. fildes2 is a non-negative integer less than the maximum value allowed for file descriptors. causes fildes2 to refer to the same file as fildes. If fildes2 refers to an already open file, the open file is closed first. The file descriptor returned by has the following in common with fildes: o Same open file (or pipe). o Same file pointer (that is, both file descriptors share one file pointer.) o Same access mode (read, write or read/write). o Same file status flags (see fcntl(2), The new file descriptor is set to remain open across system calls. See fcntl(2). This routine is found in the C library. Programs using but not using other routines from the Berkeley importability library (such as the routines described in bsdproc(3C)) should not give the option to ld(1). RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, returns the new file descriptor as a non-negative integer, fildes2. Otherwise, it returns -1 and sets to indi- cate the error. ERRORS
fails if the following is true: fildes is not a valid open file descriptor or fildes2 is not in the range of legal file descriptors. An attempt to close fildes2 was interrupted by a signal. The file is still open. WARNINGS
A multithreaded application or an application with a signal handler can exhibit a race between on one thread and another kernel call that assigns a new file descriptor while running on a second thread or signal handler. If fildes2 is free before the call was made, the other thread or signal handler may win the race and acquire that descriptor (e.g., in an call). The thread calling can then close this file and reuse the descriptor. This results in multiple functions improperly referring to the same file. This race can be avoided either by ensuring that fildes2 references an open file before calling or by providing user-level synchronization (or signal disabling) which makes sure that the thread and another thread or signal handler don't make competing calls into the kernel at the same time. SEE ALSO
close(2), creat(2), dup(2), exec(2), fcntl(2), open(2), pipe(2), privileges(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
dup2(2)
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