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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting ksh vs perl strange interaction. Post 302486856 by jlovi on Monday 10th of January 2011 01:18:49 PM
Old 01-10-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
Do a "stty -a";. Isn't a cntl-D your eof character? eof means &quot;end of file&quot;. You are not supposed to continue reading after eof. You could try to reopen the terminal with ";exec < /dev/tty";.
Hello, I tried you suggestion. Doesn't work either. Anyway, this code requires 2 x Ctrl-D, the first time:

Code:
echo a|read a
read line

No Ctrl-D read in the first read.

---------- Post updated at 07:18 PM ---------- Previous update was at 07:14 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by fpmurphy
I believe that something else is going on. Using ksh93, I do not need to enter Ctrl-D twice on any platform and read works exactly as documented.

If you spell out your exact requirements, we can probably solve your problem for you in a simple manner. Are you logged in at the console or on some remote terminal/terminal emulator?
Indeed, Ctrl-D is the EOF, as shown in stty -a

However, this doesn't work either, where no Ctrl-D is involved in the first line.

Code:
 echo "a"|read a
 readline

Adding exec < /dev/tty between the two statements doesn't help.

I'm using Konsole in Fedora/KDE. Tried with another terminal. Same result.

Code:
 [root@BE01850T400 ~]# rpm -qf $(which konsole)
 kdebase-4.4.5-1.fc12.i686


Last edited by jlovi; 01-10-2011 at 02:02 PM..
 

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TTY(4)							     Linux Programmer's Manual							    TTY(4)

NAME
tty - controlling terminal DESCRIPTION
The file /dev/tty is a character file with major number 5 and minor number 0, usually of mode 0666 and owner.group root.tty. It is a syn- onym for the controlling terminal of a process, if any. In addition to the ioctl(2) requests supported by the device that tty refers to, the ioctl(2) request TIOCNOTTY is supported. TIOCNOTTY Detach the calling process from its controlling terminal. If the process is the session leader, then SIGHUP and SIGCONT signals are sent to the foreground process group and all processes in the current session lose their controlling tty. This ioctl(2) call works only on file descriptors connected to /dev/tty. It is used by daemon processes when they are invoked by a user at a terminal. The process attempts to open /dev/tty. If the open succeeds, it detaches itself from the terminal by using TIOCNOTTY, while if the open fails, it is obviously not attached to a terminal and does not need to detach itself. FILES
/dev/tty SEE ALSO
chown(1), mknod(1), ioctl(2), termios(3), console(4), tty_ioctl(4), ttyS(4), agetty(8), mingetty(8) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.53 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2003-04-07 TTY(4)
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