08-02-2011
Write 2 tapes? Go to disk? Tape may read ok and then not read the next time, when its time has come. Some drives do a read-after-write check, so for them it should be good, but I expect most have tossed that as they went to video scan style writing.
You can put a test file on the tar, or memorize the name of the first file, and extract just that file on your test pass, doing a 'cmp' on the file on stdout pipe. At least you know the heads started out, and are now again, clean.
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PIPE(2) System Calls Manual PIPE(2)
NAME
pipe - create an interprocess channel
SYNOPSIS
pipe(fildes)
int fildes[2];
DESCRIPTION
The pipe system call creates an I/O mechanism called a pipe. The file descriptors returned can be used in read and write operations. When
the pipe is written using the descriptor fildes[1] up to 4096 bytes of data are buffered before the writing process is suspended. A read
using the descriptor fildes[0] will pick up the data. Writes with a count of 4096 bytes or less are atomic; no other process can inter-
sperse data.
It is assumed that after the pipe has been set up, two (or more) cooperating processes (created by subsequent fork calls) will pass data
through the pipe with read and write calls.
The Shell has a syntax to set up a linear array of processes connected by pipes.
Read calls on an empty pipe (no buffered data) with only one end (all write file descriptors closed) returns an end-of-file.
SEE ALSO
sh(1), read(2), write(2), fork(2)
DIAGNOSTICS
The function value zero is returned if the pipe was created; -1 if too many files are already open. A signal is generated if a write on a
pipe with only one end is attempted.
BUGS
Should more than 4096 bytes be necessary in any pipe among a loop of processes, deadlock will occur.
ASSEMBLER
(pipe = 42.)
sys pipe
(read file descriptor in r0)
(write file descriptor in r1)
PIPE(2)