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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Continuous nc data acquisition fails ocassionally Post 303019341 by jim mcnamara on Wednesday 27th of June 2018 09:34:23 AM
Old 06-27-2018
Instead of why? how about using tail -f which is meant to solve this problem.
Code:
nc -ul -p 56045 -q -1 | tail -f | awk -F: 'NF > 1 {print strftime("%d-%m-%Y %H:%M:%S"),$0;fflush();  }' > awk.txt 2>&1 &

What you need to consider, if you do not like tail, is to develop some kind of daemon - usually written in C. You have an attached child process that leaves the parent there forever. If I understand what you have there.

PS: fflush() on every line forces disk I/O instead of buffered I/O. Since nc can produce an endless stream of data this change might help.

Last edited by jim mcnamara; 06-27-2018 at 10:42 AM..
 

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FFLUSH(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						 FFLUSH(3)

NAME
fflush, fpurge -- flush a stream LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> int fflush(FILE *stream); int fpurge(FILE *stream); DESCRIPTION
The function fflush() forces a write of all buffered data for the given output or update stream via the stream's underlying write function. The open status of the stream is unaffected. If the stream argument is NULL, fflush() flushes all open output streams. The function fpurge() erases any input or output buffered in the given stream. For output streams this discards any unwritten output. For input streams this discards any input read from the underlying object but not yet obtained via getc(3); this includes any text pushed back via ungetc(3). RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion 0 is returned. Otherwise, EOF is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
[EBADF] The stream argument is not an open stream, or, in the case of fflush(), not a stream open for writing. The function fflush() may also fail and set errno for any of the errors specified for the routine write(2). SEE ALSO
write(2), fclose(3), fopen(3), setbuf(3) STANDARDS
The fflush() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 (``ISO C90''). BSD
June 4, 1993 BSD
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