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On 8/1/19 10:30 AM, Ken Brown wrote: >>> OK, when xwin-xdg-menu launches an application, it creates two pipes >>> and sets >>> the application's stdout and stderr to the write ends of those pipes. > Well, I can't be sure that the pipes are responsible. It's just that > the existence of the pipes is the only difference I could spot between > an ordinary terminal and a terminal started from xwin-xdg-menu. > > Is it possible that the logging somehow slows things down or changes the > buffering, so that the grep process takes longer to complete? This > would be consistent with my theory that the broken pipe error doesn't > really represent a bug, but rather it reflects the fact that ls exits > before grep has finished writing. Could it be a case of xwin-xdg-menu calling signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN) or similar, and accidentally letting grep inherit the ignored SIGPIPE? When SIGPIPE is not ignored, grep's failure to write to a pipe causes termination before the failed write completes; but when it is ignored, grep sees EPIPE from the failed write and reports that. -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3226 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org
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