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Date:      Sat, 4 Mar 2017 20:12:59 -0800
From:      Alfred Perlstein <alfred@freebsd.org>
To:        Julian Elischer <julian@elischer.org>, freebsd-current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org>, Devin Teske <dteske@FreeBSD.org>
Subject:   Re: Fwd: Re: I/O semantics of pipe and FIFO.
Message-ID:  <17381773-019a-2181-f00f-1908d04b8d22@freebsd.org>
In-Reply-To: <8efdc961-1768-0bc0-715f-4a1e103359d4@elischer.org>
References:  <20170304214812.GA16845@chaz.gmail.com> <8efdc961-1768-0bc0-715f-4a1e103359d4@elischer.org>

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Devin and I found this when we worked together.  I think it was due to 
some situation in dd(1) where short reads would exit pre-maturely, 
however I may be mis-remembering.  Devin, do you recall the specifics?


On 3/4/17 7:44 PM, Julian Elischer wrote:
>
> an interesting point to discuss? is our behaviour in this test right?
>    from: "austin-group mailng list (posix standard discussion)"
>
> ------ rest of email is quoted -------
> On 5/3/17 5:48 am, Stephane Chazelas wrote:
>
> 2017-03-04 13:14:08 +0000, Danny Niu:
>> Hi all.
>>
>> I couldn't remember where I saw it saying, that when reading
>> from a pipe or a FIFO, the read syscall returns the content of
>> at most one write call. It's a bit similar to the
>> message-nondiscard semantics of dear old STREAM.
>>
>> Currently, I'm reading through the text to find out a bit
>> more, and I appreciate a bit of pointer on this.
> [...]
>
> (echo x; echo y) | (sleep 1; dd count=1 2> /dev/null)
>
> outputs both x and y in all of Linux, FreeBSD and Solaris in my
> tests.
>
> That a read wouldn't read what's currently in the pipe would be
> quite surprising.
>
> I also wouldn't expect pipes to store the writes as individual
> separate message but use one buffer.
>
> In:
>
> (
>   dd bs=40000 count=1 if=/dev/zero 2> /dev/null
>   echo first through >&2
>   dd bs=40000 count=1 if=/dev/zero 2> /dev/null
>   echo second through >&2
> ) | (sleep 1; dd bs=100000 count=1 2> /dev/null) | wc -c
>
> That is where the second write blocks because the pipe is full,
> the reading dd still reads both writes in Linux and Solaris in
> my tests (on Solaris (10 on amd64 at least), reduce to 20000
> instead of 40000 or both writes would block).
>
> On FreeBSD, I get only the first write (using 8000 followed by
> 10000 for instance).
>
> FreeBSD is also the only one of the three where
>
> dd bs=1000000 count=1 if=/dev/zero | dd bs=1000000 count=1 | wc -c
>
> Doesn't output 1000000. The others schedule both processes back
> and forth during their write() and read() system call while the
> pipe is being filled and emptied several times.
>




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