Larry Hall wrote: > the file deleted by "rm" isn't deleted really until it's closed, which > won't happen until 'tail' ends. This is the way Windows works. There's > not much to be done about it (at least not in Cygwin). Believe me, > we've tried.
Here is a really ugly kludge to deal with a really ugly file system. I'm sure I read about this sort of kludge before, so the idea is certainly not original. -------Cut here------ #!/usr/bin/perl -w # this acts sort of like tail -f, but doesn't keep the # open. It is designed for non-unix systems where open files # can't be deleted. # It mindlessly shows the last 512 bytes of the file on startup # rather than the last 10 lines. # # Paul Haas, May 19, 2004 my $file = shift; open(TF,$file) || die "Reading $file $!"; seek(TF,-512,2); @lines=<TF>; my $curpos=tell(TF); close(TF); print @lines; sleep 1; while(-r $file ) { open(TF,$file) || die "Rereading $file $!"; seek(TF,$curpos,0); @lines=<TF>; $curpos = tell(TF); print @lines; close(TF); sleep 1; } -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/