On Mar 17, 1:59 pm, Jeff Schwab <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> A Unix fifo is only nominally a file. It's really just a convenient way
> of referring to an in-memory object.
> mkfifo f
> some_prog > f &
> cat f
>
> Is semantically equivalent to:
>
> some_prog | cat
>
> If you w
waltbrad wrote:
> I'm proceeding slowly though the Lutz book "Programming Python". I'm
> in the section on named pipes. The script he uses has two functions:
> one for the child the other for the parent. You start the parent then
> the child:
>
> python pipefifo.py #starts the parent
>
> file /
On Mar 17, 1:50 pm, waltbrad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I then wanted to start the child process first and see what happened
> when I ran the parent. Well that works but the reads come out in
> random order.
Well, I take that back. I accidentally had two 'parent' processes
open. So, the reads
I'm proceeding slowly though the Lutz book "Programming Python". I'm
in the section on named pipes. The script he uses has two functions:
one for the child the other for the parent. You start the parent then
the child:
python pipefifo.py #starts the parent
file /tmp/pipefifo # shows that the f