I tried to use the read/write file descriptor in bash so that I could delete the file that the file descriptor referred to afterward, as such:
F=$(mktemp)
exec 3<> "$F"
rm -f "$F"
echo "Hello world" >&3
cat <&3
but the cat
command gives no output. I can achieve what I want if I use separate file descriptors for reading and writing:
F=$(mktemp)
exec 3> "$F"
exec 4< "$F"
rm -f "$F"
echo "Hello world" >&3
cat <&4
which prints Hello world
.
I suspected that bash doesn't automatically seek to the start of the file descriptor when you switch from writing to reading it, and the following combination of bash and python code confirms this:
fdrw.sh
exec 3<> tmp
rm tmp
echo "Hello world" >&3
exec python fdrw.py
fdrw.py
import os
f = os.fdopen(3)
print f.tell()
print f.read()
which gives:
$ bash fdrw.sh
12
$ # This is the prompt reappearing
Is there a way to achieve what I want just using bash?
If you ever do happen to want to seek on bash file descriptors, you can use a subprocess, since it inherits the file descriptors of the parent process. Here is an example C program to do this.
seekfd.c