fed1a562c3
An input/output error indicates a fatal condition, even if it occurs when closing a file. Awk should not return success on I/O error, but treat I/O errors as it already treats write errors. Test case: $ (trap '' PIPE; awk 'BEGIN { print "hi"; }'; echo "E $?" >&2) | : awk: i/o error occurred while closing /dev/stdout source line number 1 E 2 The test case pipes a line into a dummy command that reads no input, with SIGPIPE ignored so we rely on awk's own I/O checking. No write error is detected, because the pipe is buffered; the broken pipe is only detected as an I/O error on closing stdout. Before this commit, "E 0" was printed (indicating status 0/success) because an I/O error merely produced a warning. A shell script was unable to detect the I/O error using the exit status.
12 KiB
Executable File
12 KiB
Executable File