I am writing a POSIX shell script that may or may not receive input from stdin as in foo.sh < test.txt, non-interactively.
How do I check whether there is anything on stdin, to avoid halting on while read -r line...?
If I get the question right, you may try the following:
#!/bin/sh if [ -t 0 ]; then echo running interactively else while read -r line ; do echo $line done fi test -t n is true if the file descriptor n is opened on a terminal, thus test -t 0 only checks for stdin, and test -t 1 only checks for stdout.echo hello | interactive and interactive <(echo world) produce different outputs (in zsh)? (interactive just returns 'yes' or 'no'.) I see that interactive <<<"goodnight" and interactive <moon.txt both work as expected. (My intuition is that <(command) is syntax sugar for something that uses a TTY, but I don't know how/why.)<(command) is still an argument, it's just replaced by the file descriptor of the stdout of command.To answer the question literally (but not what you actually want): read -t 0
Timeout, zero seconds.
-t 5 but on a thrashing system even that is problematic.read -t is not standardised in SUSv3. It is in BSD sh, bash, zsh. It's not in ksh or dash.So you can't just use #!/bin/sh and expect to have this.
The basic problem is that even if there's nothing on stdin now, that doesn't mean there won't be soon. Invoking a program normally leaves stdin connected to the terminal/whatever, so there's no way to tell what's needed.
So, to answer your question literally, you can do it, but in practice your options are:
[ -t 0 ]You can easily implement a similar behaviour as the "cat" command, that is read from a list of provided files or if they're not provided, then read from the stdin.
Although you may not use this idea, I think this Linux Journal article will be interesting for you http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/determine-if-shell-input-coming-terminal-or-pipe
:-)
If you never want to run the script interactively, make it take the input file as a parameter, rather than using stdin. Some programs use a flag or a special filename to indicate that they should take input from standard input rather than from a file; that case lets you handle command line jockeying if necessary.
If you want your script to take the standard input, why don't you want to let it be interactive (or at least behave like other POSIX tools)?
- instead of a filename.
readto get). This answer unix.stackexchange.com/questions/33049/… should convince you that you don't want to do that.find . -name x | your_script. It may take a long time before find puts a result in stdin. So the only conditions you should be interested in are 1. Is it a terminal or not, and 2. In the accepted answer, both conditions are checked. 1 is checked with[ -t 0 ]and 2. is checked as thewhilecondition:readreturns 1 if stdin has been closed. If you were running the script interactively and wanted to end the loop, you can close stdin by pressing 'CTRL-D' on an empty line sending the EOF character.