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This section describes a feature that is specific to gawk
.
You may specify a timeout in milliseconds for reading input from the keyboard,
a pipe, or two-way communication, including TCP/IP sockets. This can be done
on a per-input, per-command, or per-connection basis, by setting a special
element in the PROCINFO
array (see Auto-set):
PROCINFO["input_name", "READ_TIMEOUT"] = timeout in milliseconds
When set, this causes gawk
to time out and return failure
if no data is available to read within the specified timeout period.
For example, a TCP client can decide to give up on receiving
any response from the server after a certain amount of time:
Service = "/inet/tcp/0/localhost/daytime" PROCINFO[Service, "READ_TIMEOUT"] = 100 if ((Service |& getline) > 0) print $0 else if (ERRNO != "") print ERRNO
Here is how to read interactively from the user27 without waiting for more than five seconds:
PROCINFO["/dev/stdin", "READ_TIMEOUT"] = 5000 while ((getline < "/dev/stdin") > 0) print $0
gawk
terminates the read operation if input does not
arrive after waiting for the timeout period, returns failure,
and sets ERRNO
to an appropriate string value.
A negative or zero value for the timeout is the same as specifying
no timeout at all.
A timeout can also be set for reading from the keyboard in the implicit loop that reads input records and matches them against patterns, like so:
$ gawk 'BEGIN { PROCINFO["-", "READ_TIMEOUT"] = 5000 } > { print "You entered: " $0 }' gawk -| You entered: gawk
In this case, failure to respond within five seconds results in the following error message:
error→ gawk: cmd. line:2: (FILENAME=- FNR=1) fatal: error reading input file `-': Connection timed out
The timeout can be set or changed at any time, and will take effect on the next attempt to read from the input device. In the following example, we start with a timeout value of one second, and progressively reduce it by one-tenth of a second until we wait indefinitely for the input to arrive:
PROCINFO[Service, "READ_TIMEOUT"] = 1000 while ((Service |& getline) > 0) { print $0 PROCINFO[Service, "READ_TIMEOUT"] -= 100 }
NOTE: You should not assume that the read operation will block exactly after the tenth record has been printed. It is possible that
gawk
will read and buffer more than one record’s worth of data the first time. Because of this, changing the value of timeout like in the preceding example is not very useful.
If the PROCINFO
element is not present and the
GAWK_READ_TIMEOUT
environment variable exists,
gawk
uses its value to initialize the timeout value.
The exclusive use of the environment variable to specify timeout
has the disadvantage of not being able to control it
on a per-command or per-connection basis.
gawk
considers a timeout event to be an error even though
the attempt to read from the underlying device may
succeed in a later attempt. This is a limitation, and it also
means that you cannot use this to multiplex input from
two or more sources.
Assigning a timeout value prevents read operations from
blocking indefinitely. But bear in mind that there are other ways
gawk
can stall waiting for an input device to be ready.
A network client can sometimes take a long time to establish
a connection before it can start reading any data,
or the attempt to open a FIFO special file for reading can block
indefinitely until some other process opens it for writing.
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