This can happen if we create the .tmp file in the same directory as the target, and the .do file first does "rm -rf" on that directory, then re-creates it. The result is that the stdout file is lost. We'll make this a warning if the .do script *didn't* write to stdout (so the loss is harmless, just weird), and an error if they *did* write to stdout, which we can detect because we still have an open fd on the file, so we can fstat() it.
2 lines
38 B
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2 lines
38 B
Text
rm -rf destruct
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rm -f deltest2 *~ .*~
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