On Windows, write() is implemented using WriteFile(). After the reader
closed its end of the pipe, the first WriteFile() returns
ERROR_BROKEN_PIPE (which translates to EPIPE), subsequent WriteFile()s
return ERROR_NO_DATA, which is translated to EINVAL.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Sixt <johannes.sixt@telecom.at>
return;
}
if (fflush(f)) {
- if (errno == EPIPE)
+ /*
+ * On Windows, EPIPE is returned only by the first write()
+ * after the reading end has closed its handle; subsequent
+ * write()s return EINVAL.
+ */
+ if (errno == EPIPE || errno == EINVAL)
exit(0);
die("write failure on %s: %s", desc, strerror(errno));
}