You want to know whether your program is being called interactively or not. For instance, a user running your program from a shell is interactive, whereas the program being called from cron is not.
Use
-t
to test
STDIN
and
STDOUT
:
sub I_am_interactive { return -t STDIN && -t STDOUT; }
If you're on a POSIX system, test process groups:
use POSIX qw/getpgrp tcgetpgrp/; sub I_am_interactive { local *TTY; # local file handle open(TTY, "/dev/tty") or die "can't open /dev/tty: $!"; my $tpgrp = tcgetpgrp(fileno(TTY)); my $pgrp = getpgrp(); close TTY; return ($tpgrp == $pgrp); }
The
-t
operator tells whether the filehandle or file is a
tty device. Such devices are signs of interactive use. This only tells you whether your program has been redirected. Running your program from the shell and redirecting STDIN and STDOUT makes the
-t
version of
I_am_interactive
return false. Called from
cron
,
I_am_interactive
also returns false.
The POSIX test tells you whether your program has exclusive control over its tty. A program whose input and output has been redirected still can control its tty if it wants to, so the POSIX version of
I_am_interactive
returns true. A program run from
cron
has no tty, so
I_am_interactive
returns false.
Whichever
I_am_interactive
you choose to use, here's how you'd call it:
while (1) { if (I_am_interactive()) { print "Prompt: "; } $line = <STDIN>; last unless defined $line; # do something with the line }
Or, more clearly:
sub prompt { print "Prompt: " if I_am_interactive() } for (prompt(); $line = <STDIN>; prompt()) { # do something with the line }
The documentation for the standard POSIX module, also in Chapter 7 of Programming Perl ; the -t file-test operator in Chapter 3 of Programming Perl and in perlop (1)
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