Why do you use a json.Decoder? It seems as reading
everything (io.ReadAll) until EOF and json.Unmarshal'ling
would be a cleaner/simpler solution?
V.
On Tuesday, 17 October 2023 at 09:10:09 UTC+2 Christopher C wrote:
> Hello all!
> I'm trying to read json objects from a named pipe. The pipe will be
> filled intermittently by bash scripts. After the Decode() of the first
> object, any more calls to Decode() will return EOF. This seems proper
> since the script has completed, but once it errors with EOF, there doesn't
> seem to be a way to read any more.
>
> Is there a way to 'reset' the decoder so when another script writes to the
> pipe it can process the next object, or should I be doing some pipe length
> validation before trying to decode?
>
> Current read code snippet is...
>
> decoder := json.NewDecoder(fpipe)
> for {
> err := decoder.Decode(&msg)
> if err != nil {
> if err == io.EOF {
> // how to reset this?
> } else {
> logger.Fatal(err)
> }
> } else {
> // send out the msg
>
>
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