This is a good point. If you don't explicitly
close(STDERR), it should stay at file descriptor 2 when you re-open it. For example:
close(STDIN);
close(STDERR);
open(STDERR, ">/tmp/foo");
print fileno(STDERR), "\n"; # prints 0
However, if the
close(STDERR) call is removed,
STDERR remains at file descriptor 2.
A quick test of Proc::Daemon indicates that STDIN, STDOUT and STDERR all have the expected file descriptors.
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