How should I run another program from within my C
program? I need to be able to write data into STDIN
of the launched program (and maybe read from
pipe(...)
, one for stdin
, one for stdout
. fork(...)
the process.fork(...)
returns 0) dup (...)
the pipes to stdin
/stdout
.exec[v][e]
the to be started programm file in the child process.fork
) returns the PID of the child) do a loop that reads from the child's stdout
(select(...)
or poll(...)
, read(...)
) into a buffer, until the
child terminates (waitpid(...)
). stdin
if it expects some.close(...)
the pipes.I think you can use
freopen
for this .
I disagree with Nathan Fellman - the other question is not a duplicate of this, though the subject is related.
For simple unidirectional communication, popen() is a decent solution. It is no use for bi-directional communication, though.
IMO, imjorge (Jorge Ferreira) gave most of the answer (80%?) for bi-directional communication - but omitted a few key details.
If you do not close the unused ends of the pipes, you do not get sensible behaviour when one of the programs terminates; for example, the child might be reading from its standard input, but unless the write end of the pipe is closed in the child, it will never get EOF (zero bytes from read) because it still has the pipe open and the system thinks it might sometime get around to writing to that pipe, even though it is currently hung waiting for something to read from it.
The writing processes should consider whether to handle the SIGPIPE signal that is given when you write on a pipe where there is no reading process.
You have to be aware of pipe capacity (platform dependent, and might be as little as 4KB) and design the programs to avoid deadlock.
You want to use popen
. It gives you a unidirectional pipe with which you can access stdin and stdout of the program.
popen is standard on modern unix and unix-like OS, of which Linux is one :-)
Type
man popen
in a terminal to read more about it.
EDIT
Whether popen
produces unidirectional or bidirectional pipes depends on the implementation. In Linux and OpenBSD, popen
produces unidirectional pipes, which are read-only or write-only. On OS X, FreeBSD and NetBSD popen
produces bidirectional pipes.
You can use the system call, read manpage for system(3)
I wrote some example C code for someone else a while back that shows how to do this. Here it is for you:
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
void error(char *s);
char *data = "Some input data\n";
main()
{
int in[2], out[2], n, pid;
char buf[255];
/* In a pipe, xx[0] is for reading, xx[1] is for writing */
if (pipe(in) < 0) error("pipe in");
if (pipe(out) < 0) error("pipe out");
if ((pid=fork()) == 0) {
/* This is the child process */
/* Close stdin, stdout, stderr */
close(0);
close(1);
close(2);
/* make our pipes, our new stdin,stdout and stderr */
dup2(in[0],0);
dup2(out[1],1);
dup2(out[1],2);
/* Close the other ends of the pipes that the parent will use, because if
* we leave these open in the child, the child/parent will not get an EOF
* when the parent/child closes their end of the pipe.
*/
close(in[1]);
close(out[0]);
/* Over-write the child process with the hexdump binary */
execl("/usr/bin/hexdump", "hexdump", "-C", (char *)NULL);
error("Could not exec hexdump");
}
printf("Spawned 'hexdump -C' as a child process at pid %d\n", pid);
/* This is the parent process */
/* Close the pipe ends that the child uses to read from / write to so
* the when we close the others, an EOF will be transmitted properly.
*/
close(in[0]);
close(out[1]);
printf("<- %s", data);
/* Write some data to the childs input */
write(in[1], data, strlen(data));
/* Because of the small amount of data, the child may block unless we
* close it's input stream. This sends an EOF to the child on it's
* stdin.
*/
close(in[1]);
/* Read back any output */
n = read(out[0], buf, 250);
buf[n] = 0;
printf("-> %s",buf);
exit(0);
}
void error(char *s)
{
perror(s);
exit(1);
}