Using dup2 for piping

不打扰是莪最后的温柔 提交于 2019-11-27 11:23:22
theprole

A Little example with the first two commands. You need to create a pipe with the pipe() function that will go between ls and grep and other pipe between grep and more. What dup2 does is copy a file descriptor into another. Pipe works by connecting the input in fd[0] to the output of fd[1]. You should read the man pages of pipe and dup2. I may try and simplify the example later if you have some other doubts.

#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <errno.h>

#define READ_END 0
#define WRITE_END 1

int 
main(int argc, char* argv[]) 
{
    pid_t pid;
    int fd[2];

    pipe(fd);
    pid = fork();

    if(pid==0)
    {
        printf("i'm the child used for ls \n");
        dup2(fd[WRITE_END], STDOUT_FILENO);
        close(fd[WRITE_END]);
        execlp("ls", "ls", "-al", NULL);
    }
    else
    { 
        pid=fork();

        if(pid==0)
        {
            printf("i'm in the second child, which will be used to run grep\n");
            dup2(fd[READ_END], STDIN_FILENO);
            close(fd[READ_END]);
            execlp("grep", "grep", "alpha",NULL);
        }
    }

    return 0;
}

You would use pipe(2,3p) as well. Create the pipe, fork, duplicate the appropriate end of the pipe onto FD 0 or FD 1 of the child, then exec.

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