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Top Forums Programming getting the return code of forked child process (ftp) Post 302132667 by guenter on Saturday 18th of August 2007 05:51:26 PM
Old 08-18-2007
hi
i wrote a reply that took me about an half our or more (my english is not good). when i clicked the "submit request" button another login was requested an all i had written was lost.
therefore a short version of my post:
1. popen is not ansi c and you cannot both write and read from the pipe it creates, espesially not in solaris9 as the manual states.
2. in m.bach,The design of the UNIX operating system,ISBN:0-13-201799-7
one can find a description what one must do
3. i found to examples in the net which i do not check:
Mapping UNIX pipe descriptors to stdin and stdout in C
Simple popen2 implementation [c] [unix] [ipc] [popen] [popen2] [pipes]
4. in your program i am missing the second pipe. you correctly create one pipe and use the dup function to that the child's process stdin now is sent through the pipe. you must create another pipe for the stdout in the same manner
5. after exec the filehandles are inherited so your ftp-progrma will read from one pipe and write to the other. but everything in the program beinning with the line
sleep(1);
will never be executed by the child (but by the parent)

now i make a copy of this text befor i press the submit-button
mfg guenter
 

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PIPE(2) 							System Calls Manual							   PIPE(2)

NAME
pipe - create an interprocess communication channel SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int pipe(int fildes[2]) DESCRIPTION
The pipe system call creates an I/O mechanism called a pipe. The file descriptors returned can be used in read and write operations. When the pipe is written using the descriptor fildes[1] up to PIPE_MAX bytes of data are buffered before the writing process is suspended. A read using the descriptor fildes[0] will pick up the data. PIPE_MAX equals 7168 under Minix, but note that most systems use 4096. It is assumed that after the pipe has been set up, two (or more) cooperating processes (created by subsequent fork calls) will pass data through the pipe with read and write calls. The shell has a syntax to set up a linear array of processes connected by pipes. Read calls on an empty pipe (no buffered data) with only one end (all write file descriptors closed) returns an end-of-file. The signal SIGPIPE is generated if a write on a pipe with only one end is attempted. RETURN VALUE
The function value zero is returned if the pipe was created; -1 if an error occurred. ERRORS
The pipe call will fail if: [EMFILE] Too many descriptors are active. [ENFILE] The system file table is full. [ENOSPC] The pipe file system (usually the root file system) has no free inodes. [EFAULT] The fildes buffer is in an invalid area of the process's address space. SEE ALSO
sh(1), read(2), write(2), fork(2). NOTES
Writes may return ENOSPC errors if no pipe data can be buffered, because the pipe file system is full. BUGS
Should more than PIPE_MAX bytes be necessary in any pipe among a loop of processes, deadlock will occur. 4th Berkeley Distribution August 26, 1985 PIPE(2)
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