Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming How to capturs system() output Post 302313012 by jim mcnamara on Monday 4th of May 2009 11:14:24 AM
Old 05-04-2009
Just call popen() - it does the piping for you.
Code:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
    FILE *cmd=popen(("pgrep -c thttpd", "r");
    char result[24]={0x0};
    while (fgets(result, sizeof(result), cmd) !=NULL)
           printf("%s\n", result);
    pclose(cmd);
    return 0;
}

 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

parsing output of system()

Hi, From the above output of df command I need to parse only 43G (available space) and display it. root@localhost:> df -h /vol1/joy Filesystem Size Used Avail Capacity Mounted on /vol1/joy 180G 137G 43G 76% ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: cjjoy
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

system () output into file in awk

hello, I want to print my output into a file inside of awk, but I don't know it could wokr with using system (piping the $1-4 to another shellskript): cat file.txt |awk '{ if ($5==2) {dataname=$1 "_" $2 "_" $3 "_" $4 "_typing.rad" befehl=".gen_test " $7 " " $8 " " $8 system(befehl) >... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ergy1983
5 Replies

3. Programming

C system() how to send the output to an array??

Hi, im in need if wisdom here guys... How could I store the output of commands like ping integrally directly into a array??? I'll be using system() to run the commands but how can I send the output to an array??? cuz I need to store it so that I can later copy the array's content to a buffer... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Jess83
5 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl: looping through the output of a 'system' command

Hi there could anybody point me in the right direction when it comes to looping through the output of a system command in perl (i.e. df -k) doing a test against each line to see if it matches? for example if i have a df -k output like this and I wanted to grab the lines that matched "sda" or... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rethink
3 Replies

5. Programming

[C language] system function print output when not expected.

Hi, I am new to C and have a little problem. I am not planning to be a C expert, but this would be nice to understand. The problem is that a 'system' call prints it output to stdout, when I do not expect this. This is the program: trial.c #include <ctype.h> #include <unistd.h>... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: ejdv
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Capturing awk's system(cmd) output

Hi everybody, I am working on a bigger awk script in which one part is comparing the size of two files. I want to evaluate which file is bigger and then just save the bigger one. I got it all working except for the part where I want to figure out which file is bigger; the one awk is currently... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: iMeal
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

System Output in to an Array or variable

hey guys in only new to scripting as such, but i have a problem. i want to take the output of a search i do in the command line to then be in a variable but only a certain part of the output. this this what im doing: -bash-2.05b$ ldapsearch -x '(dn:=dc)' dc|grep dc= # base... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jmorey
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash script show Kill system output

Hi we are calling kill -9 $pid command from bash script it gives below output, but we need to hide the output. i tried /dev/null but ni luck. is there any alternate way to schive this. ../kill_scr.sh: line 42: 1891 Killed /tmp/anr_rest_mul_wc.sh Soalris 10. ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sachinbutala
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Redirect system output to null in perl

Hi Guys, Please help me.. it is urgent. I am writing a perl script to capture command output and redirect it to a logfile.At the same i want to check the return code of the command and log it if the command is not succesful in my logfile.. Here is my code, it is working but system command inside... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sriramperumalla
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to capture system() function output in variable

How to capture system() function output in awk variable and the print that awk variable..... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: bharat1211
8 Replies
PGREP(1)							Linux User's Manual							  PGREP(1)

NAME
pgrep, pkill - look up or signal processes based on name and other attributes SYNOPSIS
pgrep [-flnvx] [-d delimiter] [-P ppid,...] [-g pgrp,...] [-s sid,...] [-u euid,...] [-U uid,...] [-G gid,...] [-t term,...] [pattern] pkill [-signal] [-fnvx] [-P ppid,...] [-g pgrp,...] [-s sid,...] [-u euid,...] [-U uid,...] [-G gid,...] [-t term,...] [pattern] DESCRIPTION
pgrep looks through the currently running processes and lists the process IDs which matches the selection criteria to stdout. All the cri- teria have to match. For example, pgrep -u root sshd will only list the processes called sshd AND owned by root. On the other hand, pgrep -u root,daemon will list the processes owned by root OR daemon. pkill will send the specified signal (by default SIGTERM) to each process instead of listing them on stdout. OPTIONS
-d delimiter Sets the string used to delimit each process ID in the output (by default a newline). (pgrep only.) -f The pattern is normally only matched against the process name. When -f is set, the full command line is used. -g pgrp,... Only match processes in the process group IDs listed. Process group 0 is translated into pgrep's or pkill's own process group. -G gid,... Only match processes whose real group ID is listed. Either the numerical or symbolical value may be used. -l List the process name as well as the process ID. (pgrep only.) -n Select only the newest (most recently started) of the matching processes. -P ppid,... Only match processes whose parent process ID is listed. -s sid,... Only match processes whose process session ID is listed. Session ID 0 is translated into pgrep's or pkill's own session ID. -t term,... Only match processes whose controlling terminal is listed. The terminal name should be specified without the "/dev/" prefix. -u euid,... Only match processes whose effective user ID is listed. Either the numerical or symbolical value may be used. -U uid,... Only match processes whose real user ID is listed. Either the numerical or symbolical value may be used. -v Negates the matching. -x Only match processes whose name (or command line if -f is specified) exactly match the pattern. -signal Defines the signal to send to each matched process. Either the numeric or the symbolic signal name can be used. (pkill only.) OPERANDS
pattern Specifies an Extended Regular Expression for matching against the process names or command lines. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Find the process ID of the named daemon: unix$ pgrep -u root named Example 2: Make syslog reread its configuration file: unix$ pkill -HUP syslogd Example 3: Give detailed information on all xterm processes: unix$ ps -fp $(pgrep -d, -x xterm) Example 4: Make all netscape processes run nicer: unix$ renice +4 `pgrep netscape` EXIT STATUS
0 One or more processes matched the criteria. 1 No processes matched. 2 Syntax error in the command line. 3 Fatal error: out of memory etc. NOTES
The process name used for matching is limited to the 15 characters present in the output of /proc/pid/stat. Use the -f option to match against the complete command line, /proc/pid/cmdline. The running pgrep or pkill process will never report itself as a match. BUGS
The options -n and -v can not be combined. Let me know if you need to do this. Defunct processes are reported. SEE ALSO
ps(1) proc(5) regex(5) STANDARDS
pkill and pgrep were introduced in Sun's Solaris 7. This implementation is fully compatible. AUTHOR
Kjetil Torgrim Homme <kjetilho@ifi.uio.no> Michael K. Johnson <johnsonm@redhat.com> is the current maintainer of the procps package. Please send bug reports to <procps-list@redhat.com> Linux June 25, 2000 PGREP(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:25 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy