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Top Forums Programming Controlling a child's stdin/stdout (not working with scp) Post 302403141 by DreamWarrior on Thursday 11th of March 2010 03:24:52 PM
Old 03-11-2010
Corona: There are 50+ hosts that this script needs to transfer files to/from. Each host has a different user/password. That user is the only one with access to the files I need to remote copy (besides root, of course). Can shared keys help here? The way I understand it, shared keys allow one user access to several hosts. They are tied to the user id. That won't help if this is true.

Jim: ftp/rcp are blocked, they aren't secure. Of course, neither is a password dictionary; but if you knew our password policy (and read above about the number of accounts all with disparite passwords), you'd realize everyone keeps them anyway. So...our security policy is so secure that it's insecure, lol. I'd just be making life easier if I could make this work.
 

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filter_create_fd(3)						   util/filter.h					       filter_create_fd(3)

NAME
filter_create_fd - Create a sub process and return the requested pipes SYNOPSIS
#include <util/filter.h> NEOERR *filter_create_fd(const char *cmd, int *fdin, int *fdout, int *fderr, pid_t *pid); ARGUMENTS
cmd -> the sub command to execute. Will be executed with /bin/sh -c fdin -> pointer to return the stdin pipe, or NULL if you don't want the stdin pipe fdout -> pointer to return the stdout pipe, or NULL if you don't want the stdout pipe fderr -> pointer to return the stderr pipe, or NULL if you don't want the stderr pipe DESCRIPTION
filter_create_fd and filter_create_fp are what popen been: a mechanism to create sub processes and have pipes to all their input/output. The concept was taken from mutt, though python has something similar with popen3/popen4. You control which pipes the function returns by the fdin/fdout/fderr arguments. A NULL value means "don't create a pipe", a pointer to an int will cause the pipes to be created and the value of the file descriptor stored in the int. You will have to close(2) the file descriptors yourself. RETURN VALUE
fdin -> the stdin file descriptor of the sub process fdout -> the stdout file descriptor of the sub process fderr -> the stderr file descriptor of the sub process pid -> the pid of the sub process SEE ALSO
filter_wait(3), filter_create_fp(3), filter_create_fd ClearSilver 12 July 2007 filter_create_fd(3)
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