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Full Discussion: Problems understanding pipes
Top Forums Programming Problems understanding pipes Post 302562701 by ab_tall on Friday 7th of October 2011 06:10:47 PM
Old 10-07-2011
@Thanks alister.

The clarification was very helpful indeed.
While we are on the subject, (and I know there are scattered resources available on google for this), how is the pipe underlying structure implemented?
If it is just another file, is it possible to see the contents of the pipe {so as to know what's being passed on between the read and write ends}.
Finally,
Is there a way to find out which FDs point to the same underlying description?
If it's hidden somewhere in lsof, i'll dig deeper, but if not do let me know.

Thanks again. The community here on this site is much more forgiving towards the beginners. Smilie
 

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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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