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Full Discussion: Problems understanding pipes
Top Forums Programming Problems understanding pipes Post 302562890 by ab_tall on Saturday 8th of October 2011 08:15:38 PM
Old 10-08-2011
Good news everyone!
I got my shell to work in almost all cases. There are one or two bugs which I need to iron out, which I'll have a crack at tonight. Thank you for all your inputs!
 

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POPEN(3)						     Library Functions Manual							  POPEN(3)

NAME
popen, pclose - initiate I/O to/from a process SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h> FILE *popen(command, type) char *command, *type; pclose(stream) FILE *stream; DESCRIPTION
The arguments to popen are pointers to null-terminated strings containing respectively a shell command line and an I/O mode, either "r" for reading or "w" for writing. It creates a pipe between the calling process and the command to be executed. The value returned is a stream pointer that can be used (as appropriate) to write to the standard input of the command or read from its standard output. A stream opened by popen should be closed by pclose, which waits for the associated process to terminate and returns the exit status of the command. Because open files are shared, a type "r" command may be used as an input filter, and a type "w" as an output filter. SEE ALSO
pipe(2), fopen(3S), fclose(3S), system(3), wait(2), sh(1) DIAGNOSTICS
Popen returns a null pointer if files or processes cannot be created, or the shell cannot be accessed. Pclose returns -1 if stream is not associated with a `popened' command. BUGS
Buffered reading before opening an input filter may leave the standard input of that filter mispositioned. Similar problems with an output filter may be forestalled by careful buffer flushing, for instance, with fflush, see fclose(3S). Popen always calls sh, never calls csh. 7th Edition May 15, 1985 POPEN(3)
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