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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting How to send data to previous program (pipe)? Post 303012639 by JackK on Wednesday 7th of February 2018 08:26:21 AM
Old 02-07-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peasant
You can achieve this using shell coprocesses

There are examples on this forum and online.
I found one done example by doing sqlplus cooprocess ksh search in google.

Regards
Peasant.
I didn't know about coprocesses before. In my case, I think, writing a parser with coprocesses is not needed and too complicated (for such a small requirement).

Is it possible to do a redirection to a process by it's PID? For example:
Code:
$ echo "something" > PID#

Quote:
Originally Posted by Don Cragun
Send email to yourself, send a message to a message queue, write to a regular file, write to a FIFO file, send a signal, write some text into a shared memory segment... There are hundreds of ways to do this.
May you provide an example, please? It would be good to send a signal from cmd2 to cmd1, but how may I tell cmd1 to interpret the signal I a proper way (changing sqlprompt)?

---------- Post updated at 01:57 PM ---------- Previous update was at 01:46 PM ----------

I found something. When I have sqlplus running and in another session I do:
Code:
# echo "TEst;" > /proc/<PIDofSQLPLUS>/fd/0

then in sqlplus I receive:
Quote:
myuser@mydb SQL> TEst;
But the message is not interpreted at all (is only printed) by sqlplus, unfortunately.

---------- Post updated at 04:26 PM ---------- Previous update was at 01:57 PM ----------

According to my last update I found this (linux - sending command to process using /proc - Stack Overflow):
Quote:
You can't do that. /proc/fd/0 is (usually) not a pipe which you can write to and give the process input.
What you need to do, is invoke the process with its stdin coming from something that IS a pipe (or socket etc) so that you can write stuff into it.
A named pipe MAY work here (see mknod(1) or mkfifo(3) ).
 

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FIFO(7) 						     Linux Programmer's Manual							   FIFO(7)

NAME
fifo - first-in first-out special file, named pipe DESCRIPTION
A FIFO special file (a named pipe) is similar to a pipe, except that it is accessed as part of the file system. It can be opened by multi- ple processes for reading or writing. When processes are exchanging data via the FIFO, the kernel passes all data internally without writ- ing it to the file system. Thus, the FIFO special file has no contents on the file system; the file system entry merely serves as a refer- ence point so that processes can access the pipe using a name in the file system. The kernel maintains exactly one pipe object for each FIFO special file that is opened by at least one process. The FIFO must be opened on both ends (reading and writing) before data can be passed. Normally, opening the FIFO blocks until the other end is opened also. A process can open a FIFO in nonblocking mode. In this case, opening for read only will succeed even if no-one has opened on the write side yet, opening for write only will fail with ENXIO (no such device or address) unless the other end has already been opened. Under Linux, opening a FIFO for read and write will succeed both in blocking and nonblocking mode. POSIX leaves this behavior undefined. This can be used to open a FIFO for writing while there are no readers available. A process that uses both ends of the connection in order to communicate with itself should be very careful to avoid deadlocks. NOTES
When a process tries to write to a FIFO that is not opened for read on the other side, the process is sent a SIGPIPE signal. FIFO special files can be created by mkfifo(3), and are indicated by ls -l with the file type 'p'. SEE ALSO
mkfifo(1), open(2), pipe(2), sigaction(2), signal(2), socketpair(2), mkfifo(3), pipe(7) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 3.27 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, and information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2008-12-03 FIFO(7)
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