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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting I/O redirection within a coprocess Post 41986 by Mugin on Monday 20th of October 2003 04:19:24 PM
Old 10-20-2003
Perderabo, thanx for your fast reply.

Let me explain what i want to do.
I want to edit a file with sed on some remote machines.
Everything works fine, also the sed command output, but the ">"
part after sed does not seem to work ( i do not get any output from that part).
Should i write a little sed script before, set up a coprocess for ftp and then send the script over in order for the telnetcoprocess to execute it?Smilie

Mugin
 

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FBB::Redirector(3bobcat)				   System Level File Redirection				  FBB::Redirector(3bobcat)

NAME
FBB::Redirector - Redirects a file descriptor to another descriptor SYNOPSIS
#include <bobcat/redirector> Linking option: -lbobcat DESCRIPTION
Objects of the class FBB::Redirector set up a system level file redirection, using file descriptors rather than streams. FBB::Redirector objects are effectively wrappers around the dup2(2) system call. System level redirection allows the programmer to send output to, e.g., the standard output stream, which actually appears at another stream (e.g., the standard error). It is a stronger form of redirection than the standard one offered by C++, which uses std::streambuf redirection, and which is, because of that, bound to the program's scope. System level redirection, on the other hand, is applied at the system level, allowing the programmer to redirect standard streams when starting a program. For example, the standard error is commonly written to the standard output using an invocation like program 2>&1. When constructing FBB::Redirector objects a file descriptor is required, and another file descriptor is required when defining the redi- rection. Formally, file descriptors are not defined in C++, but they are available in many types of operating systems. In those systems each `file' has an associated `file descriptor'. A file descriptor is an int, which is an index into the program's file allocation table, maintained by the system. Another type of well-known entities which are file descriptors are sockets. Well-known filedescriptors (defined in, e.g., unistd.h) having fixed values are 0 (STDIN_FILENO), representing the standard input stream (std::cin); 1, (STDOUT_FILENO), representing the standard output stream (std::cout); 2, (STDERR_FILENO), representing the standard error stream (cerr); Notes: o System-level redirection outlives system calls from the execl(3) family. o Destroying a FBB::Redirector object does not undo the redirection set up by that object. NAMESPACE
FBB All constructors, members, operators and manipulators, mentioned in this man-page, are defined in the namespace FBB. INHERITS FROM
- ENUM
The enumeration StandardFileno holds the following values: o STDIN(0) o STDOUT(1) o STDERR(2) These values may be used to set up a redirection instead of the plain numbers. CONSTRUCTORS
o Redirector(int fd): This constructor expects the file descriptor of the file that will be used in the program to access (read, write) another file. The copy constructor is available. MEMBER FUNCTIONS
o void swallow(int otherFd) const: This member function expects the file descriptor of the file that will be redirected. Redirection means that the descriptor provided to the constructor will be used when referring to the file descriptor provided to the swallow() member (see the example below). If the redirection fails an FBB::Errno object is thrown, whose which() member shows the system's errno value set by the failing dup2(2) function. o void through(int otherFd) const: This member function also redirects otherFd to the file descriptor provided to the constructor, but will also close the construc- tor's file descriptor. After calling through the file referred to by the constructor's file descriptor can only be accessed from otherFd. The file originally referred to by otherFd is not accessible anymore from the current process. EXAMPLE
#include <iostream> #include <bobcat/redirector> using namespace std; using namespace FBB; int main() { Redirector redirector(Redirector::STDOUT); redirector.swallow(Redirector::STDERR); cerr << "This appears at the standard output stream " "use `a.out > /dev/null' to suppress this message" << endl; } FILES
bobcat/redirector - defines the class interface SEE ALSO
bobcat(7), errno(3bobcat), dup2(2), execl(3) BUGS
None Reported. DISTRIBUTION FILES
o bobcat_3.01.00-x.dsc: detached signature; o bobcat_3.01.00-x.tar.gz: source archive; o bobcat_3.01.00-x_i386.changes: change log; o libbobcat1_3.01.00-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries; o libbobcat1-dev_3.01.00-x_*.deb: debian package holding the libraries, headers and manual pages; o http://sourceforge.net/projects/bobcat: public archive location; BOBCAT
Bobcat is an acronym of `Brokken's Own Base Classes And Templates'. COPYRIGHT
This is free software, distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). AUTHOR
Frank B. Brokken (f.b.brokken@rug.nl). libbobcat1-dev_3.01.00-x.tar.gz 2005-2012 FBB::Redirector(3bobcat)
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