xref: /titanic_44/usr/src/man/man3gen/p2open.3gen (revision f05d7fc81533be643136e12ce92516d1d4292921)
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Copyright (c) 1996, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright 1989 AT&T
The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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P2OPEN 3GEN "Dec 29, 1996"
NAME
p2open, p2close - open, close pipes to and from a command
SYNOPSIS

cc [ flag ... ] file ... -lgen [ library ... ]
#include <libgen.h>

int p2open(const char *cmd, FILE *fp[2]);

int p2close(FILE *fp[2]);
DESCRIPTION

The p2open()gfunction forks and execs a shell running the command line pointed to by cmd. On return, fp[0] points to a FILE pointer to write the command's standard input and fp[1] points to a FILE pointer to read from the command's standard output. In this way the program has control over the input and output of the command.

The function returns 0 if successful; otherwise, it returns -1.

The p2close() function is used to close the file pointers that p2open() opened. It waits for the process to terminate and returns the process status. It returns 0 if successful; otherwise, it returns -1.

RETURN VALUES

A common problem is having too few file descriptors. The p2close() function returns -1 if the two file pointers are not from the same p2open().

EXAMPLES

Example 1 Example of file descriptors.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <libgen.h>

main(argc,argv)
int argc;
char **argv;
{
 FILE *fp[2];
 pid_t pid;
 char buf[16];

 pid=p2open("/usr/bin/cat", fp);
 if ( pid == -1 ) {
 fprintf(stderr, "p2open failed\en");
 exit(1);
 }
 write(fileno(fp[0]),"This is a test\en", 16);
 if(read(fileno(fp[1]), buf, 16) <=0)
 fprintf(stderr, "p2open failed\en");
 else
 write(1, buf, 16);
 (void)p2close(fp);
}
ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
MT-Level Unsafe
SEE ALSO

fclose(3C), popen(3C), setbuf(3C), attributes(5)

NOTES

Buffered writes on fp[0] can make it appear that the command is not listening. Judiciously placed fflush() calls or unbuffering fp[0] can be a big help; see fclose(3C).

Many commands use buffered output when connected to a pipe. That, too, can make it appear as if things are not working.

Usage is not the same as for popen(), although it is closely related.