POPEN(3C) Standard C Library Functions POPEN(3C)

NAME


popen, pclose - initiate a pipe to or from a process

SYNOPSIS


#include <stdio.h>

FILE *popen(const char *command, const char *mode);


int pclose(FILE *stream);


DESCRIPTION


The popen() function creates a pipe between the calling program and
the command to be executed. The arguments to popen() are pointers to
null-terminated strings. The command argument consists of a shell
command line. The mode argument is an I/O mode, either r for reading
or w for writing. The value returned is a stream pointer such that
one can write to the standard input of the command, if the I/O mode
is w, by writing to the file stream (see Intro(3)); and one can read
from the standard output of the command, if the I/O mode is r, by
reading from the file stream. Because open files are shared, a type r
command may be used as an input filter and a type w as an output
filter. A trailing F character can also be included in the mode
argument as described in fopen(3C) to enable extended FILE facility.


The environment of the executed command will be as if a child process
were created within the popen() call using fork(2). The child is
created as if invoked with the call:


execl("/usr/bin/sh", "sh", "-c", command, (char *)0);


The pclose() function closes a stream opened by popen() by closing
the pipe. It waits for the associated process to terminate and
returns the termination status of the process running the command
language interpreter. This is the value returned by waitpid(3C). See
wait.h(3HEAD) for more information on termination status. If,
however, a call to waitpid() with a pid argument equal to the process
ID of the command line interpreter causes the termination status to
be unavailable to pclose(), then pclose() returns -1 with errno set
to ECHILD to report this condition.

RETURN VALUES


Upon successful completion, popen() returns a pointer to an open
stream that can be used to read or write to the pipe. Otherwise, it
returns a null pointer and may set errno to indicate the error.


Upon successful completion, pclose() returns the termination status
of the command language interpreter as returned by waitpid().
Otherwise, it returns -1 and sets errno to indicate the error.

ERRORS


The pclose() function will fail if:

ECHILD
The status of the child process could not be obtained, as
described in the DESCRIPTION.


The popen() function may fail if:

EMFILE
There are currently FOPEN_MAX or STREAM_MAX streams open in
the calling process.


EINVAL
The mode argument is invalid.


The popen() function may also set errno values as described by
fork(2) or pipe(2).

USAGE


If the original and popen() processes concurrently read or write a
common file, neither should use buffered I/O. Problems with an output
filter may be forestalled by careful buffer flushing, for example,
with fflush() (see fclose(3C)). A security hole exists through the
IFS and PATH environment variables. Full pathnames should be used
(or PATH reset) and IFS should be set to space and tab (" \t").


Even if the process has established a signal handler for SIGCHLD, it
will be called when the command terminates. Even if another thread
in the same process issues a wait(3C) call, it will interfere with
the return value of pclose(). Even if the process's signal handler
for SIGCHLD has been set to ignore the signal, there will be no
effect on pclose().

EXAMPLES


Example 1 popen() example


The following program will print on the standard output (see
stdio(3C)) the names of files in the current directory with a .c
suffix.


#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
main()
{
char *cmd = "/usr/bin/ls *.c";
char buf[BUFSIZ];
FILE *ptr;

if ((ptr = popen(cmd, "r")) != NULL) {
while (fgets(buf, BUFSIZ, ptr) != NULL)
(void) printf("%s", buf);
(void) pclose(ptr);
}
return 0;
}


Example 2 system() replacement


The following function can be used in a multithreaded process in
place of the most common usage of the Unsafe system(3C) function:


int my_system(const char *cmd)
{
FILE *p;

if ((p = popen(cmd, "w")) == NULL)
return (-1);
return (pclose(p));
}


ATTRIBUTES


See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


+--------------------+-----------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+--------------------+-----------------+
|Interface Stability | See below. |
+--------------------+-----------------+
|MT-Level | Safe |
+--------------------+-----------------+


The F character in the mode argument of popen() is Evolving. In all
other respects this function is Standard. The pclose() function is
Standard.

SEE ALSO


ksh(1), pipe(2), fclose(3C), fopen(3C), posix_spawn(3C), stdio(3C),
system(3C), wait(3C), waitpid(3C), wait.h(3HEAD), attributes(7),
standards(7)

December 14, 2006 POPEN(3C)

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