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_pipe

Creates a pipe for reading and writing.

int _pipe(
   int *pfds,
   unsigned int psize,
   int textmode 
);

Parameters

  • pfds[2]
    Array to hold read and write file descriptors.

  • psize
    Amount of memory to reserve.

  • textmode
    File mode.

Return Value

Returns 0 if successful. Returns –1 to indicate an error, in which case errno is set to one of three values: EMFILE, which indicates no more file descriptors available; ENFILE, which indicates a system file table overflow; or EINVAL, which indicates that either the array pfds was a null pointer or an invalid value for textmode was passed in.

For more information about these and other return codes, see _doserrno, errno, _sys_errlist, and _sys_nerr.

Remarks

The _pipe function creates a pipe. A pipe is an artificial I/O channel that a program uses to pass information to other programs. A pipe is similar to a file in that it has a file pointer, a file descriptor, or both and can be read from or written to using the standard library's input and output functions. However, a pipe does not represent a specific file or device. Instead, it represents temporary storage in memory that is independent of the program's own memory and is controlled entirely by the operating system.

_pipe is similar to _open but opens the pipe for reading and writing, returning two file descriptors instead of one. The program can use both sides of the pipe or close the one it does not need. For example, the command processor in Windows NT creates a pipe when executing a command such as:

PROGRAM1 | PROGRAM2

The standard output descriptor of PROGRAM1 is attached to the pipe's write descriptor. The standard input descriptor of PROGRAM2 is attached to the pipe's read descriptor. This eliminates the need for creating temporary files to pass information to other programs.

The _pipe function returns two file descriptors to the pipe in the pfds argument. The element pfds[0] contains the read descriptor and the element pfds[1] contains the write descriptor. Pipe file descriptors are used in the same way as other file descriptors. (The low-level input and output functions _read and _write can read from and write to a pipe.) To detect the end-of-pipe condition, check for a _read request that returns 0 as the number of bytes read.

The psize argument specifies the amount of memory, in bytes, to reserve for the pipe. The textmode argument specifies the translation mode for the pipe. The manifest constant _O_TEXT specifies a text translation, and the constant _O_BINARY specifies binary translation. (See fopen for a description of text and binary modes.) If the textmode argument is 0, _pipe uses the default translation mode specified by the default-mode variable _fmode.

In multithreaded programs, no locking is performed. The file descriptors returned are newly opened and should not be referenced by any thread until after the _pipe call is complete.

To use the _pipe function to communicate between a parent and a child process, each process must have only one descriptor open on the pipe. The descriptors must be opposites: if the parent has a read descriptor open, then the child must have a write descriptor open. The easiest way to do this is to OR (|) the _O_NOINHERIT flag with textmode. Then, use _dup or _dup2 to create an inheritable copy of the pipe descriptor you want to pass to the child. Close the original descriptor, and spawn the child process. On returning from the spawn call, close the duplicate descriptor in the parent process. For more information, see example 2 below.

In the Windows operating system, a pipe is destroyed when all its descriptors have been closed. (If all read descriptors on the pipe have been closed, writing to the pipe causes an error.) All read and write operations on the pipe wait until there is enough data or enough buffer space to complete the I/O request.

Requirements

Routine

Required header

Optional header

_pipe

<io.h>

<fcntl.h>,1 <errno.h>2

1 For _O_BINARY and _O_TEXT definitions.

2 errno definitions.

For more compatibility information, see Compatibility in the Introduction.

Libraries

All versions of the C run-time libraries.

Example 1

// crt_pipe.c
/* This program uses the _pipe function to pass streams of
 * text to spawned processes.
 */

#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <io.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <process.h>
#include <math.h>

enum PIPES { READ, WRITE }; /* Constants 0 and 1 for READ and WRITE */
#define NUMPROBLEM 8

int main( int argc, char *argv[] )
{

   int fdpipe[2];
   char hstr[20];
   int pid, problem, c;
   int termstat;

   /* If no arguments, this is the spawning process */
   if( argc == 1 )
   {

      setvbuf( stdout, NULL, _IONBF, 0 );

      /* Open a set of pipes */
      if( _pipe( fdpipe, 256, O_BINARY ) == -1 )
          exit( 1 );


      /* Convert pipe read descriptor to string and pass as argument 
       * to spawned program. Program spawns itself (argv[0]).
       */
      _itoa_s( fdpipe[READ], hstr, sizeof(hstr), 10 );
      if( ( pid = _spawnl( P_NOWAIT, argv[0], argv[0], 
            hstr, NULL ) ) == -1 )
          printf( "Spawn failed" );

      /* Put problem in write pipe. Since spawned program is 
       * running simultaneously, first solutions may be done 
       * before last problem is given.
       */
      for( problem = 1000; problem <= NUMPROBLEM * 1000; problem += 1000)
      {

         printf( "Son, what is the square root of %d?\n", problem );
         _write( fdpipe[WRITE], (char *)&problem, sizeof( int ) );

      }

      /* Wait until spawned program is done processing. */
      _cwait( &termstat, pid, WAIT_CHILD );
      if( termstat & 0x0 )
         printf( "Child failed\n" );


      _close( fdpipe[READ] );
      _close( fdpipe[WRITE] );

   }

   /* If there is an argument, this must be the spawned process. */
   else
   {

      /* Convert passed string descriptor to integer descriptor. */
      fdpipe[READ] = atoi( argv[1] );

      /* Read problem from pipe and calculate solution. */
      for( c = 0; c < NUMPROBLEM; c++ )
      {

        _read( fdpipe[READ], (char *)&problem, sizeof( int ) );
        printf( "Dad, the square root of %d is %3.2f.\n",
                 problem, sqrt( ( double )problem ) );

      }
   }
}

Sample Output

Son, what is the square root of 1000?
Son, what is the square root of 2000?
Son, what iDad, the square root of 1000 is 31.62.
Dad, the square root of 2000 is 44.72.
s the square root of 3000?
Dad, the square root of 3000 is 54.77.
Son, what is the square root of 4000?
Dad, the square root of 4000 is 63.25.
Son, what is the square root of 5000?
Dad, the square root of 5000 is 70.71.
Son, what is the square root of 6000?
SonDad, the square root of 6000 is 77.46.
, what is the square root of 7000?
Dad, the square root of 7000 is 83.67.
Son, what is the square root of 8000?
Dad, the square root of 8000 is 89.44.

Example 2

This is a simple filter application. It spawns the application crt_pipe_beeper after creating a pipe that directs the spawned application's stdout to the filter. The filter removes ASCII 7 (beep) characters.

// crt_pipe_beeper.c

#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>

int main()
{
   int   i;
   for(i=0;i<10;++i)
      {
         printf("This is speaker beep number %d...\n\7", i+1);
      }
   return 0;
}

The actual filter application:

// crt_pipe_BeepFilter.C
// arguments: crt_pipe_beeper.exe

#include <windows.h>
#include <process.h>
#include <memory.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <io.h>

#define   OUT_BUFF_SIZE 512
#define   READ_FD 0
#define   WRITE_FD 1
#define   BEEP_CHAR 7

char szBuffer[OUT_BUFF_SIZE];

int Filter(char* szBuff, ULONG nSize, int nChar)
{
   char* szPos = szBuff + nSize -1;
   char* szEnd = szPos;
   int nRet = nSize;

   while (szPos > szBuff)
   {
      if (*szPos == nChar)
         {
            memmove(szPos, szPos+1, szEnd - szPos);
            --nRet;
         }
      --szPos;
   }
   return nRet;
}

int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
   int nExitCode = STILL_ACTIVE;
   if (argc >= 2)
   {
      HANDLE hProcess;
      int fdStdOut;
      int fdStdOutPipe[2];

      // Create the pipe
      if(_pipe(fdStdOutPipe, 512, O_NOINHERIT) == -1)
         return   1;

      // Duplicate stdout file descriptor (next line will close original)
      fdStdOut = _dup(_fileno(stdout));

      // Duplicate write end of pipe to stdout file descriptor
      if(_dup2(fdStdOutPipe[WRITE_FD], _fileno(stdout)) != 0)
         return   2;

      // Close original write end of pipe
      _close(fdStdOutPipe[WRITE_FD]);

      // Spawn process
      hProcess = (HANDLE)_spawnvp(P_NOWAIT, argv[1], 
       (const char* const*)&argv[1]);

      // Duplicate copy of original stdout back into stdout
      if(_dup2(fdStdOut, _fileno(stdout)) != 0)
         return   3;

      // Close duplicate copy of original stdout
      _close(fdStdOut);

      if(hProcess)
      {
         int nOutRead;
         while   (nExitCode == STILL_ACTIVE)
         {
            nOutRead = _read(fdStdOutPipe[READ_FD], 
             szBuffer, OUT_BUFF_SIZE);
            if(nOutRead)
            {
               nOutRead = Filter(szBuffer, nOutRead, BEEP_CHAR);
               fwrite(szBuffer, 1, nOutRead, stdout);
            }

            if(!GetExitCodeProcess(hProcess,(unsigned long*)&nExitCode))
               return 4;
         }
      }
   }
   return nExitCode;
}

Output

This is speaker beep number 1...
This is speaker beep number 2...
This is speaker beep number 3...
This is speaker beep number 4...
This is speaker beep number 5...
This is speaker beep number 6...
This is speaker beep number 7...
This is speaker beep number 8...
This is speaker beep number 9...
This is speaker beep number 10...

.NET Framework Equivalent

Not applicable. To call the standard C function, use PInvoke. For more information, see Platform Invoke Examples.

See Also

Reference

Process and Environment Control

_open, _wopen