I'm trying to write a program that will spawn an arbitrary number of child processes and pipe between them, similar to a command line pipeline. In my case I'm trying to do "ls -l | more" and output that to stdout, then have the parent continue executing more commands.
I have the following code as a minimal example:
int main (int argc, const char * argv[]) {
int fd[2];
pipe(fd);
chdir("/directory/with/lots/of/files");
// Create one child process for more
int pid = fork();
if (pid == 0) {
close(fd[1]);
int ret = dup2(fd[0],0);
if (ret < 0) perror("dup2");
char *argv[10];
argv[0] = "more"; argv[1] = NULL;
execvp("more", argv);
}
// Create another child process for ls
int pid2 = fork();
if (pid2 == 0) {
int ret = dup2(fd[1],1);
if (ret < 0) perror("dup2");
char *argv[10];
argv[0] = "ls"; argv[1] = "-l";
argv[2] = NULL;
execvp("ls", argv);
}
// wait for the more process to finish
int status;
waitpid(pid, &status, 0);
printf("Done!
");
return 0;
}
Now, when I execute the program (enclosed in a main() function of course) what I end up with is more, which is expected. I'll hit "d" to page down more's output and "u" to go up, and it seems to work fine. But when I reach the bottom, instead of exiting like more does, it just leaves a blank line. Ctrl-C works to exit it but it exits the entire program, meaning the "Done!" line never gets printed. A movie is available here that illustrates what happens (note that at the very end I press Ctrl-C to get back to bash).
Any thoughts on this? I'm just trying to figure out how to change it to where instead of going to a blank line after more reaches the bottom, more quits and returns to the parent process so it can continue executing.
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