You want to run another program and either read its output or supply the program with input.
Use
open
with a pipe symbol at the beginning or end. To read from a program, put the pipe symbol at the end:
$pid = open(README, "program arguments |") or die "Couldn't fork: $!\n"; while (<README>) { # ... } close(README) or die "Couldn't close: $!\n";
To write to the program, put the pipe at the beginning:
$pid = open(WRITEME, "| program arguments") or die "Couldn't fork: $!\n"; print WRITEME "data\n"; close(WRITEME) or die "Couldn't close: $!\n";
In the case of reading, this is similar to using backticks, except you have a process ID and a filehandle. As with the backticks,
open
uses the shell if it sees shell-special characters in its argument, but it doesn't if there aren't any. This is usually a welcome convenience, because it lets the shell do filename wildcard expansion and I/O redirection, saving you the trouble.
However, sometimes this isn't desirable. Piped
open
s that include unchecked user data would be unsafe while running in taint mode or in untrustworthy situations.
Recipe 19.6
shows how to get the effect of a piped
open
without risking using the shell.
Notice how we specifically call
close
on the filehandle. When you use
open
to connect a filehandle to a child process, Perl remembers this and automatically waits for the child when you close the filehandle. If the child hasn't exited by then, Perl waits until it does. This can be a very, very long wait if your child doesn't exit:
$pid = open(F, "sleep 100000|"); # child goes to sleep close(F); # and the parent goes to lala land
To avoid this, you can save the PID returned by
open
to kill your child, or use a manual
pipe
-
fork
-
exec
sequence as described in
Recipe 16.10
.
If you attempt to write to a process that has gone away, your process will receive a SIGPIPE. The default disposition for this signal is to kill your process, so the truly paranoid install a SIGPIPE handler just in case.
If you want to run another program and be able to supply its STDIN yourself, a similar construct is used:
$pid = open(WRITEME, "| program args"); print WRITEME "hello\n"; # program will get hello\n on STDIN close(WRITEME); # program will get EOF on STDIN
The leading pipe symbol in the filename argument to
open
tells Perl to start another process instead. It connects the
open
ed filehandle to the process's STDIN. Anything you write to the filehandle can be read by the program through its STDIN. When you
close
the filehandle, the
open
ed process will get an
eof
when it next tries to read from STDIN.
You can also use this technique to change your program's normal output path. For example, to automatically run everything through a pager, use something like:
$pager = $ENV{PAGER} || '/usr/bin/less'; # XXX: might not exist open(STDOUT, "| $pager");
Now, without changing the rest of your program, anything you print to standard output will go through the pager automatically.
As with
open
ing a process for reading, text passed to the shell here is subject to shell metacharacter interpretation. To avoid the shell, a similar solution is called for. As before, the parent should also be wary of
close
. If the parent closes the filehandle connecting it to the child, the parent will block while waiting for the child to finish. If the child doesn't finish, neither will the close. The workaround as before is either to kill your child process prematurely, or else use the low-level
pipe
-
fork
-
exec
scenario.
When using piped opens, always check return values of both
open
and
close
, not just of
open
. That's because the return value from
open
does not indicate whether the command was succesfully launched. With a piped open, you fork a child to execute the command. Assuming the system hadn't run out of processes, the
fork
immediately returns the PID of the child it just created.
By the time the child process tries to
exec
the command, it's a separately scheduled process. So if the command can't be found, there's effectively no way to communicate this back to the
open
function, because that function is in a different process!
Check the return value from
close
to see whether the command was successful. If the child process exits with non-zero status - which it will do if the command isn't found - the
close
returns false and
$?
is set to the wait status of that process. You can interpret its contents as described in
Recipe 16.19
.
In the case of a pipe opened for writing, you should also install a SIGPIPE handler, since writing to a child that isn't there will trigger a SIGPIPE.
The
open
function in
Chapter 3
of
Programming Perl
and in
perlfunc
(1);
Recipe 16.10
;
Recipe 16.15
;
Recipe 16.19
;
Recipe 19.6
Copyright © 2001 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.