Possible Duplicate:
bash: force exec’d process to have unbuffered stdout
I need to read a binary's (fceux, nes emulator) stdout to get some info, and kill it when I receive special input for a genetic algorithm that I'm trying. So basically, the problem is that the program doesn't flush his output so I receive the output only when the process ends, but it never ends because I'm suppose to kill it.
So is there a way to read from unflushed buffer child ? Even if it is not in C++, so I can add some flush and then read it finally in C++ (but that's becoming a little dirty). I've tried too using python, but didn't find a way to do it either.
Here is a chunk of my code :
int fd[2];
pid_t pid;
pipe (fd);
if ((pid = fork ()) == 0)
{
close (fd[0]);
dup2 (fd[1], STDOUT_FILENO);
execl ("/usr/bin/fceux", "fceux", "Super Mario Bros.zip", NULL)
perror ("fork");
}
else
{
close (fd[1]);
char buf[1];
std::string res;
while (read (fd[0], buf, 1) > 0)
{
std::cout << "Read" << std::endl;
res += buf;
if (res.find ("score") != std::string::npos)
{
std::cout << "KILL" << std::endl;
kill (pid, SIGKILL);
}
}
close (fd[0]);
}
return 0;