Let me start out by saying that this is a homework assignment for an operating systems class and I am not a programmer, especially not in C. I've been at this for a week now and I am simply stuck and I need help. I have to create TCP client and server applications where linux commands are typed into the client, executed on the server and the output is redirected back to the client. I understand the concept and I have it 90+% working. Commands like "ls", "ls -lpq", "cat somefile", "man somecommand" all work fine. Where I run into trouble is with commands that do not return any information like "mkdir newdir" (if the directory already exists it works fine because I get a response). This is all new to me but it seems to me that my problem is with the servers recv command blocking because there is no information to receive. I don't know how to get past this, I have been working this one issue for a week. I'm running out of time and I also have to implement file upload and download and I don't know where to begin there but I can't even start to work on that until I get past this issue.
Thanks
// this is where I think the problem is
while ((rcvd_bytes = recv(sock_fd, recv_str, sizeof(recv_str), 0)) > 0 ) {
// Zero out the inputCopy buffer
memset(&inputCopy, 0, sizeof(inputCopy)+1);
// Copy the recv_str into a new string so that
// we can work with it.
strcpy(inputCopy, recv_str);
argcount = parsecommand(inputCopy, args);
//Send the message back to client
dup2(sock_fd, 1);
if((status = forkAndExecute(args)) != 0) {
//printf("Command %s returned %d.\n", args[0], status);
}
// as a test is I uncomment the following line mkdir newdir
// returns but the following commands are messed up - as I expect.
//printf("\n");
memset(&recv_str, 0, sizeof(recv_str)+1);
fflush(stdout);
}
if(rcvd_bytes == 0) {
puts("Client disconnected");
fflush(stdout);
}
else if(rcvd_bytes == -1) {
perror("recv failed");
exit(0);
}