I have a form with 3 controls:

  1. A textbox for the user to enter commands to send to a console application,
  2. A button to confirm the commands to be sent and
  3. A read-only textbox to display the output from the application.

What I want is for the user to enter commands in the first textbox, press the button to enter and receive feedback via the second textbox.

I know how to use ProcessStartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput but, however, the app hangs when I use StandardOutput.ReadToEnd().

I had a look at the asynchronous Process.BeginOutputReadLine() but, even though my app does not hang, somehow I get no response in the textbox, it does absolutely nothing.

Here's my code:

public partial class MainForm : Form
{

    private void MainForm_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        InitializeInterpreter();
    }

    private void InitializeInterpreter()
    {
        InterProc.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
        InterProc.StartInfo.FileName = "app.exe";
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardInput = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
        InterProc.OutputDataReceived += new DataReceivedEventHandler(InterProcOutputHandler);

        InterProc.Start();
    }

    private static void InterProcOutputHandler(object sendingProcess, DataReceivedEventArgs outLine)
    {
        if (!String.IsNullOrEmpty(outLine.Data))
        {
           OutputTextBox.Append(Environment.NewLine + outLine.Data);
        }
    }

    private void Enterbutton_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        InterProc.StandardInput.Write(CommandtextBox.Text);
        InterProc.BeginOutputReadLine();
    }
}

Is there any way I can have this run smoothly? Thanks.

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<dumb comment>You know you can do this without redirecting standard in/out?</dumb comment> I assume you're testing how re-direction works, but you haven't stated that in your question at all. – Binary Worrier Nov 19 '09 at 18:32
Can you please elaborate on that? – Zach Nov 19 '09 at 18:55
By "What I want is for the user to enter commands in the first textbox, press the button to enter and receive feedback via the second textbox" do you actually mean "enter a command (which would normally run in a command prompt/"dos" window), run the command in the background, and show the commands output in the second text box"? If so ignore what I just said. – Binary Worrier Nov 19 '09 at 19:00
Yep, that's what I meant. – Zach Nov 19 '09 at 19:11
feedback

4 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

If you want something interactive, I got this code to work (yours modified, details on modifications below)

    private void InitializeInterpreter()
    {
        InterProc.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
        InterProc.StartInfo.FileName = "Echoer.exe";
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardInput = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
        InterProc.StartInfo.WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden;
        InterProc.OutputDataReceived += new DataReceivedEventHandler(InterProcOutputHandler);

        bool started = InterProc.Start();

        InterProc.BeginOutputReadLine();

    }

    private void AppendTextInBox(TextBox box, string text)
    {
        if (this.InvokeRequired)
        {
            this.Invoke((Action<TextBox, string>)AppendTextInBox, OutputTextBox, text);
        }
        else
        {
            box.Text += text;
        }
    }

    private void InterProcOutputHandler(object sendingProcess, DataReceivedEventArgs outLine)
    {
        AppendTextInBox(OutputTextBox, outLine.Data + Environment.NewLine);
    }

    private void Enterbutton_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        InterProc.StandardInput.WriteLine(CommandTextBox.Text);
    }

So, I moved the BeginOutputReadLine to just after the process is started. That ensures it's really only called once. I also did an invoke required to clean up thread calls. Hopefully this should work for you.

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1  
Thanks a lot, but I hooked it up properly, but I still get no output in the output text box when I enter a command and press enter. The executable I'm trying to call is "lua.exe" from luaforwindows.luaforge.net Entering something like print("Hello") should output: Hello > and the user should be able to use it like that. Anyway, I hooked up some Debug.WriteLine()'s which showed that the last statement executed may have been InterProc.StandardInput.WriteLine(CommandTextBox.Text); so that may be where something goes wrong. – Zach Nov 20 '09 at 20:53
So, I used this code, and it worked flawlessly for me. I did write a custom executable, that echoed everything back to me. The interactivity worked fine. – McKay Nov 20 '09 at 21:01
If the executable isn't ready to receive a message, it won't get received yet. So, maybe the problem is in the lua.exe? Try hooking it up to a different app? – McKay Nov 20 '09 at 21:02
It seems as though something's wrong with lua.exe, even with StdError. It works great with other exe's but not lua.exe. Oh well... – Zach Nov 21 '09 at 4:04
It doesn't work with octave.exe neither – Jader Dias Feb 15 '10 at 17:14
show 1 more comment
feedback

The best solution I have found is:

private void Redirect(StreamReader input, TextBox output)
{
    new Thread(a =>
    {
        var buffer = new char[1];
        while (input.Read(buffer, 0, 1) > 0)
        {
            output.Dispatcher.Invoke(new Action(delegate
            {
                output.Text += new string(buffer);
            }));
        };
    }).Start();
}

private void Window_Loaded(object sender, RoutedEventArgs e)
{
    process = new Process
    {
        StartInfo = new ProcessStartInfo
        {
            CreateNoWindow = true,
            FileName = "app.exe",
            RedirectStandardError = true,
            RedirectStandardOutput = true,
            UseShellExecute = false,
        }
    };
    if (process.Start())
    {
        Redirect(process.StandardError, textBox1);
        Redirect(process.StandardOutput, textBox1);
    }
}
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feedback

I've used code something like this:

    public static void Run(string fileName, string arguments, out string standardOutput, out string standardError, out int exitCode)
    {
        Process fileProcess = new Process();
        fileProcess.StartInfo = new ProcessStartInfo
        {
            FileName = fileName,
            Arguments = arguments,
            RedirectStandardError = true,
            RedirectStandardOutput = true,
            UseShellExecute = false,
            WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden,
            CreateNoWindow = true,
        };

        bool started = fileProcess.Start();

        if (started)
        {
            fileProcess.WaitForExit();
        }
        else
        {
            throw new Exception("Couldn't start");
        }

        standardOutput = fileProcess.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
        standardError = fileProcess.StandardError.ReadToEnd();
        exitCode = fileProcess.ExitCode;

    }

But it's not interactive. But if the app is interactive, it'll take a lot more code anyway.

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Yeah, I really need it to be interative... – Zach Nov 19 '09 at 22:47
By "Interactive" do you mean that you want to pass data to the standard in of the program? Or just that it will update as the app continues to output. The former is a bit harder than the latter. In any case, you complain that ReadToEnd is what hangs, when you're not using that in your sample code. What's actually the problem or can we see the new code? – McKay Nov 20 '09 at 19:13
feedback

Where are you calling StandardOutput.ReadToEnd()? I once had a similar problem because I was calling Process.WaitForExit() before StandardOutput.ReadToEnd(). I had a large amount of input, and the output buffer was full before completion and my process was blocked.

You must call StandardOutput.ReadToEnd()before Process.WaitForExit().

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