I have a c++ application in which I am starting another process(wireshark) something like following.
if (fp == NULL){
fp = popen(processpath, "r"); //processpath is the process I want to start
if (!fp){
throw std::invalid_argument("Cannot start process");
}
fprintf(fp, d_msg);//d_msg is the input I want to provide to process
} else if(fp != NULL){
fprintf(fp, d_msg);
}
The problem is when I execute my c++ application, it does start the wireshark but with error End of File on pipe magic during open
what should I do to avoid that?
Also I tried using mkfifo to create a named pipe and execute it. I used something like this:
if (fp == NULL){
system("mkfifo /tmp/mine.pcap");
fp = popen("wireshark -k -i /tmp/mine.pcap", "r");
if (!fp){
dout << "Cannot start wireshark"<<std::endl;
throw std::invalid_argument("Cannot start wireshark");
}
input = fopen("/tmp/mine.pcap", "wb");
fprintf(input , d_msg);
fclose(input);
} else if(fp != NULL){
input = fopen("/tmp/mine.pcap", "wb");
fprintf(input , d_msg);
fclose(input);
}
But that too didn't work. With this I get following error:
The file "/tmp/wireshark_mine.pcap_20130730012654_ndbFzk" is a capture for a network type that Wireshark doesn't support
Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you very much.
"r"
, i.e. for reading instead of writing?"r"
makes one end of pipe readable and another end writable? May be I understood it wrong. @GuyHarris: Actually I have pcap headers in my c++ application which I wish to pass to wireshark directly. So should I create a pcap file(with the header etc) and then do the mkfifp and use it to write the packets?popen()
will only be readable, not writable. If you open with "w", you get the writable end.