Here's a bit of C boilerplate for spawning and communicating with terminal programs on linux(and possibly other unixes)
int master, slave;
struct winsize wsize = {24, 80, 0, 0}; // 24 rows and 80 columns
if (openpty(&master, &slave, NULL, NULL, &wsize) < 0)
die("Failed to open the pty master/slave");
if (!fork()) {
// child, set session id and copy the pty slave to std{in,out,err}
setsid();
dup2(slave, STDIN_FILENO);
dup2(slave, STDOUT_FILENO);
dup2(slave, STDERR_FILENO);
close(master);
close(slave);
// then use one of the exec* variants to start executing the terminal program
}
// parent, close the pty slave
close(slave);
// At this point, we can read/write data from/to the master fd, and to the child
// process it would be the same as a user was interacting with the program
I understand that windows doesn't have fork()
or openpty()
, so my question is: How to achieve something similar on windows?
If possible, I would like to see the minimum amount of working C/C++ code required to do the following:
- Spawn an interactive session of cmd.exe using
CreateProcess
- Obtain a set of handles/file descriptors that can be used to read/write data from/to the spawned process, in a way that would simulate a interactive console session.
fork
? Can you use threads instead of a process?