I am trying to create a chain of pipes for 3 processes plus the current program such that:
1 - Exec P1 and send output of P1 to input of P2
3 - Send output of P2 to input of P3
4 - Display output of P3 in stdout
5 - Pass stdin of current/main/driver program to input of P3
I am using 2 pipes. For task #5, the main program reads from stdin and writes to a pipe that P3 reads.
I have managed to get the processes communicating with each other. However, what I noticed is there is a large delay between when P1 writes and when P2 detects this write on its STDIN, i.e. P1 may have written hundreds of times before P2 detects the write and misses many of the P1 writes at the beginning. I have confirmed via print messages that P2 is in fact launched on time, however, it does not detect/read the input in time (it is a Python script looping: "for line in sys.stdin:" )
Here is my code:
int pipe1[2];
int pipe2[2];
if (pipe(pipe1) < 0 || pipe(pipe2) < 0 )
{
perror("Error: pipe");
}
pid_t procIDC = fork();
if (procIDC == 0)
{
dup2(pipe2[0], 0);
execv("procC", argv);
}
else
{
pid_t procIDB ;
procIDB = fork();
if (procIDB == 0)
{
dup2( pipe1[0], 0);
dup2( pipe2[1], 1);
if (execl("/usr/bin/python", "/usr/bin/python", "./test.py", (char *)NULL) < 0)
{
perror("execl"); return 0;
}
}
else
{
pid_t procIDA = fork();
if (procIDA ==0)
{
dup2( pipe1[1], 1);
execv("proc1", argv);
}
else
{
dup2( pipe2[1], 1);
//print any input so it sends to p3
ssize_t read;
char *inputLine = NULL;
size_t len = 0;
while ((read = getline(&inputLine, &len, stdin)) != -1)
{
printf(inputLine);
}
}
}