34

I want to write a console application that have a different behavior depending if the input is coming from keyboard or from, say, a file.

Is it possible? What's the most elegant way to do it in C#?

4 Answers 4

59

You can find out by p/invoking the Windows FileType() API function. Here's a helper class:

using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;

public static class ConsoleEx {
    public static bool IsOutputRedirected {
        get { return FileType.Char != GetFileType(GetStdHandle(StdHandle.Stdout)); }
    }
    public static bool IsInputRedirected {
        get { return FileType.Char != GetFileType(GetStdHandle(StdHandle.Stdin)); }
    }
    public static bool IsErrorRedirected {
        get { return FileType.Char != GetFileType(GetStdHandle(StdHandle.Stderr)); }
    }

    // P/Invoke:
    private enum FileType { Unknown, Disk, Char, Pipe };
    private enum StdHandle { Stdin = -10, Stdout = -11, Stderr = -12 };
    [DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
    private static extern FileType GetFileType(IntPtr hdl);
    [DllImport("kernel32.dll")]
    private static extern IntPtr GetStdHandle(StdHandle std);
}

Usage:

bool inputRedirected = ConsoleEx.IsInputRedirected;

UPDATE: these methods were added to the Console class in .NET 4.5. Without attribution I might add :( Simply use the corresponding method instead of this helper class.

https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.console.isoutputredirected.aspx https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.console.isinputredirected.aspx https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.console.iserrorredirected.aspx

3
  • 3
    The code above was put in place for .NET 4.5 which now include properties IsErrorRedirected, IsInputRedirected and IsOutputRedirected.
    – Ron Jacobs
    Jun 29, 2012 at 20:03
  • 1
    interesting implementation, unfortunately it is not applicable for cross-platform development. Sep 21, 2012 at 8:51
  • The isatty() function tends to be available on other platforms for a similar test. Feb 17, 2017 at 14:35
8

Interestingly, when a pipe is open, the System.Console.WindowHeight and System.Console.WindowWidth Parameters are zero, which I found out due to several ArgumentOutOfRangeException's in code paths that did not care for the console size being zero.

Crossplatform: The behavior is the same under MS dotNET and Mono on Linux and Windows (I haven't tried it on a Mac).

When either STDIN or STDOUT are piped, the console size is set to 0. Thus building on Hans's implementation, my code is as follows:

using System;


 public static class ConsoleEx {
        public static bool IsConsoleSizeZero {
            get {
                try {
                    return (0 == (Console.WindowHeight + Console.WindowWidth));
                }
                catch (Exception exc){
                    return true;
                }
            }
        }
        public static bool IsOutputRedirected {
            get { return IsConsoleSizeZero && !Console.KeyAvailable; }
        }
        public static bool IsInputRedirected {
            get { return IsConsoleSizeZero && Console.KeyAvailable; }
        }
}

Update 2016: Added exception handling to the IsConsoleSizeZero Code to improve the usability of the code in a wider context.

The code still seems to work well, at least speaking from experience whilst using MonoDevelop / Xamarin Studio.

Related:

4
  • Nice catch on the Console.WindowHeight! I'm not so sure about the use of Console.KeyAvailable though. For one, it's perfectly possible to redirect both input and output, and your code would not be able to detect that.
    – jpbochi
    Sep 24, 2012 at 23:15
  • 1
    I'm running on Debian Wheezy. The 0 == (Console.WindowHeight + Console.WindowWidth) trick works for me. For instance, when my app is launched via monit the sum is 0. When manually from the command prompt it is a positive number. When running consoleless, KeyAvailable returns false but if I actually call ReadKey it yields zero. Jan 28, 2014 at 20:01
  • I can confirm this seems to work on Mac. Although Mono reports "Warning: Mono LIMITATION: Only works on windows" in Xamarin Studio. I can't figure out if "Windows" is misspelled (capital W), or the error is saying it doesn't work in the debugger.
    – Mads Y
    Oct 12, 2015 at 9:21
  • this code isn't safe, Console.KeyAvailable can throw an InvalidOperationException in some cases when the input has been redirected -- so merely checking that property can crash the application Nov 23, 2018 at 3:55
4

Lorenz answer is a good beginning, but unfortunately can be used only a inspiration. There are more modes for running a console application.

  1. Standard run (in console, without any redirection)

    Everything work as expected in console.

  2. Executing with redirection from console with standard input and/or standard output redirection

    e.g.

    type input_file.txt | application.exe (in Windows), or application.exe <input_file.txt for input redirection

    (replace type with cat in Linux)

    or

    application.exe | grep pattern or application.exe >output_file.txt for output redirection

    or

    type input_file.txt | application.exe | grep pattern or application.exe <input_file.txt >output_file.txt for input and output redirection

  3. Executing with redirection from console with standard output and error output redirection

    e.g. application.exe >output_file.txt 2>error_file.txt

  4. Executing with hidden console and redirected input/output/error

    e.g. from a GUI application (console is not Visible at all)

  5. Executing with hidden console without redirection of input/output/error

Each of these mode has it's own 'features'. The Console.WindowHeight and Console.WindowWidth work in Windows for the 1st and 2nd mode in the standard way. In Linux the return value in 2nd and 3rd mode is zero. Therefore in Linux you can not detect input only redirecting.

Therefore the code from Lorenz answer can not be used for detection of redirection in all cases. The IOException when reading Console.WindowHeight or Console.WindowWidth is thrown only when there is no output to console (e.g. 3rd mode) and only for Windows.

To detect input redirection (in Windows only) use this function:

private static bool IsInputRedirected()
{
  try
  {
    if (Console.KeyAvailable)
    {
      return (false);
    }
  }
  catch (InvalidOperationException)
  {
    return (true);
  }
  return (false);
}

For all other redirection and operating systems... try to experiment how to detect them. Different console properties and functions 'work' (throw exception, or zero return values) for different modes.

Tested on Windows 7 .NET Framework 4 Client Profile and Mono JIT compiler version 4.2.1 (Debian 4.2.1.102+dfsg2-7ubuntu4).

IMPORTANT:

Do not use this function for input redirecting in Linux (detect running OS/platform, e.g. Mono for Windows), because it can cause more trouble when you falsely expect redirection and the redirection is not active.

1
  • 1
    This is the only solution that's worked for me so far. .NET Core 3.1 using C#. Thanks! Nov 12, 2020 at 7:31
4

Since framework 4.5 exists the property Console.IsInputRedirected. 8-)

See Microsoft Docs:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.console.isinputredirected

1
  • Also works on .NET 5 and 6, which is really nice. Thanks! Feb 15, 2022 at 20:24

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