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I'm developing a program that needs to call an outside program, but needs to wait for it to execute. This is being done in C# (to which I am brand new, but have lots of experience in C++, Qt, and C) and CreateProcess does not seem to be what I'm looking for (starts the process, then forgets it, which I don't need).

This is one of my first Windows projects (or at least, only Windows and definitely only .NET) and I'm much more used to doing this sort of thing for *nix where I would use fork and then exec in the child, then wait for the child to terminate. But I have no idea where to even start looking to do something like this.

Oh, and I'm pretty sure I'm stuck in .NET because I need read access to the registry to complete this project and .NET's registry access is absolutely amazing (in my opinion, I don't have anything to compare it to).

Thanks.

3 Answers 3

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You can use the Process class. It lets you specify some options about how you want to execute it, and also provides a method which waits the process to exit before executing the next statement.

look at this link (the msdn reference): http://msdn.microsoft.com/fr-fr/library/system.diagnostics.process.aspx

basically what you can do is:

 Process p;
 // some code to initialize it, like p = startProcessWithoutOutput(path, args, true);

 p.WaitForExit();

an example of initializing the process (that's just some code I used once somewhere):

    private Process startProcessWithOutput(string command, string args, bool showWindow)
    {
        Process p = new Process();
        p.StartInfo = new ProcessStartInfo(command, args);
        p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = false;
        p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
        p.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
        p.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = !showWindow;
        p.ErrorDataReceived += (s, a) => addLogLine(a.Data);
        p.Start();
        p.BeginErrorReadLine();

        return p;
    }

as you can see in this code you can also do some output redirection, error redirection.... If you dig in the class I think you'll find quite quickly what you need.

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    IMAO this is fundamentally different from what fork actually does on for example Linux, and Windows does not have a comparable API, that said there are things you can do to better mimic fork functionality. fork is so much more than simply spawning another process, which in Linux parlance is more commonly known as spawn which this is. Commented Feb 27, 2018 at 8:12
  • 5
    I came here looking for fork too. This isn't it.
    – Void Star
    Commented Feb 28, 2019 at 18:04
  • 1
    @VoidStar This isn't a fork per say, but it answers the problematic raised in the question. For a closer version of fork take a look at this answer (not .Net oriented though): stackoverflow.com/a/985525/2008409
    – ppetrov
    Commented Mar 1, 2019 at 16:08
3
var p = System.Diagnostics.Process.Start("notepad");
p.WaitForExit();
0

You can use the Process class to start external processes. It will let you start arbitrary programs

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.diagnostics.process.aspx

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