596

I am looking for a way to get the output of a command when it is run from within a C++ program. I have looked at using the system() function, but that will just execute a command. Here's an example of what I'm looking for:

std::string result = system("./some_command");

I need to run an arbitrary command and get its output. I've looked at boost.org, but I have not found anything that will give me what I need.

3

13 Answers 13

787
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
#include <memory>
#include <stdexcept>
#include <string>
#include <array>

std::string exec(const char* cmd) {
    std::array<char, 128> buffer;
    std::string result;
    std::unique_ptr<FILE, decltype(&pclose)> pipe(popen(cmd, "r"), pclose);
    if (!pipe) {
        throw std::runtime_error("popen() failed!");
    }
    while (fgets(buffer.data(), static_cast<int>(buffer.size()), pipe.get()) != nullptr) {
        result += buffer.data();
    }
    return result;
}

Pre-C++11 version:

#include <iostream>
#include <stdexcept>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string>

std::string exec(const char* cmd) {
    char buffer[128];
    std::string result = "";
    FILE* pipe = popen(cmd, "r");
    if (!pipe) throw std::runtime_error("popen() failed!");
    try {
        while (fgets(buffer, sizeof buffer, pipe) != NULL) {
            result += buffer;
        }
    } catch (...) {
        pclose(pipe);
        throw;
    }
    pclose(pipe);
    return result;
}

Replace popen and pclose with _popen and _pclose for Windows.

39
  • 98
    Be aware that this will only grab stdout and not stderr.
    – kalaxy
    Oct 31, 2011 at 23:53
  • 16
    Also be aware that an exception can occur in result += buffer, so the pipe might not be properly closed.
    – Fred Foo
    May 19, 2012 at 20:27
  • 11
    The answer is good but it would be better if you replace 'char* cmd' with 'const char* cmd'
    – fnc12
    Dec 27, 2014 at 14:20
  • 33
    unique_ptr is a better fit here, where the actual reference count is never used.
    – Czipperz
    May 29, 2016 at 8:42
  • 15
    Is this still the best practice with C++17? Feb 27, 2019 at 9:52
104

Getting both stdout and stderr (and also writing to stdin, not shown here) is easy peasy with my pstreams header, which defines iostream classes that work like popen:

#include <pstream.h>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
  // run a process and create a streambuf that reads its stdout and stderr
  redi::ipstream proc("./some_command", redi::pstreams::pstdout | redi::pstreams::pstderr);
  std::string line;
  // read child's stdout
  while (std::getline(proc.out(), line))
    std::cout << "stdout: " << line << '\n';
  // if reading stdout stopped at EOF then reset the state:
  if (proc.eof() && proc.fail())
    proc.clear();
  // read child's stderr
  while (std::getline(proc.err(), line))
    std::cout << "stderr: " << line << '\n';
} 
18
  • 32
    I disagree. popen requires you to use the C stdio API, I prefer the iostreams API. popen requires you to manually clean up the FILE handle, pstreams do that automatically. popen only accepts a const char* for the argument, which requires care to avoid shell injection attacks, pstreams allows you to pass a vector of strings similar to execv, which is safer. popen gives you nothing but a pipe, pstreams tells you the child's PID allowing you to send signals e.g. to kill it if it's blocked or not exiting. All of those are advantages even if you only want unidirectional IO. Oct 10, 2012 at 17:08
  • 1
    Another issue with this solution is if the child writes to stderr enough to fill the buffers and block before it starts writing to stdout. The parent will block reading stdout, while the child is blocked waiting for stderr to be read. resource deadlock! At least one of those loops would be better as asynchronous (i.e., threaded). Dec 17, 2015 at 16:54
  • 1
    @JesseChisholm, yes, that could be a problem. But you don't need to use threads because pstreams allows an approximation of non-blocking I/O using the iostream interface, specifically using the readsome function, which checks for readiness using pstreambuf::in_avail(), so won't block. That allows demultiplexing on the process' stdout and stderr as each has data available. pstreambuf::in_avail() only works 100% reliably if the OS supports the non-standard FIONREAD ioctl, but that is supported on (at least) GNU/Linux and Solaris. Dec 17, 2015 at 17:23
  • 13
    @chiliNUT the new 1.0.1 release uses the Boost licence. Feb 3, 2017 at 13:50
  • 1
    @JonathanWakely how can i kill the ipstream after say a 5 second timeout?
    – A. K.
    Jan 9, 2020 at 13:04
47

For Windows, popen also works, but it opens up a console window - which quickly flashes over your UI application. If you want to be a professional, it's better to disable this "flashing" (especially if the end-user can cancel it).

So here is my own version for Windows:

(This code is partially recombined from ideas written in The Code Project and MSDN samples.)

#include <windows.h>
#include <atlstr.h>
//
// Execute a command and get the results. (Only standard output)
//
CStringA ExecCmd(
    const wchar_t* cmd              // [in] command to execute
)
{
    CStringA strResult;
    HANDLE hPipeRead, hPipeWrite;

    SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES saAttr = {sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES)};
    saAttr.bInheritHandle = TRUE; // Pipe handles are inherited by child process.
    saAttr.lpSecurityDescriptor = NULL;

    // Create a pipe to get results from child's stdout.
    if (!CreatePipe(&hPipeRead, &hPipeWrite, &saAttr, 0))
        return strResult;

    STARTUPINFOW si = {sizeof(STARTUPINFOW)};
    si.dwFlags     = STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW | STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;
    si.hStdOutput  = hPipeWrite;
    si.hStdError   = hPipeWrite;
    si.wShowWindow = SW_HIDE; // Prevents cmd window from flashing.
                              // Requires STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW in dwFlags.

    PROCESS_INFORMATION pi = { 0 };

    BOOL fSuccess = CreateProcessW(NULL, (LPWSTR)cmd, NULL, NULL, TRUE, CREATE_NEW_CONSOLE, NULL, NULL, &si, &pi);
    if (! fSuccess)
    {
        CloseHandle(hPipeWrite);
        CloseHandle(hPipeRead);
        return strResult;
    }

    bool bProcessEnded = false;
    for (; !bProcessEnded ;)
    {
        // Give some timeslice (50 ms), so we won't waste 100% CPU.
        bProcessEnded = WaitForSingleObject( pi.hProcess, 50) == WAIT_OBJECT_0;

        // Even if process exited - we continue reading, if
        // there is some data available over pipe.
        for (;;)
        {
            char buf[1024];
            DWORD dwRead = 0;
            DWORD dwAvail = 0;

            if (!::PeekNamedPipe(hPipeRead, NULL, 0, NULL, &dwAvail, NULL))
                break;

            if (!dwAvail) // No data available, return
                break;

            if (!::ReadFile(hPipeRead, buf, min(sizeof(buf) - 1, dwAvail), &dwRead, NULL) || !dwRead)
                // Error, the child process might ended
                break;

            buf[dwRead] = 0;
            strResult += buf;
        }
    } //for

    CloseHandle(hPipeWrite);
    CloseHandle(hPipeRead);
    CloseHandle(pi.hProcess);
    CloseHandle(pi.hThread);
    return strResult;
} //ExecCmd
5
  • 1
    This is my favourite solution for Windows, I hope you forgive my changes. I'd suggest to make the const-cast more explicit, whereas I consider the explicit usage of wchar_t and CreateProcessW as an unnecessary restriction.
    – Wolf
    May 16, 2017 at 10:13
  • Do you see any problem or potential problem with this cast ? I prefer to keep code at minimum and don't write it without need. May 17, 2017 at 16:27
  • 6
    After reading CreateProcess function (Windows), I see a real danger in doing this: The Unicode version of this function, CreateProcessW, can modify the contents of this string. Therefore, this parameter cannot be a pointer to read-only memory (such as a const variable or a literal string). If this parameter is a constant string, the function may cause an access violation. So it's maybe better to copy the command line into a separate buffer first, to prevent the caller from getting its original input changed.
    – Wolf
    May 18, 2017 at 12:29
  • 1
    This answer does not handle stderr properly. Feb 14, 2019 at 18:39
  • Does this also work for Unix systems? Or would I have to use something else for a Unix device?
    – 255.tar.xz
    Oct 28, 2019 at 0:28
39

I'd use popen() (++waqas).

But sometimes you need reading and writing...

It seems like nobody does things the hard way any more.

(Assuming a Unix/Linux/Mac environment, or perhaps Windows with a POSIX compatibility layer...)

enum PIPE_FILE_DESCRIPTERS
{
  READ_FD  = 0,
  WRITE_FD = 1
};

enum CONSTANTS
{
  BUFFER_SIZE = 100
};

int
main()
{
  int       parentToChild[2];
  int       childToParent[2];
  pid_t     pid;
  string    dataReadFromChild;
  char      buffer[BUFFER_SIZE + 1];
  ssize_t   readResult;
  int       status;

  ASSERT_IS(0, pipe(parentToChild));
  ASSERT_IS(0, pipe(childToParent));

  switch (pid = fork())
  {
    case -1:
      FAIL("Fork failed");
      exit(-1);

    case 0: /* Child */
      ASSERT_NOT(-1, dup2(parentToChild[READ_FD], STDIN_FILENO));
      ASSERT_NOT(-1, dup2(childToParent[WRITE_FD], STDOUT_FILENO));
      ASSERT_NOT(-1, dup2(childToParent[WRITE_FD], STDERR_FILENO));
      ASSERT_IS(0, close(parentToChild [WRITE_FD]));
      ASSERT_IS(0, close(childToParent [READ_FD]));

      /*     file, arg0, arg1,  arg2 */
      execlp("ls", "ls", "-al", "--color");

      FAIL("This line should never be reached!!!");
      exit(-1);

    default: /* Parent */
      cout << "Child " << pid << " process running..." << endl;

      ASSERT_IS(0, close(parentToChild [READ_FD]));
      ASSERT_IS(0, close(childToParent [WRITE_FD]));

      while (true)
      {
        switch (readResult = read(childToParent[READ_FD],
                                  buffer, BUFFER_SIZE))
        {
          case 0: /* End-of-File, or non-blocking read. */
            cout << "End of file reached..."         << endl
                 << "Data received was ("
                 << dataReadFromChild.size() << "): " << endl
                 << dataReadFromChild                << endl;

            ASSERT_IS(pid, waitpid(pid, & status, 0));

            cout << endl
                 << "Child exit staus is:  " << WEXITSTATUS(status) << endl
                 << endl;

            exit(0);


          case -1:
            if ((errno == EINTR) || (errno == EAGAIN))
            {
              errno = 0;
              break;
            }
            else
            {
              FAIL("read() failed");
              exit(-1);
            }

          default:
            dataReadFromChild . append(buffer, readResult);
            break;
        }
      } /* while (true) */
  } /* switch (pid = fork())*/
}

You also might want to play around with select() and non-blocking reads.

fd_set          readfds;
struct timeval  timeout;

timeout.tv_sec  = 0;    /* Seconds */
timeout.tv_usec = 1000; /* Microseconds */

FD_ZERO(&readfds);
FD_SET(childToParent[READ_FD], &readfds);

switch (select (1 + childToParent[READ_FD], &readfds, (fd_set*)NULL, (fd_set*)NULL, & timeout))
{
  case 0: /* Timeout expired */
    break;

  case -1:
    if ((errno == EINTR) || (errno == EAGAIN))
    {
      errno = 0;
      break;
    }
    else
    {
      FAIL("Select() Failed");
      exit(-1);
    }

  case 1:  /* We have input */
    readResult = read(childToParent[READ_FD], buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
    // However you want to handle it...
    break;

  default:
    FAIL("How did we see input on more than one file descriptor?");
    exit(-1);
}
4
  • 2
    The hard way is right :) I like the idea with select() call, though in this case, I actually need to wait until the task completes. I'll keep this code for another project I have :)
    – Misha M
    Jan 27, 2009 at 2:21
  • 4
    ...or you could use the existing posix_spawnp function Jan 3, 2013 at 15:18
  • 7
    Your execlp call has a bug: the last arg pointer passed must be (char *) NULL to properly terminate the variadic argument list (see execlp(3) for reference). Oct 19, 2013 at 18:38
  • 1
    Will this work on unix, linux and windows ? Can you please header files as well?
    – kittu
    May 20, 2020 at 18:34
20

Two possible approaches:

  1. I don't think popen() is part of the C++ standard (it's part of POSIX from memory), but it's available on every UNIX I've worked with (and you seem to be targeting UNIX since your command is ./some_command).

  2. On the off-chance that there is no popen(), you can use system("./some_command >/tmp/some_command.out");, then use the normal I/O functions to process the output file.

0
12

I couldn't figure out why popen/pclose is missing from Code::Blocks/MinGW. So I worked around the problem by using CreateProcess() and CreatePipe() instead.

Here's the solution that worked for me:

//C++11
#include <cstdio>
#include <iostream>
#include <windows.h>
#include <cstdint>
#include <deque>
#include <string>
#include <thread>

using namespace std;

int SystemCapture(
    string         CmdLine,    //Command Line
    string         CmdRunDir,  //set to '.' for current directory
    string&        ListStdOut, //Return List of StdOut
    string&        ListStdErr, //Return List of StdErr
    uint32_t&      RetCode)    //Return Exit Code
{
    int                  Success;
    SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES  security_attributes;
    HANDLE               stdout_rd = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
    HANDLE               stdout_wr = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
    HANDLE               stderr_rd = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
    HANDLE               stderr_wr = INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE;
    PROCESS_INFORMATION  process_info;
    STARTUPINFO          startup_info;
    thread               stdout_thread;
    thread               stderr_thread;

    security_attributes.nLength              = sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES);
    security_attributes.bInheritHandle       = TRUE;
    security_attributes.lpSecurityDescriptor = nullptr;

    if (!CreatePipe(&stdout_rd, &stdout_wr, &security_attributes, 0) ||
            !SetHandleInformation(stdout_rd, HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT, 0)) {
        return -1;
    }

    if (!CreatePipe(&stderr_rd, &stderr_wr, &security_attributes, 0) ||
            !SetHandleInformation(stderr_rd, HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT, 0)) {
        if (stdout_rd != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) CloseHandle(stdout_rd);
        if (stdout_wr != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) CloseHandle(stdout_wr);
        return -2;
    }

    ZeroMemory(&process_info, sizeof(PROCESS_INFORMATION));
    ZeroMemory(&startup_info, sizeof(STARTUPINFO));

    startup_info.cb         = sizeof(STARTUPINFO);
    startup_info.hStdInput  = 0;
    startup_info.hStdOutput = stdout_wr;
    startup_info.hStdError  = stderr_wr;

    if(stdout_rd || stderr_rd)
        startup_info.dwFlags |= STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;

    // Make a copy because CreateProcess needs to modify string buffer
    char      CmdLineStr[MAX_PATH];
    strncpy(CmdLineStr, CmdLine.c_str(), MAX_PATH);
    CmdLineStr[MAX_PATH-1] = 0;

    Success = CreateProcess(
        nullptr,
        CmdLineStr,
        nullptr,
        nullptr,
        TRUE,
        0,
        nullptr,
        CmdRunDir.c_str(),
        &startup_info,
        &process_info
    );
    CloseHandle(stdout_wr);
    CloseHandle(stderr_wr);

    if(!Success) {
        CloseHandle(process_info.hProcess);
        CloseHandle(process_info.hThread);
        CloseHandle(stdout_rd);
        CloseHandle(stderr_rd);
        return -4;
    }
    else {
        CloseHandle(process_info.hThread);
    }

    if(stdout_rd) {
        stdout_thread=thread([&]() {
            DWORD  n;
            const size_t bufsize = 1000;
            char         buffer [bufsize];
            for(;;) {
                n = 0;
                int Success = ReadFile(
                    stdout_rd,
                    buffer,
                    (DWORD)bufsize,
                    &n,
                    nullptr
                );
                printf("STDERR: Success:%d n:%d\n", Success, (int)n);
                if(!Success || n == 0)
                    break;
                string s(buffer, n);
                printf("STDOUT:(%s)\n", s.c_str());
                ListStdOut += s;
            }
            printf("STDOUT:BREAK!\n");
        });
    }

    if(stderr_rd) {
        stderr_thread=thread([&]() {
            DWORD        n;
            const size_t bufsize = 1000;
            char         buffer [bufsize];
            for(;;) {
                n = 0;
                int Success = ReadFile(
                    stderr_rd,
                    buffer,
                    (DWORD)bufsize,
                    &n,
                    nullptr
                );
                printf("STDERR: Success:%d n:%d\n", Success, (int)n);
                if(!Success || n == 0)
                    break;
                string s(buffer, n);
                printf("STDERR:(%s)\n", s.c_str());
                ListStdErr += s;
            }
            printf("STDERR:BREAK!\n");
        });
    }

    WaitForSingleObject(process_info.hProcess,    INFINITE);
    if(!GetExitCodeProcess(process_info.hProcess, (DWORD*) &RetCode))
        RetCode = -1;

    CloseHandle(process_info.hProcess);

    if(stdout_thread.joinable())
        stdout_thread.join();

    if(stderr_thread.joinable())
        stderr_thread.join();

    CloseHandle(stdout_rd);
    CloseHandle(stderr_rd);

    return 0;
}

int main()
{
    int            rc;
    uint32_t       RetCode;
    string         ListStdOut;
    string         ListStdErr;

    cout << "STARTING.\n";

    rc = SystemCapture(
        "C:\\Windows\\System32\\ipconfig.exe",    //Command Line
        ".",                                     //CmdRunDir
        ListStdOut,                              //Return List of StdOut
        ListStdErr,                              //Return List of StdErr
        RetCode                                  //Return Exit Code
    );
    if (rc < 0) {
        cout << "ERROR: SystemCapture\n";
    }

    cout << "STDOUT:\n";
    cout << ListStdOut;

    cout << "STDERR:\n";
    cout << ListStdErr;

    cout << "Finished.\n";

    cout << "Press Enter to Continue";
    cin.ignore();

    return 0;
}
5
  • 6
    Thank you! This is the best popen implementation for Windows on the Internet! And by passing the CREATE_NO_WINDOW flag one can finally get rid of the annoying cmd prompts that show up.
    – LachoTomov
    Jun 19, 2018 at 18:05
  • 1
    Where do you pass the CREATE_NO_WINDOW thingy? Feb 14, 2019 at 19:35
  • 3
    @Bill Moore, if you notice, there is a bug in your answer. ListStdErr is never used. Feb 14, 2019 at 19:49
  • 1
    @RefaelSheinker: I think you can replace the 0 in createProcess by CREATE_NO_WINDOW. learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/procthread/… Nov 7, 2021 at 12:47
  • 1
    @RefaelSheinker: Indeed. I think the second ListStdOut += s; should be replaced with ListStdErr += s;, if you want to have two distinct strings. I'd like to have them merged anyway, so I'll simply remove ListStdErr. Finally, List is kind of a weird name for a string. Nov 7, 2021 at 12:57
11

The following might be a portable solution. It follows standards.

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <string>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <sstream>

std::string ssystem (const char *command) {
    char tmpname [L_tmpnam];
    std::tmpnam ( tmpname );
    std::string scommand = command;
    std::string cmd = scommand + " >> " + tmpname;
    std::system(cmd.c_str());
    std::ifstream file(tmpname, std::ios::in | std::ios::binary );
    std::string result;
    if (file) {
        while (!file.eof()) result.push_back(file.get())
            ;
        file.close();
    }
    remove(tmpname);
    return result;
}

// For Cygwin

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    std::string bash = "FILETWO=/cygdrive/c/*\nfor f in $FILETWO\ndo\necho \"$f\"\ndone ";
    std::string in;
    std::string s = ssystem(bash.c_str());
    std::istringstream iss(s);
    std::string line;
    while (std::getline(iss, line))
    {
        std::cout << "LINE-> " + line + "  length: " << line.length() << std::endl;
    }
    std::cin >> in;
    return 0;
}
1
  • 4
    I get this warning with gcc: "warning: the use of tmpnam is dangerous, better use mkstemp" Aug 27, 2014 at 23:44
10

Take note that you can get output by redirecting output to the file and then reading it

It was shown in documentation of std::system

You can receive exit code by calling WEXITSTATUS macro.

    int status = std::system("ls -l >test.txt"); // execute the UNIX command "ls -l >test.txt"
    std::cout << std::ifstream("test.txt").rdbuf();
    std::cout << "Exit code: " << WEXITSTATUS(status) << std::endl;
1
  • This only works partially. If you want to retrieve the ID of the started process, it won't work. Jun 13, 2022 at 10:57
4

Assuming POSIX, simple code to capture stdout:

#include <sys/wait.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string>
#include <vector>

std::string qx(const std::vector<std::string>& args) {
  int stdout_fds[2];
  pipe(stdout_fds);

  int stderr_fds[2];
  pipe(stderr_fds);

  const pid_t pid = fork();
  if (!pid) {
    close(stdout_fds[0]);
    dup2(stdout_fds[1], 1);
    close(stdout_fds[1]);

    close(stderr_fds[0]);
    dup2(stderr_fds[1], 2);
    close(stderr_fds[1]);

    std::vector<char*> vc(args.size() + 1, 0);
    for (size_t i = 0; i < args.size(); ++i) {
      vc[i] = const_cast<char*>(args[i].c_str());
    }

    execvp(vc[0], &vc[0]);
    exit(0);
  }

  close(stdout_fds[1]);

  std::string out;
  const int buf_size = 4096;
  char buffer[buf_size];
  do {
    const ssize_t r = read(stdout_fds[0], buffer, buf_size);
    if (r > 0) {
      out.append(buffer, r);
    }
  } while (errno == EAGAIN || errno == EINTR);

  close(stdout_fds[0]);

  close(stderr_fds[1]);
  close(stderr_fds[0]);

  int r, status;
  do {
    r = waitpid(pid, &status, 0);
  } while (r == -1 && errno == EINTR);

  return out;
}

Code contributions are welcome for more functionality:

https://github.com/ericcurtin/execxx

0
4

You can get the output after running a script using a pipe. We use pipes when we want the output of the child process.

int my_func() {
    char ch;
    FILE *fpipe;
    FILE *copy_fp;
    FILE *tmp;
    char *command = (char *)"/usr/bin/my_script my_arg";
    copy_fp = fopen("/tmp/output_file_path", "w");
    fpipe = (FILE *)popen(command, "r");
    if (fpipe) {
        while ((ch = fgetc(fpipe)) != EOF) {
            fputc(ch, copy_fp);
        }
    }
    else {
        if (copy_fp) {
            fprintf(copy_fp, "Sorry there was an error opening the file");
        }
    }
    pclose(fpipe);
    fclose(copy_fp);
    return 0;
}

So here is the script, which you want to run. Put it in a command variable with the arguments your script takes (nothing if no arguments). And the file where you want to capture the output of the script, put it in copy_fp.

So the popen runs your script and puts the output in fpipe and then you can just copy everything from that to your output file.

In this way you can capture the outputs of child processes.

And another process is you can directly put the > operator in the command only. So if we will put everything in a file while we run the command, you won't have to copy anything.

In that case, there isn't any need to use pipes. You can use just system, and it will run the command and put the output in that file.

int my_func(){
    char *command = (char *)"/usr/bin/my_script my_arg > /tmp/my_putput_file";
    system(command);
    printf("everything saved in my_output_file");
    return 0;
}

You can read YoLinux Tutorial: Fork, Exec and Process control for more information.

4

Command class uses system("cmd > stdout 2> stderr") to provide user with stdout and stderr, in addition to the exit code.

Test run:

./a.out 'ls .'
exit code: 0
stdout: HelloWorld
HelloWorld.c
HelloWorld.cpp
HelloWorld.dSYM
a.out
gcc_container.bash
linuxsys
macsys
test.sh

stderr: 

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <sstream>
#include <unistd.h>
using namespace std;

class Command {
    public:
        Command() {
            exit_code_ = -1;
        }

        int GetExitCode() { return exit_code_;}

        string GetStdOutStr() {return stdout_str_;}

        string GetStdErrStr() {return stderr_str_;}

        int Run(const char* cmd) {
            return Run(string(cmd));
        }

        /**
         * @brief run a given command
         * 
         * @param cmd: command string
         * @return int: the exit code of running the command
         */
        int Run(string cmd) {

            // create temp files
            char tmp_dir[] = "/tmp/stdir.XXXXXX";
            mkdtemp(tmp_dir);
            string stdout_file = string(tmp_dir) + "/stdout";
            string stderr_file = string(tmp_dir) + "/stderr";

            // execute the command "cmd > stdout_file 2> stderr_file"
            string cli = cmd + " > " + stdout_file + " 2> " + stderr_file;
            exit_code_ = system(cli.c_str());
            exit_code_ = WEXITSTATUS(exit_code_);
            stdout_str_ = File2Str(stdout_file);
            stderr_str_ = File2Str(stderr_file);

            // rid of the temp files
            remove(stdout_file.c_str());
            remove(stderr_file.c_str());
            remove(tmp_dir);

            return exit_code_;
        }

    private:
        int exit_code_;
        string stderr_str_;
        string stdout_str_;

        /**
         * @brief read a file
         * 
         * @param file_name: file path 
         * @return string the contents of the file.
         */
        string File2Str(string file_name) {
            ifstream file;
            stringstream str_stream;

            file.open(file_name);
            if (file.is_open()) {
                str_stream << file.rdbuf();
                file.close();
            }
            return str_stream.str();
        }
};

int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
    Command command;

    command.Run(argv[1]);
    cout << "exit code: " << command.GetExitCode() << endl;
    cout << "stdout: " << command.GetStdOutStr() << endl;
    cout << "stderr: " << command.GetStdErrStr() << endl;
    return  command.GetExitCode();
}

3

C++ stream implemention of waqas's answer:

#include <istream>
#include <streambuf>
#include <cstdio>
#include <cstring>
#include <memory>
#include <stdexcept>
#include <string>

class execbuf : public std::streambuf {
    protected:
        std::string output;
        int_type underflow(int_type character) {
            if (gptr() < egptr()) return traits_type::to_int_type(*gptr());
            return traits_type::eof();
        }
    public:
        execbuf(const char* command) {
            std::array<char, 128> buffer;
            std::unique_ptr<FILE, decltype(&pclose)> pipe(popen(command, "r"), pclose);
            if (!pipe) {
                throw std::runtime_error("popen() failed!");
            }
            while (fgets(buffer.data(), buffer.size(), pipe.get()) != nullptr) {
                this->output += buffer.data();
            }
            setg((char*)this->output.data(), (char*)this->output.data(), (char*)(this->output.data() + this->output.size()));
        }
};

class exec : public std::istream {
    protected:
        execbuf buffer;
    public:
        exec(char* command) : std::istream(nullptr), buffer(command, fd) {
            this->rdbuf(&buffer);
        }
};

This code catches all output through stdout . If you want to catch only stderr then pass your command like this:

sh -c '<your-command>' 2>&1 > /dev/null

If you want to catch both stdout and stderr then the command should be like this:

sh -c '<your-command>' 2>&1
1
  • One need to add #include <array> and remove , fd to make it compile
    – truf
    Mar 15, 2023 at 15:39
0

I was surprised that there isn't a lightweight library that does that cross-platform. So I decided to create a library since I need the functionality anyway.

Here's the library https://github.com/Neko-Box-Coder/System2

Here's a short snippet of it (without checks)

int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
    System2CommandInfo commandInfo;

    System2Run("./some_command", &commandInfo);

    char outputBuffer[1024];
    uint32_t bytesRead = 0;
    System2ReadFromOutput(&commandInfo, outputBuffer, 1023, &bytesRead);
    outputBuffer[bytesRead] = 0;
    int returnCode;
    System2GetCommandReturnValueSync(&commandInfo, &returnCode);
    printf("%s\n", outputBuffer);
    return 0;
}

It works for posix and windows systems. (It doesn't use popen for windows so it should also work in GUI applications)

It can send input and receive output from command.

And have blocking and non-blocking version.

And it has both header only and source version as well

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.