11

I have two (UNIX) programs A and B that read and write from stdin/stdout.

My first problem is how to connect the stdout of A to stdin of B and the stdout of B to the stdin of A. I.e., something like A | B but a bidirectional pipe. I suspect I could solve this by using exec to redirect but I could not get it to work. The programs are interactive so a temporary file would not work.

The second problem is that I would like to duplicate each direction and pipe a duplicate via a logging program to stdout so that I can see the (text-line based) traffic that pass between the programs. Here I may get away with tee >(...) if I can solve the first problem.

Both these problems seems like they should have well known solutions but I have not be able to find anything.

I would prefer a POSIX shell solution, or at least something that works in bash on cygwin.

Thanks to your answers I came up with the following solution. The A/B commands uses nc to listen to two ports. The logging program uses sed (with -u for unbuffered processing).

bash-3.2$ fifodir=$(mktemp -d)
bash-3.2$ mkfifo "$fifodir/echoAtoB"
bash-3.2$ mkfifo "$fifodir/echoBtoA"
bash-3.2$ sed -u 's/^/A->B: /' "$fifodir/echoAtoB" &
bash-3.2$ sed -u 's/^/B->A: /' "$fifodir/echoBtoA" &
bash-3.2$ mkfifo "$fifodir/loopback"
bash-3.2$ nc -l -p 47002 < "$fifodir/loopback" \
          | tee "$fifodir/echoAtoB" \
          | nc -l -p 47001 \
          | tee "$fifodir/echoBtoA" > "$fifodir/loopback"

This listens for connection to port 47001 and 47002 and echos all traffic to standard output.

In shell 2 do:

bash-3.2$ nc localhost 47001

In shell 3 do:

bash-3.2$ nc localhost 47002

Now lines entered in shell 2 will be written to shell 3 and vice versa and the traffic logged to shell 1, something like:

B->A: input to port 47001
A->B: input to port 47002

The above has been tested on Cygwin

Update: The script above stopped working after a few days(!). Apparently it can deadlock. Some of the suggestions in the answers may be more reliable.

8 Answers 8

12

How about a named pipe?

# mkfifo foo
# A < foo | B > foo
# rm foo

For your second part I believe tee is the correct answer. So it becomes:

# A < foo | tee logfile | B > foo
5

http://bisqwit.iki.fi/source/twinpipe.html

1
  • twinpipe also comes with a shell script that uses the named pipe approach suggested by others. Thanks Sep 26, 2008 at 13:50
5

You could probably get away with named pipes:

mkfifo pipe
gawk '$1' < pipe | gawk '$1' > pipe
4

You can use Expect.

Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc.

You could use the following code (taken from the Exploring Expect book) as a starting point - it connects the output of proc1 to the input of proc2 and vice versa, as you requested:

#!/usr/bin/expect -f
spawn proc1
set proc1 $spawn_id
spawn proc2
interact -u $proc1
3

I spent a lot of time on this, gave it up, and last decided to use ksh (the Korn shell), which allows this.

cmd1 |& cmd2 >&p <&p

where |& is a (pipe) operator to start a co-process and &p is file descriptor of that co-process.

2

I had this problem at one point, and I threw together this simple C program.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>

#define PERROR_AND_DIE(_x_) {perror(_x_); _exit(1);}

int main(int argc, char **argv) {
    int fd0[2];
    int fd1[2];


    if ( argc != 3 ) {
        fprintf(stdout, "Usage %s: \"[command 1]\" \"[command 2]\"\n", argv[0]);
        _exit(1);
    }

    if ( pipe(fd0) || pipe(fd1) ) PERROR_AND_DIE("pipe")

    pid_t id = fork();
    if ( id == -1 ) PERROR_AND_DIE("fork");

    if ( id ) {
        if ( -1 == close(0) )  PERROR_AND_DIE("P1: close 0");
        if ( -1 == dup2(fd0[0], 0) ) PERROR_AND_DIE("P1: dup 0"); //Read my STDIN from this pipe

        if ( -1 == close(1) )  PERROR_AND_DIE("P1: close 1");
        if ( -1 == dup2(fd1[1], 1) ) PERROR_AND_DIE("P1: dup 1"); //Write my STDOUT here
        execl("/bin/sh", "/bin/sh", "-c", argv[1], NULL);
        PERROR_AND_DIE("P1: exec")
    }

    if ( -1 == close(0) )  PERROR_AND_DIE("P2: close 0");
    if ( -1 == dup2(fd1[0], 0) ) PERROR_AND_DIE("P2: dup 0");

    if ( -1 == close(1) )  PERROR_AND_DIE("P2: close 1");
    if ( -1 == dup2(fd0[1], 1) ) PERROR_AND_DIE("P2: dup 1");


    execl("/bin/sh", "/bin/sh", "-c", argv[2], NULL);
    PERROR_AND_DIE("P2: exec")
}
1

This question is similar to one I asked before. The solutions proposed by others were to use named pipes, but I suspect you don't have them in cygwin. Currently I'm sticking to my own (attempt at a) solution, but it requires /dev/fd/0 which you probably also don't have.

Although I don't really like the passing-command-lines-as-strings aspect of twinpipe (mentioned by JeeBee (139495)), it might be your only option in cygwin.

1
  • IMHO this is the best / only reasonable solution... it does seem to require bash though (instead of dash / sh)
    – Dreamcat4
    Jun 9, 2019 at 12:55
0

I'd suggest "coproc":

#! /bin/bash
# initiator needs argument

if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
  a=$1
  echo "Question $a"
else
  read a
fi

if [ $# -gt 0 ]; then
  read a
  echo "$a" >&2
else
  echo "Answer to $a is ..."
fi

exit 0

Then see this session:

$ coproc ./dialog
$ ./dialog  test  < /dev/fd/${COPROC[0]}  > /dev/fd/${COPROC[1]}
Answer to Question test is ...

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