fork() and pipes() in c

A pipe is a mechanism for interprocess communication. Data written to the pipe by one process can be read by another process. The primitive for creating a pipe is the pipe function. This creates both the reading and writing ends of the pipe. It is not very useful for a single process to use a pipe to talk to itself. In typical use, a process creates a pipe just before it forks one or more child processes. The pipe is then used for communication either between the parent or child processes, or between two sibling processes. A familiar example of this kind of communication can be seen in all operating system shells. When you type a command at the shell, it will spawn the executable represented by that command with a call to fork. A pipe is opened to the new child process and its output is read and printed by the shell. This page has a full example of the fork and pipe functions. For your convenience, the code is reproduced below:

 #include <sys/types.h>
 #include <unistd.h>
 #include <stdio.h>
 #include <stdlib.h>

 /* Read characters from the pipe and echo them to stdout. */

 void
 read_from_pipe (int file)
 {
   FILE *stream;
   int c;
   stream = fdopen (file, "r");
   while ((c = fgetc (stream)) != EOF)
     putchar (c);
   fclose (stream);
 }

 /* Write some random text to the pipe. */

 void
 write_to_pipe (int file)
 {
   FILE *stream;
   stream = fdopen (file, "w");
   fprintf (stream, "hello, world!\n");
   fprintf (stream, "goodbye, world!\n");
   fclose (stream);
 }

 int
 main (void)
 {
   pid_t pid;
   int mypipe[2];

   /* Create the pipe. */
   if (pipe (mypipe))
     {
       fprintf (stderr, "Pipe failed.\n");
       return EXIT_FAILURE;
     }

   /* Create the child process. */
   pid = fork ();
   if (pid == (pid_t) 0)
     {
       /* This is the child process.
          Close other end first. */
       close (mypipe[1]);
       read_from_pipe (mypipe[0]);
       return EXIT_SUCCESS;
     }
   else if (pid < (pid_t) 0)
     {
       /* The fork failed. */
       fprintf (stderr, "Fork failed.\n");
       return EXIT_FAILURE;
     }
   else
     {
       /* This is the parent process.
          Close other end first. */
       close (mypipe[0]);
       write_to_pipe (mypipe[1]);
       return EXIT_SUCCESS;
     }
 }

Just like other C functions you can use both fork and pipe in C++.

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