Suppose I want to call a subprocess from within my program, and I want to read the output from that subprocess into my program.
Here is a trivial way to do that:
//somefile.cpp
system("sub_process arg1 arg2 -o file.out");
//call the subprocess and have it write to file
FILE *f = std::fopen("file.out", "r");
//.... and so on
We all know that i/o operations are computationally slow. To speed this up, I would like to skip the write-to-file-then-read-from-file step, and instead redirect the output of this sub-process directly into stdin (or some other stream)
How would I do this? How do I skip the i/o operation?
Note: many programs spit out some diagnostic stuff into stdout while they run, and write a clean version of the output to stdout (ex: stdout: "step1...done, step2...done, step3..done" -o file-out: "The magic number is: 47.28"), so ignoring the "-o " argument and trusting that output will be automatically re-directed to stdout isn't necessarily helpful...
Thanks to all in advance.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…