.\" Copyright (c) 1986 The Regents of the University of California. .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" %sccs.include.redist.roff% .\" .\" @(#)pipe.c 6.4 (Berkeley) 04/17/91 .\" #include #define DATA "Bright star, would I were steadfast as thou art . . ." /* * This program creates a pipe, then forks. The child communicates to the * parent over the pipe. Notice that a pipe is a one-way communications * device. I can write to the output socket (sockets[1], the second socket * of the array returned by pipe()) and read from the input socket * (sockets[0]), but not vice versa. */ main() { int sockets[2], child; /* Create a pipe */ if (pipe(sockets) < 0) { perror("opening stream socket pair"); exit(10); } if ((child = fork()) == -1) perror("fork"); else if (child) { char buf[1024]; /* This is still the parent. It reads the child's message. */ close(sockets[1]); if (read(sockets[0], buf, 1024) < 0) perror("reading message"); printf("-->%s\en", buf); close(sockets[0]); } else { /* This is the child. It writes a message to its parent. */ close(sockets[0]); if (write(sockets[1], DATA, sizeof(DATA)) < 0) perror("writing message"); close(sockets[1]); } }