mirror of
https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd-src
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292 lines
8.5 KiB
Perl
292 lines
8.5 KiB
Perl
package IPC::Open3;
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use strict;
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no strict 'refs'; # because users pass me bareword filehandles
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use vars qw($VERSION @ISA @EXPORT $Fh $Me);
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require 5.001;
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require Exporter;
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use Carp;
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use Symbol 'qualify';
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$VERSION = 1.0102;
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@ISA = qw(Exporter);
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@EXPORT = qw(open3);
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=head1 NAME
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IPC::Open3, open3 - open a process for reading, writing, and error handling
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=head1 SYNOPSIS
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$pid = open3(\*WTRFH, \*RDRFH, \*ERRFH,
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'some cmd and args', 'optarg', ...);
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=head1 DESCRIPTION
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Extremely similar to open2(), open3() spawns the given $cmd and
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connects RDRFH for reading, WTRFH for writing, and ERRFH for errors. If
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ERRFH is '', or the same as RDRFH, then STDOUT and STDERR of the child are
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on the same file handle. The WTRFH will have autoflush turned on.
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If WTRFH begins with "E<lt>&", then WTRFH will be closed in the parent, and
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the child will read from it directly. If RDRFH or ERRFH begins with
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"E<gt>&", then the child will send output directly to that file handle.
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In both cases, there will be a dup(2) instead of a pipe(2) made.
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If you try to read from the child's stdout writer and their stderr
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writer, you'll have problems with blocking, which means you'll
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want to use select(), which means you'll have to use sysread() instead
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of normal stuff.
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open3() returns the process ID of the child process. It doesn't return on
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failure: it just raises an exception matching C</^open3:/>.
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=head1 WARNING
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It will not create these file handles for you. You have to do this
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yourself. So don't pass it empty variables expecting them to get filled
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in for you.
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Additionally, this is very dangerous as you may block forever. It
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assumes it's going to talk to something like B<bc>, both writing to it
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and reading from it. This is presumably safe because you "know" that
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commands like B<bc> will read a line at a time and output a line at a
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time. Programs like B<sort> that read their entire input stream first,
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however, are quite apt to cause deadlock.
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The big problem with this approach is that if you don't have control
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over source code being run in the child process, you can't control
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what it does with pipe buffering. Thus you can't just open a pipe to
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C<cat -v> and continually read and write a line from it.
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=cut
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# &open3: Marc Horowitz <marc@mit.edu>
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# derived mostly from &open2 by tom christiansen, <tchrist@convex.com>
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# fixed for 5.001 by Ulrich Kunitz <kunitz@mai-koeln.com>
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# ported to Win32 by Ron Schmidt, Merrill Lynch almost ended my career
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#
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# $Id: open3.pl,v 1.1 1993/11/23 06:26:15 marc Exp $
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#
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# usage: $pid = open3('wtr', 'rdr', 'err' 'some cmd and args', 'optarg', ...);
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#
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# spawn the given $cmd and connect rdr for
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# reading, wtr for writing, and err for errors.
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# if err is '', or the same as rdr, then stdout and
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# stderr of the child are on the same fh. returns pid
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# of child (or dies on failure).
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# if wtr begins with '<&', then wtr will be closed in the parent, and
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# the child will read from it directly. if rdr or err begins with
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# '>&', then the child will send output directly to that fd. In both
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# cases, there will be a dup() instead of a pipe() made.
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# WARNING: this is dangerous, as you may block forever
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# unless you are very careful.
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#
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# $wtr is left unbuffered.
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#
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# abort program if
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# rdr or wtr are null
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# a system call fails
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$Fh = 'FHOPEN000'; # package static in case called more than once
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$Me = 'open3 (bug)'; # you should never see this, it's always localized
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# Fatal.pm needs to be fixed WRT prototypes.
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sub xfork {
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my $pid = fork;
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defined $pid or croak "$Me: fork failed: $!";
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return $pid;
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}
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sub xpipe {
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pipe $_[0], $_[1] or croak "$Me: pipe($_[0], $_[1]) failed: $!";
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}
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# I tried using a * prototype character for the filehandle but it still
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# disallows a bearword while compiling under strict subs.
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sub xopen {
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open $_[0], $_[1] or croak "$Me: open($_[0], $_[1]) failed: $!";
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}
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sub xclose {
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close $_[0] or croak "$Me: close($_[0]) failed: $!";
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}
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my $do_spawn = $^O eq 'os2' || $^O eq 'MSWin32';
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sub _open3 {
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local $Me = shift;
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my($package, $dad_wtr, $dad_rdr, $dad_err, @cmd) = @_;
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my($dup_wtr, $dup_rdr, $dup_err, $kidpid);
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$dad_wtr or croak "$Me: wtr should not be null";
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$dad_rdr or croak "$Me: rdr should not be null";
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$dad_err = $dad_rdr if ($dad_err eq '');
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$dup_wtr = ($dad_wtr =~ s/^[<>]&//);
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$dup_rdr = ($dad_rdr =~ s/^[<>]&//);
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$dup_err = ($dad_err =~ s/^[<>]&//);
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# force unqualified filehandles into callers' package
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$dad_wtr = qualify $dad_wtr, $package;
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$dad_rdr = qualify $dad_rdr, $package;
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$dad_err = qualify $dad_err, $package;
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my $kid_rdr = ++$Fh;
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my $kid_wtr = ++$Fh;
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my $kid_err = ++$Fh;
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xpipe $kid_rdr, $dad_wtr if !$dup_wtr;
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xpipe $dad_rdr, $kid_wtr if !$dup_rdr;
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xpipe $dad_err, $kid_err if !$dup_err && $dad_err ne $dad_rdr;
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$kidpid = $do_spawn ? -1 : xfork;
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if ($kidpid == 0) { # Kid
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# If she wants to dup the kid's stderr onto her stdout I need to
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# save a copy of her stdout before I put something else there.
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if ($dad_rdr ne $dad_err && $dup_err
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&& fileno($dad_err) == fileno(STDOUT)) {
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my $tmp = ++$Fh;
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xopen($tmp, ">&$dad_err");
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$dad_err = $tmp;
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}
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if ($dup_wtr) {
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xopen \*STDIN, "<&$dad_wtr" if fileno(STDIN) != fileno($dad_wtr);
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} else {
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xclose $dad_wtr;
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xopen \*STDIN, "<&$kid_rdr";
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xclose $kid_rdr;
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}
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if ($dup_rdr) {
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xopen \*STDOUT, ">&$dad_rdr" if fileno(STDOUT) != fileno($dad_rdr);
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} else {
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xclose $dad_rdr;
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xopen \*STDOUT, ">&$kid_wtr";
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xclose $kid_wtr;
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}
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if ($dad_rdr ne $dad_err) {
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if ($dup_err) {
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xopen \*STDERR, ">&$dad_err"
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if fileno(STDERR) != fileno($dad_err);
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} else {
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xclose $dad_err;
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xopen \*STDERR, ">&$kid_err";
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xclose $kid_err;
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}
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} else {
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xopen \*STDERR, ">&STDOUT" if fileno(STDERR) != fileno(STDOUT);
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}
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local($")=(" ");
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exec @cmd
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or croak "$Me: exec of @cmd failed";
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} elsif ($do_spawn) {
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# All the bookkeeping of coincidence between handles is
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# handled in spawn_with_handles.
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my @close;
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if ($dup_wtr) {
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$kid_rdr = $dad_wtr;
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push @close, \*{$kid_rdr};
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} else {
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push @close, \*{$dad_wtr}, \*{$kid_rdr};
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}
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if ($dup_rdr) {
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$kid_wtr = $dad_rdr;
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push @close, \*{$kid_wtr};
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} else {
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push @close, \*{$dad_rdr}, \*{$kid_wtr};
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}
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if ($dad_rdr ne $dad_err) {
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if ($dup_err) {
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$kid_err = $dad_err ;
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push @close, \*{$kid_err};
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} else {
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push @close, \*{$dad_err}, \*{$kid_err};
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}
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} else {
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$kid_err = $kid_wtr;
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}
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require IO::Pipe;
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$kidpid = eval {
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spawn_with_handles( [ { mode => 'r',
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open_as => \*{$kid_rdr},
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handle => \*STDIN },
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{ mode => 'w',
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open_as => \*{$kid_wtr},
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handle => \*STDOUT },
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{ mode => 'w',
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open_as => \*{$kid_err},
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handle => \*STDERR },
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], \@close, @cmd);
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};
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die "$Me: $@" if $@;
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}
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xclose $kid_rdr if !$dup_wtr;
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xclose $kid_wtr if !$dup_rdr;
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xclose $kid_err if !$dup_err && $dad_rdr ne $dad_err;
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# If the write handle is a dup give it away entirely, close my copy
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# of it.
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xclose $dad_wtr if $dup_wtr;
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select((select($dad_wtr), $| = 1)[0]); # unbuffer pipe
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$kidpid;
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}
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sub open3 {
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if (@_ < 4) {
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local $" = ', ';
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croak "open3(@_): not enough arguments";
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}
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return _open3 'open3', scalar caller, @_
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}
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sub spawn_with_handles {
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my $fds = shift; # Fields: handle, mode, open_as
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my $close_in_child = shift;
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my ($fd, $pid, @saved_fh, $saved, %saved, @errs);
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require Fcntl;
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foreach $fd (@$fds) {
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$fd->{tmp_copy} = IO::Handle->new_from_fd($fd->{handle}, $fd->{mode});
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$saved{fileno $fd->{handle}} = $fd->{tmp_copy};
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}
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foreach $fd (@$fds) {
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bless $fd->{handle}, 'IO::Handle'
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unless eval { $fd->{handle}->isa('IO::Handle') } ;
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# If some of handles to redirect-to coincide with handles to
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# redirect, we need to use saved variants:
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$fd->{handle}->fdopen($saved{fileno $fd->{open_as}} || $fd->{open_as},
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$fd->{mode});
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}
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unless ($^O eq 'MSWin32') {
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# Stderr may be redirected below, so we save the err text:
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foreach $fd (@$close_in_child) {
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fcntl($fd, Fcntl::F_SETFD(), 1) or push @errs, "fcntl $fd: $!"
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unless $saved{fileno $fd}; # Do not close what we redirect!
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}
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}
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unless (@errs) {
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$pid = eval { system 1, @_ }; # 1 == P_NOWAIT
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push @errs, "IO::Pipe: Can't spawn-NOWAIT: $!" if !$pid || $pid < 0;
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}
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foreach $fd (@$fds) {
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$fd->{handle}->fdopen($fd->{tmp_copy}, $fd->{mode});
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$fd->{tmp_copy}->close or croak "Can't close: $!";
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}
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croak join "\n", @errs if @errs;
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return $pid;
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}
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1; # so require is happy
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