Question

First, I wrote a c++ code as follows:

#include <cstdio>
int main()
{
    int a,b;
    while(scanf("%d %d",&a,&b) == 2)
        printf("%d\n",a+b);
    return 0;
}

I use g++ -o a a.cpp to complie it.

Afterwards, I wrote python code as follows:

import os,sys
sys.stdin = open("./data.in","r")
sys.stdout = open("./data.out","w")
pid = os.fork()
if pid == 0:
    cmd = ["./a","./a"]
    os.execv(cmd[0],cmd)

However, the data.out file contains nothing. That is to say, the child process did not inherit stdin and stdout from his parent process. But when I wrote a c++ code as follows:

#include<unistd.h>
#include<cstdio>
int main()
{
    freopen("data.in","r",stdin);a
    freopen("data.out","w",stdout);
    int pid = fork();
    if(pid == 0)
    {
        char* cmd[]= {"./a","./a"};
        execv(cmd[0],cmd);
    }
    return 0;
}

I got the right answer in the data.out, that is to say execv works in the c++ code.

So, what I should do to let execv also works in python? I really need this function to work, could anybody can tell me? thanks a lot!

data.in contains the following:

1 1
Was it helpful?

Solution

In your python code, you've opened new IO streams and set the sys.stdin and sys.stdout Python names to point to these. They will have their own file descriptors (most likely 3, and 4). However the standard file descriptors, 0, and 1 will remain unchanged, and continue to point at their original locations. These are the descriptors inherited when you exec into stdin and stdout in your C++ program.

You need to make sure that the actual file descriptors are adjusted before execing.

os.dup2(sys.stdin.fileno(), 0)
os.dup2(sys.stdout.fileno(), 1)
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