I need to write commands from one terminal to another terminal.
I tried these:
echo -e "ls\n" > /proc/pid/fd/0
echo -e "ls\n" > /dev/pts/4
Which just prints the ls
as output and doesn't execute.
I tried these:
chmod 777 /dev/tty4 ;echo "ls" > /dev/tty4
chmod 777 /dev/tty40 ;echo "ls" > /dev/tty40
Which don't seem to do anything
Any ideas?
[note that I don't want to touch the second terminal to accomplish this. only the first one]
Python code:
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys,os,fcntl,termios
if len(sys.argv) != 3:
sys.stderr.write("usage: ttyexec.py tty command\n")
sys.exit(1)
fd = os.open("/dev/" + sys.argv[1], os.O_RDWR)
cmd=sys.argv[2]
for i in range(len(cmd)):
fcntl.ioctl(fd, termios.TIOCSTI, cmd[i])
fcntl.ioctl(fd, termios.TIOCSTI, '\n')
os.close(fd)
Is posible to show the output of a command on multiple terminals simultaneously with the following script., and it works with all console programs, including the editors. For example doing:
execmon.bash 'nano hello.txt' 5
Open an editor and both the output and the text that we introduce will be redirected to the virtual terminal number 5. You can see your terminals:
ls /dev/pts
Each virtual terminal has an associated number.
Is work with the normal terminal, konsole and xterm, just create the file execmon.bash and put this:
#! / bin / bash
# execmon.bash
# Script to run a command in a terminal and display the output
# in the terminal used and an additional one.
param = $ #
if [$ param-eq 2]; Then
echo $ 1 | tee a.out a.out && cat> / dev / pts / $ 2 && exec `cat` a.out | tee / dev / pts / $ 2 && rm a.out
else
echo "Usage:"
echo "execmon 'command' num '
echo "-command is the command to run (you have to enter ')"
echo "-num is the number of virtual console to output to the"
fi
Example:
execmon.bash 'ls-l' 5
execmon.bash 'nano Hello.txt' 5
This is hairy. The stdin file in proc you're trying to use is a symlink to the terminal device (probably /dev/pts/something). There are two processes that have that device open: the shell (your target) and the terminal emulator (e.g. gnome-terminal), and they use it like a socket to pass data in both directions. Presumably the latter is stealing the output and displaying it, so the shell never sees it. I don't think this technique will work.
What are you trying to accomplish? You can't run the process as a child using conventional tools like popen()? If it's a GUI terminal emulator, you could try to forge keyboard input via X events or the kernel's uinput API.
open 2 terminals
then type ttd on the terminal which you want to write on
ttd will show you the address of the terminal
move to the another terminal and type cat > (address of the 2nd terminal)
and hit enter
This is the wrong way to go about it - you might get it displayed in the
terminal, but not executed.
You will need to do something like tell a shell to read from a named pipe, or from netcat/socat. Or you could try injecting keystrokes as root or using xtest (there's also sometimes another way under X which I forget).
command > dev/pts/#
where # is the other terminal's name