I have an assignment to create a Linux shell in C. Currently, I am stuck on implementing redirections and pipes. The code that I have so far is below. The main() parses user's input. If the command is built in, then that command is executed. Otherwise, the tokenized input is passed to execute() (I know that I should probably pull the built-in commands into their own function).
What execute() does is loop through the array. If it encounters <
, >
, or |
it should take appropriate action. The first thing I am trying to get to work correctly is piping. I am definitely doing something wrong, though, because I cannot get it to work for even one pipe. For example, a sample input/output:
/home/ad/Documents> ls -l | grep sh
|: sh: No such file or directory
|
My idea was to get each of the directions and piping work for just one case, and then by making the function recursive I could hopefully use multiple redirections/pipes in the same command line. For example, I could do program1 < input1.txt > output1.txt
or ls -l | grep sh > output2.txt
.
I was hoping that someone can point out my errors in trying to pipe and perhaps offer some pointers in how to approach the case where multiple redirections/pipes are inputted by the user.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int MAX_PATH_LENGTH = 1024; //Maximum path length to display.
int BUF_LENGTH = 1024; // Length of buffer to store user input
char * delims = " \n"; // Delimiters for tokenizing user input.
const int PIPE_READ = 0;
const int PIPE_WRITE = 1;
void execute(char **argArray){
char **pA = argArray;
int i = 0;
while(*pA != NULL) {
if(strcmp(argArray[i],"<") == 0) {
printf("<\n");
}
else if(strcmp(argArray[i],">") == 0) {
printf(">\n");
}
else if(strcmp(argArray[i],"|") == 0) {
int fds[2];
pipe(fds);
pid_t pid;
if((pid = fork()) == 0) {
dup2(fds[PIPE_WRITE], 1);
close(fds[PIPE_READ]);
close(fds[PIPE_WRITE]);
char** argList;
memcpy(argList, argArray, i);
execvp(argArray[0], argArray);
}
if((pid = fork()) == 0) {
dup2(fds[PIPE_READ], 0);
close(fds[PIPE_READ]);
close(fds[PIPE_WRITE]);
execvp(argArray[i+1], pA);
}
close(fds[PIPE_READ]);
close(fds[PIPE_WRITE]);
wait(NULL);
wait(NULL);
printf("|\n");
}
else {
if(pid == 0){
execvp(argArray[0], argArray);
printf("Command not found.\n");
}
else
wait(NULL);*/
}
*pA++;
i++;
}
}
int main () {
char path[MAX_PATH_LENGTH];
char buf[BUF_LENGTH];
char* strArray[BUF_LENGTH];
/**
* "Welcome" message. When mash is executed, the current working directory
* is displayed followed by >. For example, if user is in /usr/lib/, then
* mash will display :
* /usr/lib/>
**/
getcwd(path, MAX_PATH_LENGTH);
printf("%s> ", path);
fflush(stdout);
/**
* Loop infinitely while waiting for input from user.
* Parse input and display "welcome" message again.
**/
while(1) {
fgets(buf, BUF_LENGTH, stdin);
char *tokenPtr = NULL;
int i = 0;
tokenPtr = strtok(buf, delims);
if(strcmp(tokenPtr, "exit") == 0){
exit(0);
}
else if(strcmp(tokenPtr, "cd") == 0){
tokenPtr = strtok(NULL, delims);
if(chdir(tokenPtr) != 0){
printf("Path not found.\n");
}
getcwd(path, MAX_PATH_LENGTH);
}
else if(strcmp(tokenPtr, "pwd") == 0){
printf("%s\n", path);
}
else {
while(tokenPtr != NULL) {
strArray[i++] = tokenPtr;
tokenPtr = strtok(NULL, delims);
}
execute(strArray);
}
bzero(strArray, sizeof(strArray)); // clears array
printf("%s> ", path);
fflush(stdout);
}
}