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Home/ Questions/Q 797651
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T22:50:35+00:00 2026-05-14T22:50:35+00:00

I am using Java on Windows XP and want to be able to send

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I am using Java on Windows XP and want to be able to send commands to another program such as telnet.
I do not want to simply execute another program. I want to execute it, and then send it a sequence of commands once it’s running.
Here’s my code of what I want to do, but it does not work:
(If you uncomment and change the command to “cmd” it works as expected. Please help.)
This is a simplified example. In production there will be many more commands sent, so please don’t suggest calling “telnet localhost”.

    try
    {
        Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();

        String command = "telnet";
        //command = "cmd";
        Process pr = rt.exec(command);

        BufferedReader processOutput = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(pr.getInputStream()));
        BufferedWriter processInput = new BufferedWriter(new OutputStreamWriter(pr.getOutputStream()));

        String commandToSend = "open localhost\n";
        //commandToSend = "dir\n" + "exit\n";

        processInput.write(commandToSend);
        processInput.flush();

        int lineCounter = 0;
        while(true)
        {
            String line = processOutput.readLine();
            if(line == null) break;
            System.out.println(++lineCounter + ": " + line);
        }

        processInput.close();
        processOutput.close();
        pr.waitFor();
    }
    catch(Exception x)
    {
        x.printStackTrace();
    }
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T22:50:35+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 10:50 pm

    That looks OK, as it won’t be producing that much output, but you should really read and write in separate threads so it doesn’t fill up the buffer and block waiting you to read before you reach the next step.

    So if it’s reaching the point where you flush the command you send to it, find out whether the Windows telnet client supports receiving commands from standard input rather than a console by piping the text you’re sending to its standard input to it in a command prompt.

    For example, echo dir c:\ | cmd causes cmd to run, list the c: drive contents and exit, much the same behaviour as if you typed dir c:\ into the console. But echo open localhost | telnet causes telnet to clear the screen then exit, rather than behaving the same way as if you typed it into the console. As telnet needs to mask user input for passwords, it’s quite likely that it’s using the console API rather than reading from standard input. It’s help doesn’t list any command arguments to tell it to read from standard input, so maybe you need to use a telnet implementation which is better suited to scripting.

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