I have written a function that attempts to read a child process’s command line output via a pipe. This should be a simple subset of the MSDN Creating a Child Process with Redirected Input and Output article, but I am clearly making an error of some sort.
The ReadFile(…) call below blocks forever no matter if I place it before or after the WaitForSingleObject(…) call that should signal the end of the child process.
I have read all the answers that suggest “Use asynchronous ReadFile” and I am open to that suggestion if someone could give me some idea how that is accomplished on a pipe. Although I don’t understand why asynchronous I/O should be needed for this case.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <string>
#include <windows.h>
unsigned int launch( const std::string & cmdline );
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
launch( std::string("C:/windows/system32/help.exe") );
return 0;
}
void print_error( unsigned int err )
{
char* msg = NULL;
FormatMessageA(
FORMAT_MESSAGE_ALLOCATE_BUFFER |
FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM |
FORMAT_MESSAGE_IGNORE_INSERTS,
NULL,
err,
MAKELANGID(LANG_NEUTRAL, SUBLANG_DEFAULT),
(LPSTR)&msg,
0, NULL );
std::cout << "------ Begin Error Msg ------" << std::endl;
std::cout << msg << std::endl;
std::cout << "------ End Error Msg ------" << std::endl;
LocalFree( msg );
}
unsigned int launch( const std::string & cmdline )
{
TCHAR cl[_MAX_PATH*sizeof(TCHAR)];
memset( cl, 0, sizeof(cl) );
cmdline.copy( cl, (_MAX_PATH*sizeof(TCHAR)) - 1);
HANDLE stdoutReadHandle = NULL;
HANDLE stdoutWriteHandle = NULL;
SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES saAttr;
memset( &saAttr, 0, sizeof(saAttr) );
saAttr.nLength = sizeof(SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES);
saAttr.bInheritHandle = TRUE;
saAttr.lpSecurityDescriptor = NULL;
// Create a pipe for the child process's STDOUT.
if ( ! CreatePipe(&stdoutReadHandle, &stdoutWriteHandle, &saAttr, 5000) )
throw std::runtime_error( "StdoutRd CreatePipe" );
// Ensure the read handle to the pipe for STDOUT is not inherited.
if ( ! SetHandleInformation(stdoutReadHandle, HANDLE_FLAG_INHERIT, 0) )
throw std::runtime_error( "Stdout SetHandleInformation" );
STARTUPINFO startupInfo;
memset( &startupInfo, 0, sizeof(startupInfo) );
startupInfo.cb = sizeof(startupInfo);
startupInfo.hStdError = stdoutWriteHandle;
startupInfo.hStdOutput = stdoutWriteHandle;
startupInfo.hStdInput = GetStdHandle(STD_INPUT_HANDLE);
startupInfo.dwFlags |= STARTF_USESTDHANDLES;
char* rawEnvVars = GetEnvironmentStringsA();
//__asm _emit 0xcc;
PROCESS_INFORMATION processInfo;
memset( &processInfo, 0, sizeof(processInfo) );
std::cout << "Start [" << cmdline << "]" << std::endl;
if ( CreateProcessA( 0, &cl[0], 0, 0, false,
CREATE_NO_WINDOW | CREATE_UNICODE_ENVIRONMENT,
rawEnvVars, 0, &startupInfo, &processInfo ) )
{
//CloseHandle( stdoutWriteHandle );
DWORD wordsRead;
char tBuf[257] = {'\0'};
bool success = true;
std::string outBuf("");
unsigned int t;
while(success) {
//__asm _emit 0xcc;
std::cout << "Just before ReadFile(...)" << std::endl;
success = ReadFile( stdoutReadHandle, tBuf, 256, &wordsRead, NULL);
(t=GetLastError())?print_error(t):t=t;
std::cout << "Just after ReadFile(...) | read " << wordsRead<< std::endl;
std::cout << ".";
if( success == false ) break;
outBuf += tBuf;
tBuf[0] = '\0';
}
std::cout << "output = [" << outBuf << "]" << std::endl;
if ( WaitForSingleObject( processInfo.hProcess, INFINITE ) == WAIT_OBJECT_0 )
{
unsigned int exitcode = 0;
GetExitCodeProcess( processInfo.hProcess, (LPDWORD)&exitcode );
std::cout << "exitcode = [" << exitcode << "]" << std::endl;
//__asm _emit 0xcc;
CloseHandle( processInfo.hProcess );
CloseHandle( processInfo.hThread );
return exitcode;
}
}
else
{
DWORD procErr = GetLastError();
std::cout << "FAILED TO CREATE PROCESS!" << std::endl;
print_error( procErr );
}
return -1;
} // end launch()
There are a few bugs in your code, but the most important is that you’ve specified
FALSEfor thebInheritHandlesargument toCreateProcess. The new process can’t use the pipe if it doesn’t inherit the handle to it. In order for a handle to be inherited, thebInheritHandlesargument must beTRUEand the handle must have inheritance enabled.Other issues:
You’re specifying
CREATE_UNICODE_ENVIRONMENTbut passing an ANSI environment block. Note that it is easier to passNULLforlpEnvironmentand let the system copy the environment block for you. You should still specifyCREATE_UNICODE_ENVIRONMENTin this case, as described in the documentation, because your environment block might contain Unicode characters.Similarly, if you’re calling CreateProcessA you should be using STARTUPINFOA.
You don’t zero-terminate
tBufeach time around the loop, so you’ll get spurious extra characters in your output buffer.You need to close
stdoutWriteHandlebefore you enter your read loop, or you won’t know when the subprocess exits. (Or you could use asynchronous IO and check for process exit explicitly.)GetLastError()is undefined if an API function succeeds, so you should only be calling it ifReadFilereturnsFALSE. (Of course, in this case this is purely cosmetic since you aren’t acting on the error code.)For reference, here is my corrected version of your code. I’ve turned it into plain C (sorry!) because that’s what I’m familiar with. I compiled and tested in Unicode mode, but I think it should work without modification in ANSI mode too.