Connect pipes of processes in php

隐身守侯 提交于 2019-12-22 12:19:57

问题


I would like the output of one process created with proc_open to be piped to another one created with proc_open (in php). For example. In bash I can do:

[herbert@thdev1 ~]$ cat foo
2
3
1
[herbert@thdev1 ~]$ cat foo | sort
1
2
3
[herbert@thdev1 ~]$ 

I would like to simulate this in php using proc_open (instead of shell_exec) in order to have control over return-codes, pipes, etc. So I want something like this:

$catPipes=array();
$sortPipes=array();
$cwd = '/tmp';
$env = array();
$catProcess = proc_open("cat foo", array(
        0 => array("pipe", "r"),
        1 => array("pipe", "w")
    ), $catPipes, $cwd, $env);

$sortProcess = proc_open("sort", array(
    0 => array("pipe", "r", $catPipes[1]),
    1 => array("pipe", "w"),
    ), $sortPipes, $cwd, $env);

echo stream_get_contents($sortPipes[1]);
fclose($sortPipes[1]);
//proc_close(this) ... proc_close(that) ... etc

Would someone know how I can simulate the "|" of bash in php, i.e. connect the second descriptor of the cat-process to the first descriptor of the sort-process? Any help would be appreciated! But please do not redirect me to shell_exec, as I want to be able to check exit-codes and log errors :).

EDIT:

My needs-to-work-business-solution btw is:

while(!feof($searchPipes[1])) fwrite($lookupPipes[0], stream_get_line($searchPipes[1], 40000));

Which is basically what the OS would do, but I do not want to my own pipe-management, as I have a kernel/posix for that, and let's be honest, it's not 1976 :)


回答1:


Yes, you can -- but i think you have to define this the way round. That you can use the STDIN of "sort" as STDOUT pipe for "cat". Have a look at the following, which works for me:

<?php

$txt = "a\nc\ne\nb\nd\n";
$fh  = fopen('data://text/plain;base64,' . base64_encode($txt), 'r');

$sort_pipes = array();
$sort_proc  = proc_open(
    'sort',
    array(
        array('pipe', 'r'),
        STDOUT
    ),
    $sort_pipes
);

$cat_pipes = array();
$cat_proc  = proc_open(
    'cat',
    array(
        $fh,
        $sort_pipes[0]
    ),
    $cat_pipes
);

In the first two rows i defined a data stream from a text string that i do not have to rely on a file somewhere in the filesystem. Note, that i have a list of unsorted characters stored in the data stream (a, c, e, b, d). Running the script above should return a sorted list to STDOUT.

Note, that you can specify resources as descriptors, too. In this case you must omit the array notation, so:

STDOUT

instead of

array(STDOUT)

etc.

Btw.: you can even write directly to a file specified by a file name. You can find further information on the descriptor specification in the manual entry for proc_open at http://en.php.net/manual/de/function.proc-open.php

EDIT

The other way works too, of course: you can also write "cat" to an STDOUT pipe array('pipe', 'w') and use $cat_pipes[1] as STDIN for "sort". :)



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12179978/connect-pipes-of-processes-in-php

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