dup (system call)
In Unix-like operating systems, dup and dup2 system calls create a copy of a given file descriptor. This new descriptor actually does not behave like a copy, but like an alias of the old one.
C library POSIX definition
The dup and dup2 calls are standardized by the POSIX specification.[1]
int dup (int oldfd);
int dup2 (int oldfd, int newfd);
The former allocates the first available descriptor, just like open() behaves; an alternative way to duplicate a file descriptor to an unspecified place is the fcntl system call with F_DUPFD
command.
The latter places the copy into newfd. If newfd is open, it is closed first.
dup2 for input/output redirection
Unix shells use dup2 for input/output redirection. Along with pipe()
, it is a tool on which Unix pipes rely.
The following example uses pipe()
and dup()
in order to connect two separate processes (program1 and program2) using Unix pipes:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
/* function prototypes */
void die(const char*);
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
int pdes[2];
pid_t child;
if(pipe(pdes) == -1)
die("pipe()");
child = fork();
if(child == (pid_t)(-1))
die("fork()"); /* fork failed */
if(child == (pid_t)0) {
/* child process */
close(1); /* close stdout */
if(dup(pdes[1]) == -1)
die("dup()");
/* now stdout and pdes[1] are equivalent (dup returns lowest free descriptor) */
if((execlp("program1", "program1", "arg1", NULL)) == -1)
die("execlp()");
_exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
} else {
/* parent process */
close(0); /* close stdin */
if(dup(pdes[0]) == -1)
die("dup()");
/* now stdin and pdes[0] are equivalent (dup returns lowest free descriptor) */
if((execlp("program2", "program2", "arg1", NULL)) == -1)
die("execlp()");
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS);
}
return 0;
}
void die(const char *msg) {
perror(msg);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
See also
- File descriptor – how it works and other functions related to open
References
- ↑ "dup, dup2". opengroup.org.
- Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment by W. Richard Stevens ISBN 81-7808-096-6