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Cannot write to a process

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  • Christian EhrlicherC Offline
    Christian EhrlicherC Offline
    Christian Ehrlicher
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #8

    @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

    I'm trying to write through write channel to that git process AFTER the process had already started.

    Again: git has no interactive mode so you can't send anything to it when the process runs.

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    • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

      @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

      I'm trying to write through write channel to that git process AFTER the process had already started.

      Again: git has no interactive mode so you can't send anything to it when the process runs.

      S Offline
      S Offline
      smallC
      wrote on last edited by smallC
      #9

      @Christian-Ehrlicher
      I can. I do it on Windows with the exact code I've posted.
      On Windows this code works as intended:
      I'm starting git process via QProcess with start() method.
      Then, when the process started I communicate with that process via write and readAllStandardOutput methods of QProcess.
      So when I do:
      process.write("git status");
      I'm getting git status output as if I were to type it in the console, so when I execute this:
      auto output = process. readAllStandardOutput();
      in this^^^ output field I'm getting output from git.

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      • Christian EhrlicherC Offline
        Christian EhrlicherC Offline
        Christian Ehrlicher
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        Even on windows it works only by accident. When you click on git.exe on windows there will be no command prompt which stays open - so no interaction possible.

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        • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

          Even on windows it works only by accident. When you click on git.exe on windows there will be no command prompt which stays open - so no interaction possible.

          S Offline
          S Offline
          smallC
          wrote on last edited by smallC
          #11

          @Christian-Ehrlicher You're joking. You must be. Did you ever hear about communication between processes? For example writing to other process stdin and reading from such process stdout?

          Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
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          • S smallC

            @Christian-Ehrlicher You're joking. You must be. Did you ever hear about communication between processes? For example writing to other process stdin and reading from such process stdout?

            Christian EhrlicherC Offline
            Christian EhrlicherC Offline
            Christian Ehrlicher
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

            For example writing to other process stdin and reading from such process stdout?

            I did, but git does not do it (don't know how often I have to repeat it) - git is not interactive. Simply call 'git status' and you're done.

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            • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

              @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

              For example writing to other process stdin and reading from such process stdout?

              I did, but git does not do it (don't know how often I have to repeat it) - git is not interactive. Simply call 'git status' and you're done.

              S Offline
              S Offline
              smallC
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              @Christian-Ehrlicher
              Please post the code you want me to execute in order to get reply from git to the "git status" command.
              I've tried the start command with program and params list and it doesn't work.

              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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              • S smallC

                @Christian-Ehrlicher
                Please post the code you want me to execute in order to get reply from git to the "git status" command.
                I've tried the start command with program and params list and it doesn't work.

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #14

                @smallC
                You are running a command of "/usr/bin/git", and then sending the string "git status\n" to its standard input. That makes no sense at all, what would git begin to do with a command starting with git... even if it worked this way?

                I don't know what you claim it's doing under Windows. I don't want to get into a debate about that. Here you must be under Linux ("/usr/bin/git"), so if you don't agree and think what you had should work I invite you to man git and find where you says it will read commands from stdin as you say rather than accept status as an argument which is what I/ @Christian-Ehrlicher say.

                Since you need to run git status you need to pass status as an argument on the command-line to git. You need:

                process.start(git_process_path, QStringList() << "status");
                // or, if you prefer
                process.setProgram(git_process_path);
                process.setArguments(QStringList() << "status");
                process.start();
                

                You can then read from its standard output. However, you really should also read from its standard error too, at present you are leaving anything it might write to stderr to vanish into the blue. Separately from that, for production code at least, you should be checking for error return code.

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                • Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                  Christian EhrlicherC Offline
                  Christian Ehrlicher
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

                  Please post the code you want me to execute in order to get reply from git to the "git status" command.
                  I've tried the start command with program and params list and it doesn't work.

                  Please post your code - I won't write code for you. But basically it's just QProcess::start(), QProcess::waitForFinished() (not recommended, use signals/slots) and the QProcess::readAllStandardError()/QProcess::readAllStandardOutput()

                  Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
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                  • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                    @smallC said in Cannot write to a process:

                    Please post the code you want me to execute in order to get reply from git to the "git status" command.
                    I've tried the start command with program and params list and it doesn't work.

                    Please post your code - I won't write code for you. But basically it's just QProcess::start(), QProcess::waitForFinished() (not recommended, use signals/slots) and the QProcess::readAllStandardError()/QProcess::readAllStandardOutput()

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    smallC
                    wrote on last edited by smallC
                    #16

                    @Christian-Ehrlicher
                    I did post my code. In OP.

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                    • JonBJ JonB

                      @smallC
                      You are running a command of "/usr/bin/git", and then sending the string "git status\n" to its standard input. That makes no sense at all, what would git begin to do with a command starting with git... even if it worked this way?

                      I don't know what you claim it's doing under Windows. I don't want to get into a debate about that. Here you must be under Linux ("/usr/bin/git"), so if you don't agree and think what you had should work I invite you to man git and find where you says it will read commands from stdin as you say rather than accept status as an argument which is what I/ @Christian-Ehrlicher say.

                      Since you need to run git status you need to pass status as an argument on the command-line to git. You need:

                      process.start(git_process_path, QStringList() << "status");
                      // or, if you prefer
                      process.setProgram(git_process_path);
                      process.setArguments(QStringList() << "status");
                      process.start();
                      

                      You can then read from its standard output. However, you really should also read from its standard error too, at present you are leaving anything it might write to stderr to vanish into the blue. Separately from that, for production code at least, you should be checking for error return code.

                      S Offline
                      S Offline
                      smallC
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      @JonB
                      Hi thanks,
                      That indeed worked. My mistake was that I was thinking of /usr/bin/git in terms of git executable on Windows.
                      Thanks for your help.

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • S smallC

                        @JonB
                        Hi thanks,
                        That indeed worked. My mistake was that I was thinking of /usr/bin/git in terms of git executable on Windows.
                        Thanks for your help.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #18

                        @smallC
                        I think your original way worked under Windows because of the git implementation there, only. I look at https://gitforwindows.org/ and I see it talking about

                        Git BASH

                        Git for Windows provides a BASH emulation used to run Git from the command line. *NIX users should feel right at home, as the BASH emulation behaves just like the "git" command in LINUX and UNIX environments.

                        and the screenshot at https://gitforwindows.org/img/gw1.png. I think they are saying in their Windows git that a command of git alone enters a "shell", kind of emulating Linux bash, which allows you to type things like git status into it, and it stays there and executes. Perhaps not quite, but something like that anyway. That is not a facility of git under Linux. probably why your stuff worked under Windows and not Linux?

                        S 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @smallC
                          I think your original way worked under Windows because of the git implementation there, only. I look at https://gitforwindows.org/ and I see it talking about

                          Git BASH

                          Git for Windows provides a BASH emulation used to run Git from the command line. *NIX users should feel right at home, as the BASH emulation behaves just like the "git" command in LINUX and UNIX environments.

                          and the screenshot at https://gitforwindows.org/img/gw1.png. I think they are saying in their Windows git that a command of git alone enters a "shell", kind of emulating Linux bash, which allows you to type things like git status into it, and it stays there and executes. Perhaps not quite, but something like that anyway. That is not a facility of git under Linux. probably why your stuff worked under Windows and not Linux?

                          S Offline
                          S Offline
                          smallC
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          @JonB
                          Yes, in Windows it opens a bash/cmd and you can write/read from it. It works differently on Linux. I wasn't aware of that. I thought that the /usr/bin/git<<this git, is an equivalent to Windows git.exe. That's why the confusion.
                          Thanks for your help.

                          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • S smallC

                            @JonB
                            Yes, in Windows it opens a bash/cmd and you can write/read from it. It works differently on Linux. I wasn't aware of that. I thought that the /usr/bin/git<<this git, is an equivalent to Windows git.exe. That's why the confusion.
                            Thanks for your help.

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            @smallC
                            Indeed. FWIW, if you do want to support Windows too I think the Linux command-line-arguments-only will work there too, but not the other way round, though you'd have to verify.

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