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Cannot get the QProcess started

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  • A Anonymous_Banned275

    Could somebody kindly hep me to troubleshot this problem?

    Here is my debug output.
    I am basically wanting to put some valid Command and args to make sure
    I have them coded / syntax correct.

    link text]( START int Form:: RunProcess_Asynch(QString Command, QStringList args )
    "hcitool "
    (" scan ")
    error enum val = QProcess::FailedToStart

    Here is my full code, keep in mind it is under construction

       // temorary connect here
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::errorOccurred, [=](QProcess::ProcessError error)
        {
            qDebug() << "error enum val = " << error << endl;
        });
    
    #ifdef BYPASS
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::stateChanged, [=](QProcess::S::S::ProcessError error)
        {
            qDebug() << "error enum val = " << error << endl;
        });
    #endif
    
    
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, &Form::processError);
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, &Form::processError);
        //connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::finished(exit)::finished, this, &Form::processFinished);
        //    connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::started, this, &Form::processError);
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::started, this, &Form::processStarted);
        // capture any errors (do this before you run the process)
        connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, &Form::processError);
    
        Command = "ls ";
        args<<"-l"; //<<">> /tmp/temp";
    
        OProcess.start(Command,args); //,QIODevice::ReadWrite);
    NOTE inlcuding ,QIODevice::ReadWrite); - it still  fails to start 
    
        OProcess.readAllStandardError();
        // temorary connect here
        //   connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, &Form::processError);
        //    connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::finished(exit)::finished, this, &Form::processFinished);
        //    connect(&OProcess, &QProcess::started, this, &Form::processError);
        OProcess.waitForFinished();
        qDebug(" END int Form:: RunProcess_Asynch(QString Command, QStringList args )");
        return 0;
    }
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    KroMignonK Offline
    KroMignonK Offline
    KroMignon
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

    Could somebody kindly hep me to troubleshot this problem?

    This cannot work as it is, you have to choose which way you use QProcess:

    • asynchronous with signals/slots
    • synchronous with QProcess::waitForXXXXX()

    But you should not mix them up.

    Another question, is OProcess a local variable or a class member?

    It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. (Sherlock Holmes)

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • KroMignonK KroMignon

      @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

      Could somebody kindly hep me to troubleshot this problem?

      This cannot work as it is, you have to choose which way you use QProcess:

      • asynchronous with signals/slots
      • synchronous with QProcess::waitForXXXXX()

      But you should not mix them up.

      Another question, is OProcess a local variable or a class member?

      A Offline
      A Offline
      Anonymous_Banned275
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      @KroMignon OProcess is a class member.
      I need to get the process started , then I will modify the rest of the code..

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • A Offline
        A Offline
        Anonymous_Banned275
        wrote on last edited by Anonymous_Banned275
        #4

        Partially solved.
        The QPrtocess will not start if there are any spaces in the "command' or "arg".
        Still now writing to the file or console. .

        Addendum

        I need clarification on this
        I did venture to QProcess to have a better control then afforded by "system" calls.
        After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
        system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

        with

        //Command = "hcitool";
        // args<<"dev"<<">>/tmp/temp";
        Oprocess.start(Command,args,QIODevice::ReadWrite);

        Basically
        how does “command , Arg “ get passed to the system similar to “system” call ?
        On top of that – I really do not understand what “device” is QIODevice
        accessing. My gut feeling is that this “OProcess.start” is incomplete to fully replace “system” call.

        KroMignonK JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • A Anonymous_Banned275

          Partially solved.
          The QPrtocess will not start if there are any spaces in the "command' or "arg".
          Still now writing to the file or console. .

          Addendum

          I need clarification on this
          I did venture to QProcess to have a better control then afforded by "system" calls.
          After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
          system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

          with

          //Command = "hcitool";
          // args<<"dev"<<">>/tmp/temp";
          Oprocess.start(Command,args,QIODevice::ReadWrite);

          Basically
          how does “command , Arg “ get passed to the system similar to “system” call ?
          On top of that – I really do not understand what “device” is QIODevice
          accessing. My gut feeling is that this “OProcess.start” is incomplete to fully replace “system” call.

          KroMignonK Offline
          KroMignonK Offline
          KroMignon
          wrote on last edited by KroMignon
          #5

          @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

          I need clarification on this
          I did venture to QProcess to have a better control then afforded by "system" calls.
          After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
          system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

          I don't really understand why you want to add file redirection in command? The output of your command will be avaible with QProcess::readAllStandardOutput().

          I guess the command returns immediatly after execution, so I would do it like this:

          QProcess hcitool;
          hcitool.setProcessChannelMode(QProcess::MergedChannels);
          hcitool.start("hcitool", QStringList() << "dev");
          if(hcitool.waitForFinished(1000))
          {
              QString text(hcitool.readAll());
              qDebug() << "hcitool returns:" << text;
          }
          else
          {
              qDebug() << "Failed to run hcitool";
          }
          

          It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. (Sherlock Holmes)

          1 Reply Last reply
          2
          • A Anonymous_Banned275

            Partially solved.
            The QPrtocess will not start if there are any spaces in the "command' or "arg".
            Still now writing to the file or console. .

            Addendum

            I need clarification on this
            I did venture to QProcess to have a better control then afforded by "system" calls.
            After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
            system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

            with

            //Command = "hcitool";
            // args<<"dev"<<">>/tmp/temp";
            Oprocess.start(Command,args,QIODevice::ReadWrite);

            Basically
            how does “command , Arg “ get passed to the system similar to “system” call ?
            On top of that – I really do not understand what “device” is QIODevice
            accessing. My gut feeling is that this “OProcess.start” is incomplete to fully replace “system” call.

            JonBJ Online
            JonBJ Online
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by JonB
            #6

            @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

            After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
            system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

            I may not get much thanks for this, but to answer just this question. You cannot pass >> or >> /tmp/temp as an argument to QProcess. This is because only the Linux shell deals with redirection symbols such as >>. (This would also be the case if you use other redirection symbols such as >, < or |.)

            When you go system("hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp") what the library function system() does is issue this command: /bin/sh -c "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp", which gets the /bin/sh shell to execute the command dealing with the >> redirection.

            To do the same from QProcess you need to go:

            OProcess.start("/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp");
            // or shorter if you prefer, same thing:
            OProcess.start("/bin/sh", { "-c", "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp" });
            

            That will work.

            A separate issue is that you would be better not doing it this way and instead handling the output redirection to a file or memory yourself, as @KroMignon shows one way. But if you want to do it the same way as your original system() call this is how to do it via QProcess.

            Christian EhrlicherC A 2 Replies Last reply
            4
            • JonBJ JonB

              @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

              After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
              system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

              I may not get much thanks for this, but to answer just this question. You cannot pass >> or >> /tmp/temp as an argument to QProcess. This is because only the Linux shell deals with redirection symbols such as >>. (This would also be the case if you use other redirection symbols such as >, < or |.)

              When you go system("hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp") what the library function system() does is issue this command: /bin/sh -c "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp", which gets the /bin/sh shell to execute the command dealing with the >> redirection.

              To do the same from QProcess you need to go:

              OProcess.start("/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp");
              // or shorter if you prefer, same thing:
              OProcess.start("/bin/sh", { "-c", "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp" });
              

              That will work.

              A separate issue is that you would be better not doing it this way and instead handling the output redirection to a file or memory yourself, as @KroMignon shows one way. But if you want to do it the same way as your original system() call this is how to do it via QProcess.

              Christian EhrlicherC Online
              Christian EhrlicherC Online
              Christian Ehrlicher
              Lifetime Qt Champion
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              @JonB https://forum.qt.io/topic/118925/qprocess-c-syntax-passing-program-and-arguments/9 :D

              Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
              Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

              JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                @JonB https://forum.qt.io/topic/118925/qprocess-c-syntax-passing-program-and-arguments/9 :D

                JonBJ Online
                JonBJ Online
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #8

                @Christian-Ehrlicher LOL.

                @AnneRanch In that link you asked that question before and I answered the same way. That remains valid.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • A Offline
                  A Offline
                  Anonymous_Banned275
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  OK, let me try this again.
                  Here a full code

                  void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()
                  {
                      qDebug(" START void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()");
                      ReadTempFile();
                      ClearTempFile();
                      system("hciconfig -a >/tmp/temp"); // TOK builds file
                      ReadTempFile();
                      ClearTempFile();
                      QProcess process;
                      qDebug(" START  process.start..... -a  ");
                      process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"); // no output expected 
                      process.waitForFinished();
                      qDebug(" process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a ");
                      ReadTempFile();    // no data in tempo expected 
                      process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"<<" >>"<<"/tmp/temp");
                  
                  **THIS FAILS TO REDIRECT THE HCICONFIG TO TEMP FILE** 
                    
                      process.waitForFinished();
                      qDebug(" process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a >>/tmp/temp");
                      qDebug(" process.waitForFinished()");
                      ReadTempFile();
                      qDebug(" NO DATA ReadTempFile()");
                      process.start("hcitool", QStringList() << "dev"<<">>"<<"/tmp/temp");
                      process.waitForFinished();
                      process.start("hcitool", QStringList() << "dev"<<">>/tmp/temp");
                      process.waitForFinished();
                      qDebug(" End  void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()");
                  }
                  
                  Here is the output. 
                  
                  
                  

                  10:46:25: Starting /home/qy/Qt/Examples/Qt-5.12.12/widgets/mainwindows/mdi/mdi...
                  Warning: Ignoring XDG_SESSION_TYPE=wayland on Gnome. Use QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland to run on Wayland anyway.
                  START void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()
                  START Form::ReadTempFile()
                  in.readLine().isEmpty()
                  END Form::ReadTempFile()
                  START void Form::ClearTempFile()
                  in.readLine().isEmpty()
                  END void Form::ClearTempFile()
                  START Form::ReadTempFile()
                  END Form::ReadTempFile()
                  START void Form::ClearTempFile()
                  in.readLine().isEmpty()
                  END void Form::ClearTempFile()
                  START process.start..... -a
                  process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a
                  START Form::ReadTempFile()
                  in.readLine().isEmpty()
                  END Form::ReadTempFile()
                  process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a >>/tmp/temp
                  process.waitForFinished()
                  START Form::ReadTempFile()

                  THetre ARE no DATA IN TEMP FILE

                  in.readLine().isEmpty()
                  END Form::ReadTempFile()
                  NO DATA ReadTempFile()
                  End void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()

                  **The task of QProcess is to redirect output of command hciconfig to the temporary file.

                  This line of code fails to do so:

                  process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"<<" >>"<<"/tmp/temp");**

                  Can anybody help me to solve this?
                  Do I have wrong syntax?

                  KroMignonK 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • A Anonymous_Banned275

                    OK, let me try this again.
                    Here a full code

                    void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()
                    {
                        qDebug(" START void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()");
                        ReadTempFile();
                        ClearTempFile();
                        system("hciconfig -a >/tmp/temp"); // TOK builds file
                        ReadTempFile();
                        ClearTempFile();
                        QProcess process;
                        qDebug(" START  process.start..... -a  ");
                        process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"); // no output expected 
                        process.waitForFinished();
                        qDebug(" process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a ");
                        ReadTempFile();    // no data in tempo expected 
                        process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"<<" >>"<<"/tmp/temp");
                    
                    **THIS FAILS TO REDIRECT THE HCICONFIG TO TEMP FILE** 
                      
                        process.waitForFinished();
                        qDebug(" process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a >>/tmp/temp");
                        qDebug(" process.waitForFinished()");
                        ReadTempFile();
                        qDebug(" NO DATA ReadTempFile()");
                        process.start("hcitool", QStringList() << "dev"<<">>"<<"/tmp/temp");
                        process.waitForFinished();
                        process.start("hcitool", QStringList() << "dev"<<">>/tmp/temp");
                        process.waitForFinished();
                        qDebug(" End  void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()");
                    }
                    
                    Here is the output. 
                    
                    
                    

                    10:46:25: Starting /home/qy/Qt/Examples/Qt-5.12.12/widgets/mainwindows/mdi/mdi...
                    Warning: Ignoring XDG_SESSION_TYPE=wayland on Gnome. Use QT_QPA_PLATFORM=wayland to run on Wayland anyway.
                    START void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()
                    START Form::ReadTempFile()
                    in.readLine().isEmpty()
                    END Form::ReadTempFile()
                    START void Form::ClearTempFile()
                    in.readLine().isEmpty()
                    END void Form::ClearTempFile()
                    START Form::ReadTempFile()
                    END Form::ReadTempFile()
                    START void Form::ClearTempFile()
                    in.readLine().isEmpty()
                    END void Form::ClearTempFile()
                    START process.start..... -a
                    process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a
                    START Form::ReadTempFile()
                    in.readLine().isEmpty()
                    END Form::ReadTempFile()
                    process.waitForFinished() hcicofig -a >>/tmp/temp
                    process.waitForFinished()
                    START Form::ReadTempFile()

                    THetre ARE no DATA IN TEMP FILE

                    in.readLine().isEmpty()
                    END Form::ReadTempFile()
                    NO DATA ReadTempFile()
                    End void Form::on_pushButton_46_clicked()

                    **The task of QProcess is to redirect output of command hciconfig to the temporary file.

                    This line of code fails to do so:

                    process.start("hciconfig", QStringList() << "-a"<<" >>"<<"/tmp/temp");**

                    Can anybody help me to solve this?
                    Do I have wrong syntax?

                    KroMignonK Offline
                    KroMignonK Offline
                    KroMignon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                    Can anybody help me to solve this?
                    Do I have wrong syntax?

                    Do you read what other replies to your post?
                    For example wat @JonB has written

                    to do the same from QProcess you need to go:
                    OProcess.start("/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp");
                    // or shorter if you prefer, same thing:
                    OProcess.start("/bin/sh", { "-c", "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp" });

                    So this would be: process.start(/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hciconfig -a >> /tmp/temp");

                    It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. (Sherlock Holmes)

                    A 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                      Christian EhrlicherC Online
                      Christian Ehrlicher
                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      @KroMignon said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                      Do you read what other replies to your post?

                      I would guess no - the answer was now written three times, the first one already one and a half year ago for the exact same question. Really a nice and much to long active troll.

                      Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
                      Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • KroMignonK KroMignon

                        @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                        Can anybody help me to solve this?
                        Do I have wrong syntax?

                        Do you read what other replies to your post?
                        For example wat @JonB has written

                        to do the same from QProcess you need to go:
                        OProcess.start("/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp");
                        // or shorter if you prefer, same thing:
                        OProcess.start("/bin/sh", { "-c", "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp" });

                        So this would be: process.start(/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hciconfig -a >> /tmp/temp");

                        A Offline
                        A Offline
                        Anonymous_Banned275
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        @KroMignon OK, I will sincerely apologize for all the trouble I have caused.
                        I have made few major mistakes

                        1. QProcess is useless without monitoring - hence it is important to utilize as many "connect" as feasible to keep track what QProcess is doing..

                        2. In any case process "start" has to be immediately followed - in code - waitForFinished(); Without that the process gets killed and without appropriate "connect" etc etc

                        3. I did not read the explanation what Linux and "system" does with "redirecting " AND THAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT POST in this discussion. I was not aware about the details of "system" call. I look very briefly at the post and did see no point in replacing a simple "system" call , with another application. Many thanks for posting that.

                        ... and I think it is a time to close this thread....
                        Solved? YES

                        KroMignonK JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • A Anonymous_Banned275

                          @KroMignon OK, I will sincerely apologize for all the trouble I have caused.
                          I have made few major mistakes

                          1. QProcess is useless without monitoring - hence it is important to utilize as many "connect" as feasible to keep track what QProcess is doing..

                          2. In any case process "start" has to be immediately followed - in code - waitForFinished(); Without that the process gets killed and without appropriate "connect" etc etc

                          3. I did not read the explanation what Linux and "system" does with "redirecting " AND THAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT POST in this discussion. I was not aware about the details of "system" call. I look very briefly at the post and did see no point in replacing a simple "system" call , with another application. Many thanks for posting that.

                          ... and I think it is a time to close this thread....
                          Solved? YES

                          KroMignonK Offline
                          KroMignonK Offline
                          KroMignon
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                          ... and I think it is a time to close this thread....
                          Solved? YES

                          Nice to see you could solve your issue, but I am not really sure that you have understand what you have done wrong.

                          Qt is an asynchronous framework, but some classes can be used in synchronous mode.
                          QProcess is one of them, but you should avoid mixing synchronous and asynchronous calls.

                          That was, for me, the main issue in your code.

                          What I don't understand is why you want to use QProcess to mimic system() calls.
                          For me, using QProcess made only sense when you want to take control about process execution like:

                          • get process exit code
                          • get process output

                          If you only want to start a process and redirect its output to a file, using QProcess is a little bit an "overkill".

                          It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. (Sherlock Holmes)

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • A Anonymous_Banned275

                            @KroMignon OK, I will sincerely apologize for all the trouble I have caused.
                            I have made few major mistakes

                            1. QProcess is useless without monitoring - hence it is important to utilize as many "connect" as feasible to keep track what QProcess is doing..

                            2. In any case process "start" has to be immediately followed - in code - waitForFinished(); Without that the process gets killed and without appropriate "connect" etc etc

                            3. I did not read the explanation what Linux and "system" does with "redirecting " AND THAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT POST in this discussion. I was not aware about the details of "system" call. I look very briefly at the post and did see no point in replacing a simple "system" call , with another application. Many thanks for posting that.

                            ... and I think it is a time to close this thread....
                            Solved? YES

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

                            @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                            In any case process "start" has to be immediately followed - in code - waitForFinished(); Without that the process gets killed and without appropriate "connect" etc etc

                            This is not true. You need to understand the scope of the QProcess variable in your C++ code and declare it in the appropriate place for your desired lifetime.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            3
                            • JonBJ JonB

                              @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                              After all this I realized that I may have a better understanding of QProcess, however, I have a major misunderstanding of trying to replace
                              system("hcotool dev >> /tmp/temp")

                              I may not get much thanks for this, but to answer just this question. You cannot pass >> or >> /tmp/temp as an argument to QProcess. This is because only the Linux shell deals with redirection symbols such as >>. (This would also be the case if you use other redirection symbols such as >, < or |.)

                              When you go system("hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp") what the library function system() does is issue this command: /bin/sh -c "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp", which gets the /bin/sh shell to execute the command dealing with the >> redirection.

                              To do the same from QProcess you need to go:

                              OProcess.start("/bin/sh", QStringList() << "-c" << "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp");
                              // or shorter if you prefer, same thing:
                              OProcess.start("/bin/sh", { "-c", "hcitool dev >> /tmp/temp" });
                              

                              That will work.

                              A separate issue is that you would be better not doing it this way and instead handling the output redirection to a file or memory yourself, as @KroMignon shows one way. But if you want to do it the same way as your original system() call this is how to do it via QProcess.

                              A Offline
                              A Offline
                              Anonymous_Banned275
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              @JonB
                              FYI
                              Contrary to documentation , perhaps it varies with QT version , the attached code (KISS) fills the /temp file - which was my objective .

                                   process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp");
                                       process.waitForFinished();
                              
                              KroMignonK JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                              0
                              • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                @JonB
                                FYI
                                Contrary to documentation , perhaps it varies with QT version , the attached code (KISS) fills the /temp file - which was my objective .

                                     process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp");
                                         process.waitForFinished();
                                
                                KroMignonK Offline
                                KroMignonK Offline
                                KroMignon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                                FYI
                                Contrary to documentation , perhaps it varies with QT version , the attached code (KISS) fills the /temp file - which was my objective .

                                     process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp");
                                         process.waitForFinished();
                                

                                Why do you want to use startDetached()?
                                This doesn't make sense to me.
                                startDetached() is for starting a daemon process, even the return PID held by the QProcess instance may become invalid without notice (as written in documentation).
                                https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qprocess.html#startDetached

                                It is an old maxim of mine that when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. (Sherlock Holmes)

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                2
                                • A Anonymous_Banned275

                                  @JonB
                                  FYI
                                  Contrary to documentation , perhaps it varies with QT version , the attached code (KISS) fills the /temp file - which was my objective .

                                       process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp");
                                           process.waitForFinished();
                                  
                                  JonBJ Online
                                  JonBJ Online
                                  JonB
                                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                                  #17

                                  @AnneRanch said in Cannot get the QProcess started:

                                  process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp");

                                  Apart from @KroMignon's correct point that you should not change to startDetached().

                                  >> I believe you will find that your statement is not working, and you are mistaken in thinking it does. <<

                                  I tested process.startDetached("ls -l >>/tmp/temp"); under Ubuntu 20.04, with Qt 5.12.x. After executing your line, if you look in QT Creator's Application Output pane you get:

                                  /usr/bin/ls: cannot access '>>/tmp/temp': No such file or directory
                                  

                                  Then I tried process.startDetached("hcitool dev>>/tmp/temp"); and the Application Output showed just

                                  Devices:
                                  

                                  In neither case is /tmp/temp created or written to.

                                  This is exactly as I would expect and have previously said above: you cannot use a redirection symbol like >> without going via a shell (/bin/sh or /bin/bash followed by -c and then the command). Which is what this whole thread is about. Since you don't, the command (ls or hcitool) sees a single argument of >>/tmp/temp, and cannot act on it correctly.

                                  I would guess you had the file /tmp/temp already created from a previous run, filled with previous hcitool output, and thought that meant your command had been successful and appended to it, but it had not. Start by rm /tmp/temp to ENSURE that file does not exist, and then try your startDetached() command again. It does NOT create that file, does it...?

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