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How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?

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  • N NTU_WTY
    29 Aug 2022, 09:44

    @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

    @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

    I wrote in above ways that both not recognized wsl. But if I open the cmd prompt, power shell, or MinGW terminal, they all recognize wsl.

    Then you have a problem. This is my final time of asking: copy and paste, or show me a screenshot, of precisely what you are trying in a Command Prompt. Do not tell me "they work", show me what you are trying, character for character.
    26d6eb5d-82e2-406c-8a7f-b7a176c54895-image.png

    J Offline
    J Offline
    JonB
    wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 09:51 last edited by
    #15

    @NTU_WTY
    So all you have proved is that wsl ls works from that Command Prompt. Which is not the same as the command you are trying to issue from your Qt program, is it? Maybe it's wsl.exe, maybe it's not. Maybe it's in C:\Windows\System32, maybe it's not.

    Will you please try:

    cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls"
    

    in a Command Prompt.

    After that, try the error code I showed earlier.

    N 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 10:34
    0
    • J JonB
      29 Aug 2022, 09:51

      @NTU_WTY
      So all you have proved is that wsl ls works from that Command Prompt. Which is not the same as the command you are trying to issue from your Qt program, is it? Maybe it's wsl.exe, maybe it's not. Maybe it's in C:\Windows\System32, maybe it's not.

      Will you please try:

      cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls"
      

      in a Command Prompt.

      After that, try the error code I showed earlier.

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      NTU_WTY
      wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 10:34 last edited by
      #16

      @JonB
      Sorry that I choose the wrong terminal. The following is my "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe" result:
      d2d020db-c4dd-4b29-965c-15713891f333-image.png

      If I directly type: cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" in the search input, the terminal will flash out (successfully show and close). So I modified to: cmd /k "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" , it opens the terminal and lists all the files inside.
      I also tried: cmd /k "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe pwd", and it returns 6073b618-8b08-4a4f-98f7-96c92f0be042-image.png,
      where /mnt/c is the correct representation of the path C:\ in wsl.

      About the slot, I think I need more time to digest, thank you~

      J 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 10:52
      0
      • N NTU_WTY
        29 Aug 2022, 10:34

        @JonB
        Sorry that I choose the wrong terminal. The following is my "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe" result:
        d2d020db-c4dd-4b29-965c-15713891f333-image.png

        If I directly type: cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" in the search input, the terminal will flash out (successfully show and close). So I modified to: cmd /k "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" , it opens the terminal and lists all the files inside.
        I also tried: cmd /k "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe pwd", and it returns 6073b618-8b08-4a4f-98f7-96c92f0be042-image.png,
        where /mnt/c is the correct representation of the path C:\ in wsl.

        About the slot, I think I need more time to digest, thank you~

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        JonB
        wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 10:52 last edited by
        #17

        @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

        If I directly type: cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" in the search input

        In what "search input"? The Windows desktop Start button area, or similar? I asked you to type into a Command Prompt...! Never mind, I get the gist, it looks like the full path does work, that in itself is not the issue.

        Yes you should try the code with signal/slot I showed earlier.

        You might also try e.g.

        sh.start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "echo Hello >> C:\\Temp\\tempfile.txt");
        

        Please be sensible about the path, whatever works for you. Does this work?

        N 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 13:36
        0
        • J JonB
          29 Aug 2022, 10:52

          @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

          If I directly type: cmd /c "C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe ls" in the search input

          In what "search input"? The Windows desktop Start button area, or similar? I asked you to type into a Command Prompt...! Never mind, I get the gist, it looks like the full path does work, that in itself is not the issue.

          Yes you should try the code with signal/slot I showed earlier.

          You might also try e.g.

          sh.start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "echo Hello >> C:\\Temp\\tempfile.txt");
          

          Please be sensible about the path, whatever works for you. Does this work?

          N Offline
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          NTU_WTY
          wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 13:36 last edited by
          #18

          @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

          You might also try e.g.
          sh.start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "echo Hello >> C:\Temp\tempfile.txt");

          Please be sensible about the path, whatever works for you. Does this work?

          Yes! It generates tempfile and also Hello inside this file. It only fails when related to wsl.

          I try to rewrite the code by mimicking from the doc:

          QObject *parent;
          QString program = "cmd";
          QStringList arguments;
          arguments << "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe" << "ls"; 
          QProcess *sh = new QProcess(parent);
          sh->start(program, arguments);
          
          connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
          

          It outputs this when the object is created:
          21:17:42: C:/Users/USER/Documents/Code/Qt/build-testQT-Desktop_Qt_5_15_2_MinGW_32_bit-Debug/debug/testQT.exe crashed.
          I'm not sure if I wrote it right. Thank you for your patience~ Please correct me and give me more hints!

          J 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 13:42
          0
          • N NTU_WTY
            29 Aug 2022, 13:36

            @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

            You might also try e.g.
            sh.start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "echo Hello >> C:\Temp\tempfile.txt");

            Please be sensible about the path, whatever works for you. Does this work?

            Yes! It generates tempfile and also Hello inside this file. It only fails when related to wsl.

            I try to rewrite the code by mimicking from the doc:

            QObject *parent;
            QString program = "cmd";
            QStringList arguments;
            arguments << "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe" << "ls"; 
            QProcess *sh = new QProcess(parent);
            sh->start(program, arguments);
            
            connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
            

            It outputs this when the object is created:
            21:17:42: C:/Users/USER/Documents/Code/Qt/build-testQT-Desktop_Qt_5_15_2_MinGW_32_bit-Debug/debug/testQT.exe crashed.
            I'm not sure if I wrote it right. Thank you for your patience~ Please correct me and give me more hints!

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            jsulm
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 13:42 last edited by
            #19

            @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

            QObject *parent;

            This is dangling pointer!
            If you do not need a parent then pass nullptr instead!

            QProcess *sh = new QProcess();
            

            If you really want a proper parent then pass a pointer to an existing (allocated) object.

            https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

            N 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 14:19
            1
            • J jsulm
              29 Aug 2022, 13:42

              @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

              QObject *parent;

              This is dangling pointer!
              If you do not need a parent then pass nullptr instead!

              QProcess *sh = new QProcess();
              

              If you really want a proper parent then pass a pointer to an existing (allocated) object.

              N Offline
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              NTU_WTY
              wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 14:19 last edited by
              #20

              @jsulm said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

              This is dangling pointer!
              If you do not need a parent then pass nullptr instead!
              QProcess *sh = new QProcess();

              If you really want a proper parent then pass a pointer to an existing (allocated) object.

              Thank you~ The code executed successfully without any messages after null ptr correction. So... what shall I do next to get some info from the process?

              J 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 14:44
              0
              • N NTU_WTY
                29 Aug 2022, 14:19

                @jsulm said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                This is dangling pointer!
                If you do not need a parent then pass nullptr instead!
                QProcess *sh = new QProcess();

                If you really want a proper parent then pass a pointer to an existing (allocated) object.

                Thank you~ The code executed successfully without any messages after null ptr correction. So... what shall I do next to get some info from the process?

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                JonB
                wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 14:44 last edited by JonB
                #21

                @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                what shall I do next to get some info from the process?

                So connect(&sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }) does not lead to any output now when you run the wsl subprocess?

                N 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 14:48
                0
                • J JonB
                  29 Aug 2022, 14:44

                  @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                  what shall I do next to get some info from the process?

                  So connect(&sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }) does not lead to any output now when you run the wsl subprocess?

                  N Offline
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                  NTU_WTY
                  wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 14:48 last edited by NTU_WTY
                  #22

                  @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                  So connect(&sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }) does not lead to any output now when you run the wsl subprocess?

                  No, no output. Actually I wrote: connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }); since &sh will get error.

                  J 1 Reply Last reply 29 Aug 2022, 17:03
                  0
                  • N NTU_WTY
                    29 Aug 2022, 14:48

                    @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                    So connect(&sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }) does not lead to any output now when you run the wsl subprocess?

                    No, no output. Actually I wrote: connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; }); since &sh will get error.

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                    JonB
                    wrote on 29 Aug 2022, 17:03 last edited by
                    #23

                    @NTU_WTY
                    I would connect QProcess::stateChanged() next.

                    N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 07:10
                    1
                    • J JonB
                      29 Aug 2022, 17:03

                      @NTU_WTY
                      I would connect QProcess::stateChanged() next.

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                      NTU_WTY
                      wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 07:10 last edited by
                      #24

                      @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                      I would connect QProcess::stateChanged() next.

                      I modified the connect line to:

                      connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                      

                      It outputs: QProcess::NotRunning

                      J 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 07:13
                      0
                      • N NTU_WTY
                        30 Aug 2022, 07:10

                        @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                        I would connect QProcess::stateChanged() next.

                        I modified the connect line to:

                        connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                        

                        It outputs: QProcess::NotRunning

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                        JonB
                        wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 07:13 last edited by
                        #25

                        @NTU_WTY
                        Have you put this connect() (indeed any/all connect()s) before your sh->start(program, arguments);? We want this signal connected and reporting before it attempts to start the program.

                        N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 07:25
                        0
                        • J JonB
                          30 Aug 2022, 07:13

                          @NTU_WTY
                          Have you put this connect() (indeed any/all connect()s) before your sh->start(program, arguments);? We want this signal connected and reporting before it attempts to start the program.

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                          NTU_WTY
                          wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 07:25 last edited by
                          #26

                          @JonB OK, now it outputs three lines:

                          • QProcess::Starting
                          • QProcess::Running
                          • QProcess::NotRunning
                          J 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 08:08
                          0
                          • N NTU_WTY
                            30 Aug 2022, 07:25

                            @JonB OK, now it outputs three lines:

                            • QProcess::Starting
                            • QProcess::Running
                            • QProcess::NotRunning
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                            JonB
                            wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 08:08 last edited by JonB
                            #27

                            @NTU_WTY
                            So that implies it did start, then ran and stopped running (i.e. finished). I suspect the whole thing is working, it is not evident what "proof" you have that it is not.

                            QProcess *sh = new QProcess(parent);
                            connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
                            connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                            connect(sh, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished),
                                [=](int exitCode, QProcess::ExitStatus exitStatus){ qDebug() << exitCode << exitStatus; });
                            connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [=]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << sh->readAllStandardError(); });
                            connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [=]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << sh->readAllStandardOutput(); });
                            
                            sh->start(program, arguments);
                            

                            It is now up to you to test with various parameters for program and arguments. For example

                            sh->start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "dir");
                            

                            should test that the above code is working as you would expect.

                            sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "--help");
                            

                            should prove that wsl runs, it should report back its "usage".

                            sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "ls");
                            

                            should get your wsl to do an ls and output whatever that outputs, provided wsl allows you do that (I would not know if there is some issue there).

                            N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 09:31
                            1
                            • J JonB
                              30 Aug 2022, 08:08

                              @NTU_WTY
                              So that implies it did start, then ran and stopped running (i.e. finished). I suspect the whole thing is working, it is not evident what "proof" you have that it is not.

                              QProcess *sh = new QProcess(parent);
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                              connect(sh, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished),
                                  [=](int exitCode, QProcess::ExitStatus exitStatus){ qDebug() << exitCode << exitStatus; });
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [=]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << sh->readAllStandardError(); });
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [=]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << sh->readAllStandardOutput(); });
                              
                              sh->start(program, arguments);
                              

                              It is now up to you to test with various parameters for program and arguments. For example

                              sh->start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "dir");
                              

                              should test that the above code is working as you would expect.

                              sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "--help");
                              

                              should prove that wsl runs, it should report back its "usage".

                              sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "ls");
                              

                              should get your wsl to do an ls and output whatever that outputs, provided wsl allows you do that (I would not know if there is some issue there).

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                              NTU_WTY
                              wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 09:31 last edited by NTU_WTY
                              #28

                              @JonB Thank you so much. Do I need to set parent as nullptr? And the readyReadStandardError and readyReadStandardOutput would get error so I comment them first. Here's the code I slightly modified:

                              QProcess *sh = new QProcess();
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
                              connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                              connect(sh, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished),[=](int exitCode, QProcess::ExitStatus exitStatus){ qDebug() << exitCode << exitStatus; });
                              //connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << readAllStandardError(); });
                              //connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << readAllStandardOutput(); });
                              
                              QString program = "cmd";
                              QStringList arguments;
                              arguments << "/c" << "dir" << ">>" << "C:\\Temp\\dir_res.txt";
                              //arguments << "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe" << "ls" << ">>" << "C:\\Temp\\ls_res.txt";
                              sh->start(program, arguments);
                              

                              The dir command successfully list the files in dir_res.txt with Qt output as:

                              • QProcess::Starting
                              • QProcess::Running
                              • QProcess::NotRunning
                              • 0 QProcess::NormalExit

                              The wsl command still creates empty file in ls_res.txt with Qt output as:

                              • QProcess::Starting
                              • QProcess::Running
                              • QProcess::NotRunning
                              • 1 QProcess::NormalExit

                              if I change the program directly to "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", the output is:

                              • QProcess::Starting
                              • QProcess::NotRunning
                              • QProcess::FailedToStart
                              J 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 10:03
                              0
                              • N NTU_WTY
                                30 Aug 2022, 09:31

                                @JonB Thank you so much. Do I need to set parent as nullptr? And the readyReadStandardError and readyReadStandardOutput would get error so I comment them first. Here's the code I slightly modified:

                                QProcess *sh = new QProcess();
                                connect(sh, &QProcess::errorOccurred, this, [](QProcess::ProcessError error) { qDebug() << error; });
                                connect(sh, &QProcess::stateChanged, this, [](QProcess::ProcessState newState) { qDebug() << newState; });
                                connect(sh, QOverload<int, QProcess::ExitStatus>::of(&QProcess::finished),[=](int exitCode, QProcess::ExitStatus exitStatus){ qDebug() << exitCode << exitStatus; });
                                //connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << readAllStandardError(); });
                                //connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << readAllStandardOutput(); });
                                
                                QString program = "cmd";
                                QStringList arguments;
                                arguments << "/c" << "dir" << ">>" << "C:\\Temp\\dir_res.txt";
                                //arguments << "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe" << "ls" << ">>" << "C:\\Temp\\ls_res.txt";
                                sh->start(program, arguments);
                                

                                The dir command successfully list the files in dir_res.txt with Qt output as:

                                • QProcess::Starting
                                • QProcess::Running
                                • QProcess::NotRunning
                                • 0 QProcess::NormalExit

                                The wsl command still creates empty file in ls_res.txt with Qt output as:

                                • QProcess::Starting
                                • QProcess::Running
                                • QProcess::NotRunning
                                • 1 QProcess::NormalExit

                                if I change the program directly to "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", the output is:

                                • QProcess::Starting
                                • QProcess::NotRunning
                                • QProcess::FailedToStart
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                                JonB
                                wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 10:03 last edited by
                                #29

                                @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                Do I need to set parent as nullptr?

                                Doesn't matter (for our purposes), this might be a better choice.

                                And the readyReadStandardError and readyReadStandardOutput would get error so I comment them first.

                                No, you are not supposed to comment them out, you are supposed to make them work. Preferably on your own, if you want my help please don't say they "get error", copy & paste the line and the error message. Or do you expect someone to guess what the issue is rather than you doing that?

                                I seem to have to repeat myself. Can you please start by doing as I ask, with code working and my commands. Don't start doing your own commands till those are resolved. I have said we need to get behaviour we understand first before you introduce redirection. Can you please do the 3 commands I wrote, and report the output, before you do your own variations. And you must get the connect(sh, &QProcess::readyRead...s working for these....

                                N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 10:31
                                0
                                • J JonB
                                  30 Aug 2022, 10:03

                                  @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                  Do I need to set parent as nullptr?

                                  Doesn't matter (for our purposes), this might be a better choice.

                                  And the readyReadStandardError and readyReadStandardOutput would get error so I comment them first.

                                  No, you are not supposed to comment them out, you are supposed to make them work. Preferably on your own, if you want my help please don't say they "get error", copy & paste the line and the error message. Or do you expect someone to guess what the issue is rather than you doing that?

                                  I seem to have to repeat myself. Can you please start by doing as I ask, with code working and my commands. Don't start doing your own commands till those are resolved. I have said we need to get behaviour we understand first before you introduce redirection. Can you please do the 3 commands I wrote, and report the output, before you do your own variations. And you must get the connect(sh, &QProcess::readyRead...s working for these....

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                                  NTU_WTY
                                  wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 10:31 last edited by
                                  #30

                                  @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                  &QProc

                                  The error is: Use of undeclared identifier 'readAllStandardError'
                                  I tried this way to make it work (please correct me if I'm wrong):

                                  connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << sh->readAllStandardError(); });
                                  connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << sh->readAllStandardOutput(); });
                                  

                                  After this modification, the output of sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "--help"); is:

                                  • QProcess::Starting
                                  • QProcess::NotRunning
                                  • QProcess::FailedToStart

                                  same as the output of sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "ls");

                                  The output of sh->start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "dir"); is:

                                  QProcess::Starting
                                  QProcess::Running
                                  stdout: " \xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xB0\xCF C \xA4\xA4\xAA\xBA\xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xA8S\xA6\xB3\xBC\xD0\xC5\xD2\xA1""C\r\n \xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xB0\xCF\xA7\xC7\xB8\xB9:  4E94-6F25\r\n\r\n C:\\Users\\USER\\Documents\\Code\\Qt\\build-testQT-Desktop_Qt_5_15_2_MinGW_32_bit-Debug \xAA\xBA\xA5\xD8\xBF\xFD\r\n\r\n"
                                  stdout: "2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26    <DIR>          .\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26    <DIR>          ..\r\n2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:37               985 .qmake.stash\r\n2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 04:29    <DIR>          .qtc_clangd\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:29    <DIR>          debug\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            27,314 Makefile\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            36,629 Makefile.Debug\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            36,723 Makefile.Release\r\n"
                                  stdout: "2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:37    <DIR>          release\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:04                 0 res.txt\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 10:13    <DIR>          Test\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43             2,976 ui_mainwindow.h\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:55                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp1ia32l\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp1raevz\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 04:50                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp6vdzgw\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:45                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpc2kqux\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 09:05                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpdaqef2\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 10:02                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpeilcjn\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:51                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpfppfsf\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 10:06                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmphst0vl\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 11:18                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpmxin8w\r\n2022/08/26  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 08:19                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmppjmq8y\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 10:08                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpxs1ja2\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:15                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpypomgz\r\n              18 \xAD\xD3\xC0\xC9\xAE\xD7         104,627 \xA6\xEC\xA4\xB8\xB2\xD5\r\n"
                                  stdout: "               6 \xAD\xD3\xA5\xD8\xBF\xFD  597,839,917,056 \xA6\xEC\xA4\xB8\xB2\xD5\xA5i\xA5\xCE\r\n"
                                  QProcess::NotRunning
                                  0 QProcess::NormalExit
                                  
                                  J 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 10:57
                                  0
                                  • N NTU_WTY
                                    30 Aug 2022, 10:31

                                    @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                    &QProc

                                    The error is: Use of undeclared identifier 'readAllStandardError'
                                    I tried this way to make it work (please correct me if I'm wrong):

                                    connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardError, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stderr:" << sh->readAllStandardError(); });
                                    connect(sh, &QProcess::readyReadStandardOutput, this, [sh]() { qDebug() << "stdout:" << sh->readAllStandardOutput(); });
                                    

                                    After this modification, the output of sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "--help"); is:

                                    • QProcess::Starting
                                    • QProcess::NotRunning
                                    • QProcess::FailedToStart

                                    same as the output of sh->start("C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe", QStringList() << "ls");

                                    The output of sh->start("cmd", QStringList() << "/c" << "dir"); is:

                                    QProcess::Starting
                                    QProcess::Running
                                    stdout: " \xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xB0\xCF C \xA4\xA4\xAA\xBA\xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xA8S\xA6\xB3\xBC\xD0\xC5\xD2\xA1""C\r\n \xBA\xCF\xBA\xD0\xB0\xCF\xA7\xC7\xB8\xB9:  4E94-6F25\r\n\r\n C:\\Users\\USER\\Documents\\Code\\Qt\\build-testQT-Desktop_Qt_5_15_2_MinGW_32_bit-Debug \xAA\xBA\xA5\xD8\xBF\xFD\r\n\r\n"
                                    stdout: "2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26    <DIR>          .\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26    <DIR>          ..\r\n2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:37               985 .qmake.stash\r\n2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 04:29    <DIR>          .qtc_clangd\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:29    <DIR>          debug\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            27,314 Makefile\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            36,629 Makefile.Debug\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43            36,723 Makefile.Release\r\n"
                                    stdout: "2022/08/23  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 06:37    <DIR>          release\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:04                 0 res.txt\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 10:13    <DIR>          Test\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:43             2,976 ui_mainwindow.h\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:55                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp1ia32l\r\n2022/08/30  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:26                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp1raevz\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 04:50                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmp6vdzgw\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 09:45                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpc2kqux\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 09:05                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpdaqef2\r\n2022/08/24  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 10:02                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpeilcjn\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:51                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpfppfsf\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 10:06                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmphst0vl\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 11:18                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpmxin8w\r\n2022/08/26  \xA4W\xA4\xC8 08:19                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmppjmq8y\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 10:08                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpxs1ja2\r\n2022/08/29  \xA4U\xA4\xC8 03:15                 0 usersuserappdatalocaltemptmpypomgz\r\n              18 \xAD\xD3\xC0\xC9\xAE\xD7         104,627 \xA6\xEC\xA4\xB8\xB2\xD5\r\n"
                                    stdout: "               6 \xAD\xD3\xA5\xD8\xBF\xFD  597,839,917,056 \xA6\xEC\xA4\xB8\xB2\xD5\xA5i\xA5\xCE\r\n"
                                    QProcess::NotRunning
                                    0 QProcess::NormalExit
                                    
                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    JonB
                                    wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 10:57 last edited by JonB
                                    #31

                                    @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                    The error is: Use of undeclared identifier 'readAllStandardError'

                                    I think you copied what I had written when I first posted, I corrected that to sh->readAll....() soon after as you can see in my earlier post and that is what you have now, so you are seeing the output correctly.

                                    So you now show the dir command working just as we would expect, good. Now you must try the other two. Ah, I see you are saying with C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe as the command you always get QProcess::FailedToStart, right? Well, you were the one who said this is the full path to the wsl executable, not me! Before we revert to trying to call it via cmd /c, could you please tell me exactly what you have in C:\Windows\System32 directory which is wsl-something?

                                    N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 12:00
                                    0
                                    • J JonB
                                      30 Aug 2022, 10:57

                                      @NTU_WTY said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                      The error is: Use of undeclared identifier 'readAllStandardError'

                                      I think you copied what I had written when I first posted, I corrected that to sh->readAll....() soon after as you can see in my earlier post and that is what you have now, so you are seeing the output correctly.

                                      So you now show the dir command working just as we would expect, good. Now you must try the other two. Ah, I see you are saying with C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe as the command you always get QProcess::FailedToStart, right? Well, you were the one who said this is the full path to the wsl executable, not me! Before we revert to trying to call it via cmd /c, could you please tell me exactly what you have in C:\Windows\System32 directory which is wsl-something?

                                      N Offline
                                      N Offline
                                      NTU_WTY
                                      wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 12:00 last edited by
                                      #32

                                      @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                      could you please tell me exactly what you have in C:\Windows\System32 directory which is wsl-something?

                                      There are 3 files containing "wsl" in my C:\Windows\System32 directory by entering dir "wsl*" /s in the terminal:

                                      • wsl.exe
                                      • wslapi.dll
                                      • wslconfig.exe
                                      J 2 Replies Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 12:08
                                      0
                                      • N NTU_WTY
                                        30 Aug 2022, 12:00

                                        @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                        could you please tell me exactly what you have in C:\Windows\System32 directory which is wsl-something?

                                        There are 3 files containing "wsl" in my C:\Windows\System32 directory by entering dir "wsl*" /s in the terminal:

                                        • wsl.exe
                                        • wslapi.dll
                                        • wslconfig.exe
                                        J Offline
                                        J Offline
                                        JonB
                                        wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 12:08 last edited by
                                        #33

                                        @NTU_WTY
                                        Then I have no idea why you cannot execute C:\Windows\System32\wsl.exe from QProcess, and you get QProcess::FailedToStart.

                                        So the best we can do is run these:

                                        sh->start("cmd", QStringList() "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe --help");
                                        sh->start("cmd", QStringList() "/c" << "C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe ls");
                                        

                                        If you have to enter just wsl instead of C:\\Windows\\System32\\wsl.exe then please do so. We want to see whether either of these send back any output.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • N NTU_WTY
                                          30 Aug 2022, 12:00

                                          @JonB said in How to use Windows QT to call WSL cmd?:

                                          could you please tell me exactly what you have in C:\Windows\System32 directory which is wsl-something?

                                          There are 3 files containing "wsl" in my C:\Windows\System32 directory by entering dir "wsl*" /s in the terminal:

                                          • wsl.exe
                                          • wslapi.dll
                                          • wslconfig.exe
                                          J Offline
                                          J Offline
                                          JonB
                                          wrote on 30 Aug 2022, 12:24 last edited by
                                          #34

                                          @NTU_WTY
                                          BIG QUESTION (possibly): Are you compiling your Qt application as 64-bit or as 32-bit??

                                          N 1 Reply Last reply 30 Aug 2022, 12:31
                                          0

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                                          30 Aug 2022, 07:10

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