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How to execute a shell script from C in Linux?

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c

linux

shell

How can I execute a shell script from C in Linux?

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Jan Deinhard Avatar asked Sep 17 '10 14:09

Jan Deinhard


2 Answers

It depends on what you want to do with the script (or any other program you want to run).

If you just want to run the script system is the easiest thing to do, but it does some other stuff too, including running a shell and having it run the command (/bin/sh under most *nix).

If you want to either feed the shell script via its standard input or consume its standard output you can use popen (and pclose) to set up a pipe. This also uses the shell (/bin/sh under most *nix) to run the command.

Both of these are library functions that do a lot under the hood, but if they don't meet your needs (or you just want to experiment and learn) you can also use system calls directly. This also allows you do avoid having the shell (/bin/sh) run your command for you.

The system calls of interest are fork, execve, and waitpid. You may want to use one of the library wrappers around execve (type man 3 exec for a list of them). You may also want to use one of the other wait functions (man 2 wait has them all). Additionally you may be interested in the system calls clone and vfork which are related to fork.

fork duplicates the current program, where the only main difference is that the new process gets 0 returned from the call to fork. The parent process gets the new process's process id (or an error) returned.

execve replaces the current program with a new program (keeping the same process id).

waitpid is used by a parent process to wait on a particular child process to finish.

Having the fork and execve steps separate allows programs to do some setup for the new process before it is created (without messing up itself). These include changing standard input, output, and stderr to be different files than the parent process used, changing the user or group of the process, closing files that the child won't need, changing the session, or changing the environmental variables.

You may also be interested in the pipe and dup2 system calls. pipe creates a pipe (with both an input and an output file descriptor). dup2 duplicates a file descriptor as a specific file descriptor (dup is similar but duplicates a file descriptor to the lowest available file descriptor).

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nategoose Avatar answered Oct 10 '22 15:10

nategoose


You can use system:

system("/usr/local/bin/foo.sh"); 

This will block while executing it using sh -c, then return the status code.

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Matthew Flaschen Avatar answered Oct 10 '22 14:10

Matthew Flaschen