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cmake/Source/cmWin32ProcessExecution.h

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/*=========================================================================
Program: CMake - Cross-Platform Makefile Generator
Module: $RCSfile: cmWin32ProcessExecution.h,v $
Language: C++
Date: $Date: 2006-05-12 18:12:13 $
Version: $Revision: 1.13 $
Copyright (c) 2002 Kitware, Inc., Insight Consortium. All rights reserved.
See Copyright.txt or http://www.cmake.org/HTML/Copyright.html for details.
This software is distributed WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. See the above copyright notices for more information.
=========================================================================*/
#ifndef cmWin32ProcessExecution_h
#define cmWin32ProcessExecution_h
#include "cmStandardIncludes.h"
#include "windows.h"
class cmMakefile;
/** \class cmWin32ProcessExecution
* \brief A process executor for windows
*
* cmWin32ProcessExecution is a class that provides a "clean" way of
* executing processes on Windows. It is modified code from Python 2.1
* distribution.
*
* Portable 'popen' replacement for Win32.
*
* Written by Bill Tutt <billtut@microsoft.com>. Minor tweaks and 2.0
* integration by Fredrik Lundh <fredrik@pythonware.com> Return code
* handling by David Bolen <db3l@fitlinxx.com>.
*
* Modified for CMake.
*
* For more information, please check Microsoft Knowledge Base
* Articles Q190351 and Q150956.
*/
class cmWin32ProcessExecution
{
public:
cmWin32ProcessExecution()
{
this->HideWindows = false;
this->SetConsoleSpawn("w9xpopen.exe");
this->Initialize();
}
~cmWin32ProcessExecution();
///! If true windows will be created hidden.
void SetHideWindows(bool v) { this->HideWindows = v; }
/**
* Initialize the process execution datastructure. Do not call while
* running the process.
*/
void Initialize()
{
this->ProcessHandle = 0;
this->ExitValue = -1;
// Comment this out. Maybe we will need it in the future.
// file IO access to the process might be cool.
//this->StdIn = 0;
//this->StdOut = 0;
//this->StdErr = 0;
this->pStdIn = -1;
this->pStdOut = -1;
this->pStdErr = -1;
}
/**
* Start the process in the directory path. Make sure that the
* executable is either in the path or specify the full path. The
* argument verbose specifies wether or not to display output while
* it is being generated.
*/
bool StartProcess(const char*, const char* path, bool verbose);
/**
* Wait for the process to finish. If timeout is specified, it will
* break the process after timeout expires. (Timeout code is not yet
* implemented.
*/
bool Wait(int timeout);
/**
* Get the output of the process (mixed stdout and stderr) as
* std::string.
*/
const std::string GetOutput() const { return this->Output; }
/**
* Get the return value of the process. If the process is still
* running, the return value is -1.
*/
int GetExitValue() const { return this->ExitValue; }
/**
* On Windows 9x there is a bug in the process execution code which
* may result in blocking. That is why this workaround is
* used. Specify the console spawn, which should run the
* Windows9xHack code.
*/
void SetConsoleSpawn(const char* prog) { this->ConsoleSpawn = prog; }
static int Windows9xHack(const char* command);
/** Code from a Borland web site with the following explaination :
* In this article, I will explain how to spawn a console
* application and redirect its standard input/output using
* anonymous pipes. An anonymous pipe is a pipe that goes only in
* one direction (read pipe, write pipe, etc.). Maybe you are
* asking, "why would I ever need to do this sort of thing?" One
* example would be a Windows telnet server, where you spawn a shell
* and listen on a port and send and receive data between the shell
* and the socket client. (Windows does not really have a built-in
* remote shell). First, we should talk about pipes. A pipe in
* Windows is simply a method of communication, often between
* process. The SDK defines a pipe as "a communication conduit with
* two ends; a process with a handle to one end can communicate with
* a process having a handle to the other end." In our case, we are
* using "anonymous" pipes, one-way pipes that "transfer data
* between a parent process and a child process or between two child
* processes of the same parent process." It's easiest to imagine a
* pipe as its namesake. An actual pipe running between processes
* that can carry data. We are using anonymous pipes because the
* console app we are spawning is a child process. We use the
* CreatePipe function which will create an anonymous pipe and
* return a read handle and a write handle. We will create two
* pipes, on for stdin and one for stdout. We will then monitor the
* read end of the stdout pipe to check for display on our child
* process. Every time there is something availabe for reading, we
* will display it in our app. Consequently, we check for input in
* our app and send it off to the write end of the stdin pipe.
*/
static bool BorlandRunCommand(const char* command,
const char* dir,
std::string& output, int& retVal,
bool verbose,
int timeout, bool hideWindows);
private:
bool CloseHandles();
bool PrivateOpen(const char*, const char*, int, int);
bool PrivateClose(int timeout);
HANDLE ProcessHandle;
HANDLE hChildStdinRd;
HANDLE hChildStdinWr;
HANDLE hChildStdoutRd;
HANDLE hChildStdoutWr;
HANDLE hChildStderrRd;
HANDLE hChildStderrWr;
HANDLE hChildStdinWrDup;
HANDLE hChildStdoutRdDup;
HANDLE hChildStderrRdDup;
int pStdIn;
int pStdOut;
int pStdErr;
int ExitValue;
std::string Output;
std::string ConsoleSpawn;
bool Verbose;
bool HideWindows;
};
#endif