27

Is there a way to redirect the standard output of a process in Win32 console to a named pipe? Named pipes are built in to Windows and while they would be an useful concept, I've never seen them used from command line.

Ie. like example.exe >\\.\mypipe. (This syntax may not be correct but you get the point.) I would like to be able to redirect stdout and stderr to different pipes at the same time.

I would like to avoid using physical files as a substitute, to escape dealing with IO slowness, IO buffers, file locks, access rights, available hard disk space, decision to overwrite, unmeant persistence, etc.

Another reason is because the traditional Windows set of tools are not designed around a (text) file based philosophy as much as in Unix. Also, named pipes couldn't easily be mounted in Windows, if at all.

Finally, there is the curiosity if a good concept could be put into good use.

2
  • 1
    You mean like redirecting to a named pipe or a mailslot ? Do you have / are willing to write the receiving end ?
    – ixe013
    May 30, 2012 at 12:38
  • Yes, like to a named pipe or mailslot. I don't yet have but willing to write the receiving end.
    – n611x007
    Oct 6, 2012 at 10:06

3 Answers 3

9

I'm not sure why you don't want to redirect to a file. There are two methods I will provide here. One method is to redirect to and read from a file, the other is a set of programs.


Named pipes

What I did was write two programs for .NET 4. One sends output to a named pipe, the other reads from this pipe and displays to the console. Usage is quite simple:

asdf.exe | NamedPipeServer.exe "APipeName"

In another console window:

NamedPipeClient.exe "APipeName"

Unfortunately, this can only redirect stdout (or stdin, or combined), not stderr by itself, due to limitations in the pipe operator (|) in the Windows Command Prompt. If you figure out how to send stderr through that pipe operator, it should work. Alternatively, the server could be modified to launch your program and specifically redirect stderr. If that is necessary, let me know in a comment (or do it yourself); it's not too difficult if you have some C# and .NET "Process" library knowledge.

You can download the server and the client.

If you close the server after connection, the client will close immediately. If you close the client after connection, the server will close as soon as you try to send something through it. It's not possible to reconnect a broken pipe, mostly because I can't be bothered doing something so complicated right now. It's also limited to one client per server.

Source code

These are written in C#. There's not much point trying to explain it. They use the .NET NamedPipeServerStream and NamedPipeClientStream.

The server:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.IO.Pipes;
using System.IO;

namespace NamedPipeServer
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            if (args == null || args.Length == 0)
            {
                Console.Error.WriteLine("[NamedPipeServer]: Need pipe name.");
                return;
            }
            
            NamedPipeServerStream PipeServer = new NamedPipeServerStream(args[0], System.IO.Pipes.PipeDirection.Out);
            PipeServer.WaitForConnection();
            StreamWriter PipeWriter = new StreamWriter(PipeServer);
            PipeWriter.AutoFlush = true;

            string tempWrite;

            while ((tempWrite = Console.ReadLine()) != null)
            {
                try
                {
                    PipeWriter.WriteLine(tempWrite);
                }
                catch (IOException ex)
                {
                    if (ex.Message == "Pipe is broken.")
                    {
                        Console.Error.WriteLine("[NamedPipeServer]: NamedPipeClient was closed, exiting");
                        return;
                    }
                }
            }

            PipeWriter.Close();
            PipeServer.Close();
        }
    }
}

The client:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.IO.Pipes;
using System.IO;

namespace NamedPipeClient
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            if (args == null || args.Length == 0)
            {
                Console.Error.WriteLine("[NamedPipeClient]: Need pipe name.");
                return;
            }

            NamedPipeClientStream PipeClient = new NamedPipeClientStream(".", args[0], System.IO.Pipes.PipeDirection.In);
            PipeClient.Connect();
            StreamReader PipeReader = new StreamReader(PipeClient);

            string tempRead;

            while ((tempRead = PipeReader.ReadLine()) != null)
            {
                Console.WriteLine(tempRead);
            }

            PipeReader.Close();
            PipeClient.Close();
        }
    }
}

Redirecting to a file

type NUL>StdErr.temp
start powershell -c Get-Content StdErr.temp -Wait
MyExecutable.exe 2>StdErr.temp
  1. Create an empty file
  2. Start a new console window that watches the file
  3. Run executable and redirect stderr output to that file

This provides the desired effect of one console window to watch stdout (and provide stdin), and another to watch stderr.

Anything that mimics tail would work. The PowerShell method works natively in Windows, but may be a bit slow (i.e. there's some latency between the writing to the file and the displaying to the screen). See this StackOverflow question for other tail alternatives.

The only problem is the temporary file may grow quite large. A possible workaround is to run a loop that only prints if the file has content and clear the file immediately afterwards, but that would cause a race condition.

2
  • 3
    UNIX users are the ones that are annoyed because Windows fails yet again to implement a 40 year old idea in a sensible way. You shouldn't need to write a custom program every time you want to do a basic thing. facepalm
    – bambams
    Oct 25, 2013 at 14:58
  • 1
    See below: you can use the UNC path assigned to a named pipe, and access it directly. Nov 16, 2017 at 11:06
34

I am surprised that this has't been answered correctly already. There is indeed a UNC path assigned to named pipes by the system, accessible on any machine in the network, which can be used like a normal file:

program.exe >\\.\pipe\StdOutPipe 2>\\.\pipe\StdErrPipe

Assuming pipes named "StdOutPipe" and "StdErrPipe" exist on this machine, this attempts to connect and write to them. The pipe part is what specifies that you want a named pipe.

4
  • 1
    I think this should be marked as the correct answer as Is just what is asking @n611x007 not external programs are required for doing this!
    – arturn
    Oct 27, 2017 at 6:59
  • 1
    the problem is that you still need to launch a service of some kind that creates those pipes.... they do not exist independently of a program that created and are destroyed when the program goes away. Nov 16, 2017 at 11:08
  • 3
    @ErikAronesty I assumed these pipes already exist. Otherwise, there is no way to create them only with cmd.exe.
    – IS4
    Nov 16, 2017 at 14:26
  • Yeah that's the cool thing about unix pipes, you can create pipes from the command line Nov 28, 2017 at 13:51
-1

Your preferences for a Windows pipe of data from a server to a client dos window either immediately or later might be satisfied with a small RAM drive. The same memory gets allocated for the data, written/read with a file-system-like name. The client either deletes the used-up file and waits for another, or leaves it to disappear when the computer shuts down.

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