1. Yes. A file handle to a pipe connected to the stdout of the child (KID) process started by the forked open.

    Since you know enough to write this, I obviously don't need to explain that further. Everything you need to know is in the documentation I've already pointed at.

  2. No. It allows reading from the stdout out of the child process.

    All you need to do is arrange for pmemd to write the file you are interested in to stdout.

    On Win*, You can con [sic] a program into writing to the console instead of the filesystem but asking it to write to the psuedo-filename con.

    You supply that string as a filename, the program opens the file in the normal way and writes to it, completely unaware that its output is going to the console. Where it can be read by a monitoring process via pipe.

  3. As I explained, I do not know for certain that /dev/tty is the correct psuedo-filehandle equivalent of con.

    It could even be that there is no way to do this on *nix. I'd be surprised, but it is possible,

    You'll need to look up the documentation on your system to find that answer. It is beyond my knowledge.


Examine what is said, not who speaks -- Silence betokens consent -- Love the truth but pardon error.
"Science is about questioning the status quo. Questioning authority".
In the absence of evidence, opinion is indistinguishable from prejudice.
RIP PCW It is as I've been saying!(Audio until 20090817)

In reply to Re^5: How to monitor a child process from a perl script by BrowserUk
in thread How to monitor a child process from a perl script by oscarjiao

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