Can't you do it like this?
# mkfifo fifo
# pppd notty < fifo | pppoe -I eth1 >fifo
/Johan

----- Original Message -----
From: Rob Landley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2001 3:05 AM
Subject: How do I make a circular pipe?


> How do I do the following:
>
> #  --> pppd notty | pppoe -I eth1 | --
>    |_________________________________|
>
> I.E. connect the stdout of a process  (or chain
> thereof) to its own stdin?
>
> So I wrote a program to do it, along the lines of:
>
> sixty-nine /bin/sh -c "pppd notty | pppoe -I eth1"
>
> With an executable approximately along the lines of
> (warning, pseudo-code, the other machine isn't hooked
> up to the internet at the moment for obvious reasons):
>
> int main(int argc, char *argv[], char *envp[])
> {
>   int fd[2];
>   pipe(fd);
>   dup2(fd[0],0);
>   dup2(fd[0],1);
>   execve(argv[1],argv+1,envp);
>   fprintf(stderr,"Bad.\n");
>   exit(1);
> }
>
> And it didn't work.  I made a little test program that
> writes to stdout and reads from stdin and reports to
> stderr, and it gets nothing.  Apparently, the pipe
> fd's evaporate when the process does an execve.
>
> What do I do?  (If anybody else knows an easier way to
> get pppoe working, that would be helpful too.
>
> Rob
>
> (P.S.  WHY does pppd want to talk to a tty by default
> instead of stdin and stdout?  Were the people who
> wrote it at all familiar with the unix philosophy?
> Just curious...)
>
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