You can use the popen and pclose commands to read and write data through a pipe to a system command as if it were a file.
Like fopen, popen opens a pipe for reading or writing depending on the second mode argument ("r" or "w") and returns a file handle representing the pipe. You can then use the standard file functions for reading and writing on the pipe’s file handle (fprint, fgetword, fgetline, etc.).
If popen returns 0 something went wrong with the system command.
For example:
// Unix specific example. Note: if you really want to get a directory // listing, please use the "getFileList" command instead. This is just // used as a simple example. // $pipe = popen( "ls -1", "r" ); string $dirList[]; while ( !feof( $pipe ) ) { $dirList[size( $dirList )] = fgetline( $pipe ); } pclose( $pipe ); // Windows specific example. Note: if you really want to get a directory // listing, please use the "getFileList" command instead. This is just // used as a simple example. // $pipe = popen( "DIR /B", "r" ); string $dirList[]; while ( !feof( $pipe ) ) { $dirList[size( $dirList )] = fgetline( $pipe ); } pclose( $pipe );