CSC352 Homework 3 2013

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--D. Thiebaut (talk) 14:38, 9 October 2013 (EDT)



This assignment is due on 10/22/13 during class. You can work in pairs on this if you desire, but only if you follow the pair-programming model, where two programmers work together at one computer.


The Idea


The idea is to start programming for our collage app. At some point, it is very likely that we will want to have some Linux machines run some C/MPI programs in the background to scale images on the fly, or perform some time consuming task, and there will be a Processing/Java program that will be in charge of interacting with the user(s) and display the collage.

So we need to figure out how to interface Java and C programs. This is the purpose of this assignment.

Interfacing C and Java


One way to exchange data between the C program (we'll call it the producer) and the Java program (the consumer) is to use a Linux fifo. Please read the information about mkfifo in Wikipedia. Mkfifo allows your programs to be written as if they were exchanging data by having the producer write the data to a file, and the consumer read the data from the same file. Mkfifo makes the file temporary and erases it when the exchange is done. That simple!

Good Tutorial on the Subject


The tutorial "How to connect a C/C++ process to a Java application (link) is very good. Please give it a quick reading. It will give you an idea of what we have to do in C and Java for the two to talk to each other. Below I created a simpler version of the Producer and Consumer for you to play with.

A Producer in C: producer1.c


/*
producer1.c
D. Thiebaut
This program generates N random numbers in an array,
sorts them, and sends them out to a java application
through a Linux Fifo.  See the Linux command mkfifo
for more information.

The java application is called consumer1.java.
To compile and run both:

   gcc -o producer1 producer1.c
   javac Consumer1.java
 
   mkfifo temp
 
   java Consumer1 &           # run in the background
   ./producer1

This example is inspired by the good tutorial at this URL: 
http://research.engineering.wustl.edu/~beardj/CtoJava.html
 */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <stdint.h>

#define N 100

// -----------------------------------------------------
// comp(): a comparator function to compare to different
// integers
int comp (const void * elem1, const void * elem2) {
  int f = *( (int*) elem1 ); // typecast elem1 to become a pointer to an int,
  int s = *( (int*) elem2 ); // then dereference elem1 to get the int it's pointing to
  if (f > s) return  1;
  if (f < s) return -1;
  return 0;
}

// ===================== M A I N =======================
int main(int argc, const char** argv){
  int i, array[N];
  const char* outFile = "temp";

  //--- seed random number generator ---
  srand ( 123 );
  for ( i=0; i<N; i++ )
    array[i]  = rand() % 1000; // numbers in [0,1000[

  //--- sort the N ints in the array "array",  ---
  //--- using comparator comp()                ---
  qsort( array, N, sizeof( int ), comp );

  //--- open fifo for writing ---
  FILE *fp_out = fopen(outFile,"w");

  //--- output dimension N, then all N ints ---
  fprintf( fp_out, "%d\n", N );
  for ( i=0; i<N; i++ )
    fprintf( fp_out, "%d\n", array[i] );

   //--- close output fifo ---
   fclose(fp_out);
   return( 0 ); // success
}


The Java Consumer: Consumer1.java


/*
  Consumer1.java
  D. Thiebaut
  the consumer part of the producer-consumer example made of 
  producer1.c and consumer1.java

  To compile and run:
   gcc -o producer1 producer1.c
   javac Consumer1.java
 
   mkfifo temp
 
   java Consumer1 &           # run in the background
   ./producer1

  Example inspired by the good tutorial at 
  http://research.engineering.wustl.edu/~beardj/CtoJava.html
 */
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.FileReader;
import java.util.ArrayList;

public class Consumer1{    
    //--- the external FIFO we'll use.  It's a file ---
    //--- that Linux will manage as a FIFO for us   ---
    private static final String FIFO = "temp"; 
    
    public static void main(String[] args){
	BufferedReader in = null;
	ArrayList<Integer> array = new ArrayList<Integer>();
	int N = 0, count = 0;
	boolean firstLine = true;

	try{
	    in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(FIFO));
	    while ( in.ready() ) {
		String line = in.readLine().trim();
		int x = Integer.parseInt( line );
		if ( firstLine ) {
		    N = x;
		    firstLine = false;
		}
		else {
		    array.add( x );
		    count++;
		}
	    }
	    in.close();
	} catch( IOException ex ){
	    System.err.println( "IO Exception at buffered read!!" );
	    System.exit( -1 );
	}
	
	//--- we're done.  Display what we received
	System.out.println( "Expected " + N + " ints, received " + count + " ints");
	for ( int x: array )
	    System.out.print( x + " " );
	System.out.println( "\n\n" );
   }
}

Compile and Run

  • This should work on your MacBook, as mkfifo should be part of OS X, but if you run into trouble, run this on Beowulf.
  • Create the C and Java programs listed above.
  • Compile both:
      gcc -o producer1  producer1.c
      javac Consumer1.java
  • Create a file named temp (that's the name used by both the C and Java programs when accessing the external file) that Linux will use as a fifo:
      mkfifo temp
  • Run both programs, starting with the consumer, since it is waiting on the producer to actually process the data, and then with the producer. Adding the & symbol at the end of the line starting the java program runs it in the background. It is important to do so, otherwise you would be stuck waiting for Consumer1 to be done before being able to type a new command, but Consumer1 cannot be done until you have started producer1...


       java Consumer1  &
       ./producer1

       Expected 100 ints, received 100 ints
       8 9 16 46 60 67 79 99 100 104 107 109 114 131 135 156 166 167 187 190 225 236 243 254 
       261 272 272 275 275 293 293 294 305 317 321 330 330 335 340 344 351 371 373 400 403 
       427 434 439 449 455 459 467 469 511 515 519 522 523 531 534 539 540 553 563 578 592 
       598 606 620 623 634 667 677 685 696 702 711 715 718 719 720 725 761 766 798 804 804 
       810 814 828 857 895 911 912 930 936 938 979 989 992