Sys::Cmd - run a system command or spawn a system processes
0.99.0 (2022-10-05)
use Sys::Cmd qw/run spawn/; # Get command output, raise exception on failure: $output = run(@cmd); # Feed command some input, get output as lines, # raise exception on failure: @output = run( @cmd, { input => 'feedme' } ); # Spawn and interact with a process somewhere else: $proc = spawn( @cmd, { dir => '/', encoding => 'encoding(iso-8859-3)' }, ); while ( my $line = $proc->stdout->getline ) { $proc->stdin->print("thanks\n"); } my @errors = $proc->stderr->getlines; $proc->close(); # Finished talking to file handles $proc->wait_child(); # Cleanup # read exit information $proc->exit(); # exit status $proc->signal(); # signal $proc->core(); # core dumped? (boolean)
Sys::Cmd lets you run system commands and capture their output, or spawn and interact with a system process through its STDIN, STDOUT, and STDERR file handles. The following functions are exported on demand by this module:
STDIN
STDOUT
STDERR
Execute @cmd and return what the command sent to its STDOUT, raising an exception in the event of error. In array context returns a list instead of a plain string.
@cmd
The first element of @cmd determines what/how things are run:
If it is a relative file name it is executed directly using Proc::Spawn.
If it is a CODE reference (subroutine) Sys::Cmd forks before running it in the child process. This is not supported on Win32.
Everything else is looked up using File::Which and then executed with Proc::Spawn.
The command input and environment can be modified with an optional hashref containing the following key/values:
The working directory the command will be run in.
An string value identifying the encoding of the input/output file-handles. Defaults to 'utf8'.
A hashref containing key/values to be added to the current environment at run-time. If a key has an undefined value then the key is removed from the environment altogether.
A string which is fed to the command via its standard input, which is then closed.
The same as the run function but with the command's STDERR output appended to the STDOUT output.
run
Return a Sys::Cmd object (documented below) representing the process running @cmd, with attributes set according to the optional \%opt hashref. The first element of @cmd determines the execution method just like the run() function.
run()
Sys::Cmd objects can of course be created using the standard new constructor if you prefer that to the spawn function:
new
spawn
$proc = Sys::Cmd->new( cmd => \@cmd, dir => '/', env => { SOME => 'VALUE' }, enc => 'iso-8859-3', input => 'feedme', on_exit => sub { my $proc = shift; print $proc->pid .' exited with '. $proc->exit; }, );
Note that Sys::Cmd objects created this way will not lookup the command using File::Which the way the run, runx and spawn functions do. CODE references in $cmd[0] are however still recognized and forked off.
runx
$cmd[0]
Sys::Cmd uses Log::Any debug calls for logging purposes. An easy way to see the output is to add use Log::Any::Adapter 'Stdout' in your program.
debug
use Log::Any::Adapter 'Stdout'
Spawns a process based on %args. %args must contain at least a cmd value, and optionally encoding, env, dir and input values as defined as attributes below.
cmd
encoding
env
dir
input
If an on_exit subref argument is provided it will be called by the wait_child method, which can either be called manually or will be automatically called when the object is destroyed.
on_exit
wait_child
All attributes are read-only.
An array ref containing the command or CODE reference (UNIX only) and its arguments.
A string which is fed to the command via its standard input, which is then closed. This is a shortcut for printing to, and closing the command's stdin file-handle. An empty string will close the command's standard input without writing to it. On some systems, some commands may close standard input on startup, which will cause a SIGPIPE when trying to write to it for which Sys::Cmd will warn.
The command's process ID.
The command's STDIN file handle, based on IO::Handle so you can call print() etc methods on it. Autoflush is automatically enabled on this handle.
The command's STDOUT file handle, based on IO::Handle so you can call getline() etc methods on it.
The command's STDERR file handle, based on IO::Handle so you can call getline() etc methods on it.
The command's exit value, shifted by 8 (see "perldoc -f system"). Set by wait_child().
wait_child()
The signal number (if any) that terminated the command, bitwise-added with 127 (see "perldoc -f system"). Set by wait_child().
A boolean indicating the process core was dumped. Set by wait_child().
In array context returns a list of the command and its arguments. In scalar context returns a string of the command and its arguments joined together by spaces.
Close all filehandles to the child process. Note that file handles will automaticaly be closed when the Sys::Cmd object is destroyed. Annoyingly, this means that in the following example $fh will be closed when you tried to use it:
$fh
my $fh = Sys::Cmd->new( %args )->stdout;
So you have to keep track of the Sys::Cmd object manually.
Wait for the child to exit using waitpid, collect the exit status and return it. This method sets the exit, signal and core attributes and will also be called automatically when the Sys::Cmd object is destroyed.
Sys::Cmd::Template
AnyEvent::Run, AnyEvent::Util, Argv, Capture::Tiny, Child, Forks::Super, IO::Pipe, IPC::Capture, IPC::Cmd, IPC::Command::Multiplex, IPC::Exe, IPC::Open3, IPC::Open3::Simple, IPC::Run, IPC::Run3, IPC::RunSession::Simple, IPC::ShellCmd, IPC::System::Simple, POE::Pipe::TwoWay, Proc::Background, Proc::Fork, Proc::Spawn, Spawn::Safe, System::Command
This distribution is managed via github:
https://github.com/mlawren/sys-cmd/tree/devel
This distribution follows the semantic versioning model:
http://semver.org/
Code is tidied up on Git commit using githook-perltidy:
http://github.com/mlawren/githook-perltidy
Mark Lawrence <nomad@null.net>, based heavily on Git::Repository::Command by Philippe Bruhat (BooK).
Copyright 2011-2021 Mark Lawrence <nomad@null.net>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
To install Sys::Cmd, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Sys::Cmd
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Sys::Cmd
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.