package process
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- class FileProcessLogger extends ProcessLogger with Closeable with Flushable
A scala.sys.process.ProcessLogger that writes output to a file.
- trait Process extends AnyRef
Represents a process that is running or has finished running.
Represents a process that is running or has finished running. It may be a compound process with several underlying native processes (such as
a #&& b
).This trait is often not used directly, though its companion object contains factories for scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder, the main component of this package.
It is used directly when calling the method
run
on aProcessBuilder
, which makes the process run in the background. The methods provided onProcess
make it possible for one to block until the process exits and get the exit value, or destroy the process altogether.- See also
- trait ProcessBuilder extends Source with Sink
Represents a sequence of one or more external processes that can be executed.
Represents a sequence of one or more external processes that can be executed. A
ProcessBuilder
can be a single external process, or a combination of otherProcessBuilder
. One can control where the output of an external process will go to, and where its input will come from, or leave that decision to whoever starts it.One creates a
ProcessBuilder
through factories provided in scala.sys.process.Process's companion object, or implicit conversions based on these factories made available in the package object scala.sys.process. Here are some examples:import scala.sys.process._ // Executes "ls" and sends output to stdout "ls".! // Execute "ls" and assign a `LazyList[String]` of its output to "contents". val contents = Process("ls").lazyLines // Here we use a `Seq` to make the parameter whitespace-safe def contentsOf(dir: String): String = Seq("ls", dir).!!
The methods of
ProcessBuilder
are divided in three categories: the ones that combine twoProcessBuilder
to create a third, the ones that redirect input or output of aProcessBuilder
, and the ones that execute the external processes associated with it.Combining
ProcessBuilder
Two existing
ProcessBuilder
can be combined in the following ways:- They can be executed in parallel, with the output of the first being fed
as input to the second, like Unix pipes. This is achieved with the
#|
method. - They can be executed in sequence, with the second starting as soon as
the first ends. This is done by the
###
method. - The execution of the second one can be conditioned by the return code
(exit status) of the first, either only when it's zero, or only when it's
not zero. The methods
#&&
and#||
accomplish these tasks.
Redirecting Input/Output
Though control of input and output can be done when executing the process, there's a few methods that create a new
ProcessBuilder
with a pre-configured input or output. They are#<
,#>
and#>>
, and may take as input either anotherProcessBuilder
(like the pipe described above), or something else such as ajava.io.File
or ajava.io.InputStream
. For example:new URL("https://databinder.net/dispatch/About") #> "grep JSON" #>> new File("About_JSON") !
Starting Processes
To execute all external commands associated with a
ProcessBuilder
, one may use one of four groups of methods. Each of these methods have various overloads and variations to enable further control over the I/O. These methods are:run
: the most general method, it returns a scala.sys.process.Process immediately, and the external command executes concurrently.!
: blocks until all external commands exit, and returns the exit code of the last one in the chain of execution.!!
: blocks until all external commands exit, and returns aString
with the output generated.lazyLines
: returns immediately likerun
, and the output being generated is provided through aLazyList[String]
. Getting the next element of thatLazyList
may block until it becomes available. This method will throw an exception if the return code is different than zero -- if this is not desired, use thelazyLines_!
method.
Handling Input and Output
If not specified, the input of the external commands executed with
run
or!
will not be tied to anything, and the output will be redirected to the stdout and stderr of the Scala process. For the methods!!
andlazyLines
, no input will be provided, and the output will be directed according to the semantics of these methods.Some methods will cause stdin to be used as input. Output can be controlled with a scala.sys.process.ProcessLogger --
!!
andlazyLines
will only redirect error output when passed aProcessLogger
. If one desires full control over input and output, then a scala.sys.process.ProcessIO can be used withrun
.For example, we could silence the error output from
lazyLines_!
like this:val etcFiles = "find /etc" lazyLines_! ProcessLogger(line => ())
Extended Example
Let's examine in detail one example of usage:
import scala.sys.process._ "find src -name *.scala -exec grep null {} ;" #| "xargs test -z" #&& "echo null-free" #|| "echo null detected" !
Note that every
String
is implicitly converted into aProcessBuilder
through the implicits imported from scala.sys.process. TheseProcessBuilder
are then combined in three different ways.#|
pipes the output of the first command into the input of the second command. It mirrors a shell pipe (|
).#&&
conditionally executes the second command if the previous one finished with exit value 0. It mirrors shell's&&
.#||
conditionally executes the third command if the exit value of the previous command is different than zero. It mirrors shell's||
.
Finally,
!
at the end executes the commands, and returns the exit value. Whatever is printed will be sent to the Scala process standard output. If we wanted to capture it, we could run that with!!
instead.Note: though it is not shown above, the equivalent of a shell's
;
would be###
. The reason for this name is that;
is a reserved token in Scala. - They can be executed in parallel, with the output of the first being fed
as input to the second, like Unix pipes. This is achieved with the
- trait ProcessCreation extends AnyRef
Factories for creating scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.
Factories for creating scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder. They can be found on and used through scala.sys.process.Process's companion object.
- final class ProcessIO extends AnyRef
This class is used to control the I/O of every scala.sys.process.Process.
This class is used to control the I/O of every scala.sys.process.Process. The functions used to create it will be called with the process streams once it has been started. It might not be necessary to use
ProcessIO
directly -- scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder can return the process output to the caller, or use a scala.sys.process.ProcessLogger which avoids direct interaction with a stream. One can even use the factories atBasicIO
to create aProcessIO
, or use its helper methods when creating one's ownProcessIO
.When creating a
ProcessIO
, it is important to close all streams when finished, since the JVM might use system resources to capture the process input and output, and will not release them unless the streams are explicitly closed.ProcessBuilder
will callwriteInput
,processOutput
andprocessError
in separate threads, and if daemonizeThreads is true, they will all be marked as daemon threads.- Note
Failure to close the passed streams may result in resource leakage.
- trait ProcessImplicits extends AnyRef
Provide implicit conversions for the factories offered by scala.sys.process.Process's companion object.
Provide implicit conversions for the factories offered by scala.sys.process.Process's companion object. These implicits can then be used to decrease the noise in a pipeline of commands, making it look more shell-like. They are available through the package object scala.sys.process.
- trait ProcessLogger extends AnyRef
Encapsulates the output and error streams of a running process.
Encapsulates the output and error streams of a running process. This is used by scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder when starting a process, as an alternative to scala.sys.process.ProcessIO, which can be more difficult to use. Note that a
ProcessLogger
will be used to create aProcessIO
anyway. The objectBasicIO
has some functions to do that.Here is an example that counts the number of lines in the normal and error output of a process:
import scala.sys.process._ var normalLines = 0 var errorLines = 0 val countLogger = ProcessLogger(line => normalLines += 1, line => errorLines += 1) "find /etc" ! countLogger
- See also
Value Members
- implicit def builderToProcess(builder: JProcessBuilder): ProcessBuilder
Implicitly convert a
java.lang.ProcessBuilder
into a Scala one.Implicitly convert a
java.lang.ProcessBuilder
into a Scala one.- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- implicit def buildersToProcess[T](builders: collection.Seq[T])(implicit convert: (T) => Source): collection.Seq[Source]
Return a sequence of scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.Source from a sequence of values for which an implicit conversion to
Source
is available.Return a sequence of scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.Source from a sequence of values for which an implicit conversion to
Source
is available.- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- implicit def fileToProcess(file: File): FileBuilder
Implicitly convert a
java.io.File
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.FileBuilder, which can be used as either input or output of a process.Implicitly convert a
java.io.File
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.FileBuilder, which can be used as either input or output of a process. For example:import scala.sys.process._ "ls" #> new java.io.File("dirContents.txt") !
- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- def stderr: PrintStream
The error stream of this process
- def stdin: InputStream
The input stream of this process
- def stdout: PrintStream
The output stream of this process
- implicit def stringSeqToProcess(command: collection.Seq[String]): ProcessBuilder
Implicitly convert a sequence of
String
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.Implicitly convert a sequence of
String
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder. The first argument will be taken to be the command to be executed, and the remaining will be its arguments. When using this, arguments may contain spaces.- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- implicit def stringToProcess(command: String): ProcessBuilder
Implicitly convert a
String
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.Implicitly convert a
String
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- implicit def urlToProcess(url: URL): URLBuilder
Implicitly convert a
java.net.URL
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.URLBuilder , which can be used as input to a process.Implicitly convert a
java.net.URL
into a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder.URLBuilder , which can be used as input to a process. For example:import scala.sys.process._ Seq("xmllint", "--html", "-") #< new java.net.URL("https://www.scala-lang.org") #> new java.io.File("fixed.html") !
- Definition Classes
- ProcessImplicits
- object BasicIO
This object contains factories for scala.sys.process.ProcessIO, which can be used to control the I/O of a scala.sys.process.Process when a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder is started with the
run
command.This object contains factories for scala.sys.process.ProcessIO, which can be used to control the I/O of a scala.sys.process.Process when a scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder is started with the
run
command.It also contains some helper methods that can be used to in the creation of
ProcessIO
.It is used by other classes in the package in the implementation of various features, but can also be used by client code.
- object Process extends ProcessImpl with ProcessCreation
Methods for constructing simple commands that can then be combined.
- object ProcessBuilder extends ProcessBuilderImpl
This object contains traits used to describe input and output sources.
- object ProcessLogger
Provides factories to create scala.sys.process.ProcessLogger, which are used to capture output of scala.sys.process.ProcessBuilder commands when run.
This is the documentation for the Scala standard library.
Package structure
The scala package contains core types like
Int
,Float
,Array
orOption
which are accessible in all Scala compilation units without explicit qualification or imports.Notable packages include:
scala.collection
and its sub-packages contain Scala's collections frameworkscala.collection.immutable
- Immutable, sequential data-structures such asVector
,List
,Range
,HashMap
orHashSet
scala.collection.mutable
- Mutable, sequential data-structures such asArrayBuffer
,StringBuilder
,HashMap
orHashSet
scala.collection.concurrent
- Mutable, concurrent data-structures such asTrieMap
scala.concurrent
- Primitives for concurrent programming such asFutures
andPromises
scala.io
- Input and output operationsscala.math
- Basic math functions and additional numeric types likeBigInt
andBigDecimal
scala.sys
- Interaction with other processes and the operating systemscala.util.matching
- Regular expressionsOther packages exist. See the complete list on the right.
Additional parts of the standard library are shipped as separate libraries. These include:
scala.reflect
- Scala's reflection API (scala-reflect.jar)scala.xml
- XML parsing, manipulation, and serialization (scala-xml.jar)scala.collection.parallel
- Parallel collections (scala-parallel-collections.jar)scala.util.parsing
- Parser combinators (scala-parser-combinators.jar)scala.swing
- A convenient wrapper around Java's GUI framework called Swing (scala-swing.jar)Automatic imports
Identifiers in the scala package and the
scala.Predef
object are always in scope by default.Some of these identifiers are type aliases provided as shortcuts to commonly used classes. For example,
List
is an alias forscala.collection.immutable.List
.Other aliases refer to classes provided by the underlying platform. For example, on the JVM,
String
is an alias forjava.lang.String
.