val sexp_of_t : t -> Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexp.t
val pid : t -> Core.Pid.t
accessors
type env = Core.Unix.env
val sexp_of_env : env -> Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexp.t
val env_of_sexp : Ppx_sexp_conv_lib.Sexp.t -> env
type 'a create = ?argv0:string -> ?buf_len:int -> ?env:env -> ?prog_search_path:string list -> ?stdin:string -> ?working_dir:string -> prog:string -> args:string list -> unit -> 'a Async_kernel.Deferred.t
create ~prog ~args ()
uses Core.Unix.create_process_env
to create a child process that runs the executable prog
with args
as arguments. It creates pipes to communicate with the child process's stdin
, stdout
, and stderr
.
Unlike exec
, args
should not include prog
as the first argument.
If buf_len
is supplied, it determines the size of the reader and writer buffers used to communicate with the child process's stdin
, stdout
, and stderr
.
If stdin
is supplied, then the writer to the child's stdin will have ~raise_when_consumer_leaves:false
and ~buffer_age_limit:`Unlimited
, which makes it more robust.
env
specifies the environment of the child process.
If working_dir
is supplied, then the child process will chdir()
there before calling exec()
.
If argv0
is given, it is used (instead of prog
) as the first element of the argv
array passed to exec
.
create
returns Error
if it is unable to create the child process. This can happen in any number of situations (unable to fork, unable to create the pipes, unable to cd to working_dir
, unable to exec
etc.). create
does not return Error
if the binary exits with non-zero exit code; instead, it returns OK t
, where wait t
returns an Error
.
See Core.Unix.create_process_env
for more details.
val create : t Core.Or_error.t create
val wait : t -> Core.Unix.Exit_or_signal.t Async_kernel.Deferred.t
wait t = Unix.waitpid (pid t)
. wait
's result becomes determined when the child process terminates, via exit or signal. wait
does not touch stdin
, stdout
or stderr
. The caller should ensure that stdout
and stderr
are being drained in the background to avoid the child process blocking on a write due to pushback. See collect_output_and_wait
for a higher-level alternative that handles this.
module Output : sig ... end
val collect_output_and_wait : t -> Output.t Async_kernel.Deferred.t
collect_output_and_wait t
closes stdin t
and then begins collecting the output produced on t
's stdout
and stderr
, continuing to collect output until t
terminates and the pipes for stdout
and stderr
are closed. Usually when t
terminates, the pipes are closed; however, t
could fork other processes which survive after t
terminates and in turn keep the pipes open -- collect_output_and_wait
will not become determined until both pipes are closed in all descendant processes.
type 'a run = ?accept_nonzero_exit:int list -> ?argv0:string -> ?env:env -> ?prog_search_path:string list -> ?stdin:string -> ?working_dir:string -> prog:string -> args:string list -> unit -> 'a Async_kernel.Deferred.t
run
create
s a process, feeds it stdin
if provided, and wait
s for it to complete. If the process exits with an acceptable status, then run
returns its stdout. If the process exits unacceptably, then run
returns an error indicating what went wrong that includes stdout and stderr.
Acceptable statuses are zero, and any nonzero values specified in accept_nonzero_exit
.
Some care is taken so that an error displays nicely as a sexp---in particular, if the child's output can already be parsed as a sexp, then it will display as a sexp (rather than a sexp embedded in a string). Also, if the output isn't a sexp, it will be split on newlines into a list of strings, so that it displays on multiple lines rather than a single giant line with embedded "\n"'s.
run_lines
is like run
but returns the lines of stdout as a string list, using String.split_lines
.
run_expect_no_output
is like run
but expects the command to produce no output, and returns an error if the command does produce output.
val run : string Core.Or_error.t run
val run_exn : string run
val run_lines : string list Core.Or_error.t run
val run_lines_exn : string list run
val run_expect_no_output : unit Core.Or_error.t run
val run_expect_no_output_exn : unit run
type 'a collect = ?accept_nonzero_exit:int list -> t -> 'a Async_kernel.Deferred.t
collect_stdout_and_wait
and collect_stdout_lines_and_wait
are like run
and run_lines
but work from an existing process instead of creating a new one.
val collect_stdout_and_wait : string Core.Or_error.t collect
val collect_stdout_and_wait_exn : string collect
val collect_stdout_lines_and_wait : string list Core.Or_error.t collect
val collect_stdout_lines_and_wait_exn : string list collect
module Lines_or_sexp : sig ... end
Lines_or_sexp
is useful for rendering a string nicely in a sexp, avoiding quoting if the string is multi-line or was produced by converting a sexp to a string. Output.sexp_of_t
uses Lines_or_sexp
to nicely render stdout and stderr of a child process.