IPC::System::Simple - Run commands simply, with detailed diagnostics
use IPC::System::Simple qw(system systemx capture capturex);
system("some_command"); # Command succeeds or dies!
system("some_command",@args); # Succeeds or dies, avoids shell if @args
systemx("some_command",@args); # Succeeds or dies, NEVER uses the shell
# Capture the output of a command (just like backticks). Dies on error.
my $output = capture("some_command");
# Just like backticks in list context. Dies on error.
my @output = capture("some_command");
# As above, but avoids the shell if @args is non-empty
my $output = capture("some_command", @args);
# As above, but NEVER invokes the shell.
my $output = capturex("some_command", @args);
my @output = capturex("some_command", @args);
Calling Perl's in-built system()
function is easy, determining if it was successful is hard. Let's face it, $?
isn't the nicest variable in the world to play with, and even if you do check it, producing a well-formatted error string takes a lot of work.
IPC::System::Simple
takes the hard work out of calling external commands. In fact, if you want to be really lazy, you can just write:
use IPC::System::Simple qw(system);
and all of your system
commands will either succeed (run to completion and return a zero exit value), or die with rich diagnostic messages.
The IPC::System::Simple
module also provides a simple replacement to Perl's backticks operator. Simply write:
use IPC::System::Simple qw(capture);
and then use the "capture()" command just like you'd use backticks. If there's an error, it will die with a detailed description of what went wrong. Better still, you can even use capturex()
to run the equivalent of backticks, but without the shell:
use IPC::System::Simple qw(capturex);
my $result = capturex($command, @args);
If you want more power than the basic interface, including the ability to specify which exit values are acceptable, trap errors, or process diagnostics, then read on!
use IPC::System::Simple qw(
capture capturex system systemx run runx $EXITVAL EXIT_ANY
);
# Run a command, throwing exception on failure
run("some_command");
runx("some_command",@args); # Run a command, avoiding the shell
# Do the same thing, but with the drop-in system replacement.
system("some_command");
systemx("some_command", @args);
# Run a command which must return 0..5, avoid the shell, and get the
# exit value (we could also look at $EXITVAL)
my $exit_value = runx([0..5], "some_command", @args);
# The same, but any exit value will do.
my $exit_value = runx(EXIT_ANY, "some_command", @args);
# Capture output into $result and throw exception on failure
my $result = capture("some_command");
# Check exit value from captured command
print "some_command exited with status $EXITVAL\n";
# Captures into @lines, splitting on $/
my @lines = capture("some_command");
# Run a command which must return 0..5, capture the output into
# @lines, and avoid the shell.
my @lines = capturex([0..5], "some_command", @args);
IPC::System::Simple
provides a subroutine called run
, that executes a command using the same semantics as Perl's built-in system
:
use IPC::System::Simple qw(run);
run("cat *.txt"); # Execute command via the shell
run("cat","/etc/motd"); # Execute command without shell
The primary difference between Perl's in-built system and the run
command is that run
will throw an exception on failure, and allows a list of acceptable exit values to be set. See "Exit values" for further information.
In fact, you can even have IPC::System::Simple
replace the default system
function for your package so it has the same behaviour:
use IPC::System::Simple qw(system);
system("cat *.txt"); # system now succeeds or dies!
system
and run
are aliases to each other.
See also "runx(), systemx() and capturex()" for variants of system()
and run()
that never invoke the shell, even with a single argument.
A second subroutine, named capture
executes a command with the same semantics as Perl's built-in backticks (and qx()
):
use IPC::System::Simple qw(capture);
# Capture text while invoking the shell.
my $file = capture("cat /etc/motd");
my @lines = capture("cat /etc/passwd");
However unlike regular backticks, which always use the shell, capture
will bypass the shell when called with multiple arguments:
# Capture text while avoiding the shell.
my $file = capture("cat", "/etc/motd");
my @lines = capture("cat", "/etc/passwd");
See also "runx(), systemx() and capturex()" for a variant of capture()
that never invokes the shell, even with a single argument.
The runx()
, systemx()
and capturex()
commands are identical to the multi-argument forms of run()
, system()
and capture()
respectively, but never invoke the shell, even when called with a single argument. These forms are particularly useful when a command's argument list might be empty, for example:
systemx($cmd, @args);
The use of systemx()
here guarantees that the shell will never be invoked, even if @args
is empty.
In the case where the command returns an unexpected status, both run
and capture
will throw an exception, which if not caught will terminate your program with an error.
Capturing the exception is easy:
eval {
run("cat *.txt");
};
if ($@) {
print "Something went wrong - $@\n";
}
See the diagnostics section below for more details.
IPC::System::Simple
considers the following to be unexpected, and worthy of exception:
Failing to start entirely (eg, command not found, permission denied).
Returning an exit value other than zero (but see below).
Being killed by a signal.
Being passed tainted data (in taint mode).
Traditionally, system commands return a zero status for success and a non-zero status for failure. IPC::System::Simple
will default to throwing an exception if a non-zero exit value is returned.
You may specify a range of values which are considered acceptable exit values by passing an array reference as the first argument. The special constant EXIT_ANY
can be used to allow any exit value to be returned.
use IPC::System::Simple qw(run system capture EXIT_ANY);
run( [0..5], "cat *.txt"); # Exit values 0-5 are OK
system( [0..5], "cat *.txt"); # This works the same way
my @lines = capture( EXIT_ANY, "cat *.txt"); # Any exit is fine.
The run
and replacement system
subroutines returns the exit value of the process:
my $exit_value = run( [0..5], "cat *.txt");
# OR:
my $exit_value = system( [0..5] "cat *.txt");
print "Program exited with value $exit_value\n";
The exit value of any command executed by IPC::System::Simple
can always be retrieved from the $IPC::System::Simple::EXITVAL
variable:
This is particularly useful when inspecting results from capture
, which returns the captured text from the command.
use IPC::System::Simple qw(capture $EXITVAL EXIT_ANY);
my @enemies_defeated = capture(EXIT_ANY, "defeat_evil", "/dev/mordor");
print "Program exited with value $EXITVAL\n";
$EXITVAL
will be set to -1
if the command did not exit normally (eg, being terminated by a signal) or did not start. In this situation an exception will also be thrown.
The run
subroutine make available the full 32-bit exit value on Win32 systems. This has been true since IPC::System::Simple
v0.06 when called with multiple arguments, and since v1.25 when called with a single argument. This is different from the previous versions of IPC::System::Simple
and from Perl's in-build system()
function, which can only handle 8-bit return values.
The capture
subroutine always returns the 32-bit exit value under Windows. The capture
subroutine also never uses the shell, even when passed a single argument.
The run
subroutine always uses a shell when passed a single argument. On NT systems, it uses cmd.exe
in the system root, and on non-NT systems it uses command.com
in the system root.
As of IPC::System::Simple
v1.25, the runx
and capturex
subroutines, as well as multiple-argument calls to the run
and capture
subroutines, have their arguments properly quoted, so that arugments with spaces and the like work properly. Unfortunately, this breaks any attempt to invoke the shell itself. If you really need to execute cmd.exe
or command.com
, use the single-argument form. For single-argument calls to run
and capture
, the argument must be properly shell-quoted in advance of the call.
Versions of IPC::System::Simple
before v0.09 would not search the PATH
environment variable when the multi-argument form of run()
was called. Versions from v0.09 onwards correctly search the path provided the command is provided including the extension (eg, notepad.exe
rather than just notepad
, or gvim.bat
rather than just gvim
). If no extension is provided, .exe
is assumed.
Signals are not supported on Windows systems. Sending a signal to a Windows process will usually cause it to exit with the signal number used.
The command specified did not even start. It may not exist, or you may not have permission to use it. The reason it could not start (as determined from $!
) will be provided.
The command ran successfully, but returned an exit value we did not expect. The value returned is reported.
The command was killed by a signal. The name of the signal will be reported, or UNKNOWN
if it cannot be determined. The signal number is always reported. If we detected that the process dumped core, then the string and dumped core
is appended.
You attempted to call run
or capture
but did not provide any arguments at all. At the very lease you need to supply a command to run.
You called run
or capture
with a list of acceptable exit values, but no actual command.
You called run
or capture
with tainted (untrusted) arguments, which is almost certainly a bad idea. To untaint your arguments you'll need to pass your data through a regular expression and use the resulting match variables. See "Laundering and Detecting Tainted Data" in perlsec for more information.
You called run
or capture
but part of your environment was tainted (untrusted). You should either delete the named environment variable before calling run
, or set it to an untainted value (usually one set inside your program). See "Cleaning Up Your Path" in perlsec for more information.
Implementing the capture
command involves dark and terrible magicks involving pipes, and one of them has sprung a leak. This could be due to a lack of file descriptors, although there are other possibilities.
If you are able to reproduce this error, you are encouraged to submit a bug report according to the "Reporting bugs" section below.
You've found a bug in IPC::System::Simple
. Please check to see if an updated version of IPC::System::Simple
is available. If not, please file a bug report according to the "Reporting bugs" section below.
You've passed the undefined value as a command to be executed. While this is a very Zen-like action, it's not supported by Perl's current implementation.
This module depends upon Win32::Process when used on Win32 system. Win32::Process
is bundled as a core module in ActivePerl 5.6 and above.
There are no non-core dependencies on non-Win32 systems.
Perl provides a range of in-built functions for handling external commands, and CPAN provides even more. The IPC::System::Simple
differentiates itself from other options by providing:
The diagnostics produced by IPC::System::Simple
are designed to provide as much information as possible. Rather than requiring the developer to inspect $?
, IPC::System::Simple
does the hard work for you.
If an odd exit status is provided, you're informed of what it is. If a signal kills your process, you are informed of both its name and number. If tainted data or environment prevents your command from running, you are informed of exactly which data or environmental variable is tainted.
IPC::System::Simple
takes an aggressive approach to error handling. Rather than allow commands to fail silently, exceptions are thrown when unexpected results are seen. This allows for easy development using a try/catch style, and avoids the possibility of accidentally continuing after a failed command.
The run
, system
and capture
commands all set $EXITVAL
, making it easy to determine the exit status of a command. Additionally, the system
and run
interfaces return the exit status.
When called with multiple arguments, the run
, system
and capture
interfaces never invoke the shell. This differs from the in-built Perl system
command which may invoke the shell under Windows when called with multiple arguments. It differs from the in-built Perl backticks operator which always invokes the shell.
When system
is exported, the exotic form system { $cmd } @args
is not supported. Attemping to use the exotic form is a syntax error. This affects the calling package only. Use CORE::system
if you need it, or consider using the autodie module to replace system
with lexical scope.
Core dumps are only checked for when a process dies due to a signal. It is not believed there are any systems where processes can dump core without dying to a signal.
WIFSTOPPED
status is not checked, as perl never spawns processes with the WUNTRACED
option.
Signals are not supported under Win32 systems, since they don't work at all like Unix signals. Win32 signals cause commands to exit with a given exit value, which this modules does capture.
Before reporting a bug, please check to ensure you are using the most recent version of IPC::System::Simple
. Your problem may have already been fixed in a new release.
You can find the IPC::System::Simple
bug-tracker at http://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=IPC-System-Simple . Please check to see if your bug has already been reported; if in doubt, report yours anyway.
Submitting a patch and/or failing test case will greatly expedite the fixing of bugs.
If you find this module useful, please consider rating it on the CPAN Ratings service at http://cpanratings.perl.org/rate/?distribution=IPC-System-Simple .
The module author loves to hear how IPC::System::Simple
has made your life better (or worse). Feedback can be sent to <pjf@perltraining.com.au>.
autodie uses IPC::System::Simple
to provide succeed-or-die replacements to system
(and other built-ins) with lexical scope.
POSIX, IPC::Run::Simple, perlipc, perlport, IPC::Run, IPC::Run3, Win32::Process
Paul Fenwick <pjf@cpan.org>
Copyright (C) 2006-2008 by Paul Fenwick
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.6.0 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.