Struct std::process::Command 1.0.0[−][src]
pub struct Command { /* fields omitted */ }
Expand description
A process builder, providing fine-grained control over how a new process should be spawned.
A default configuration can be
generated using Command::new(program)
, where program
gives a path to the
program to be executed. Additional builder methods allow the configuration
to be changed (for example, by adding arguments) prior to spawning:
use std::process::Command;
let output = if cfg!(target_os = "windows") {
Command::new("cmd")
.args(["/C", "echo hello"])
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process")
} else {
Command::new("sh")
.arg("-c")
.arg("echo hello")
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process")
};
let hello = output.stdout;
RunCommand
can be reused to spawn multiple processes. The builder methods
change the command without needing to immediately spawn the process.
use std::process::Command;
let mut echo_hello = Command::new("sh");
echo_hello.arg("-c")
.arg("echo hello");
let hello_1 = echo_hello.output().expect("failed to execute process");
let hello_2 = echo_hello.output().expect("failed to execute process");
RunSimilarly, you can call builder methods after spawning a process and then spawn a new process with the modified settings.
use std::process::Command;
let mut list_dir = Command::new("ls");
// Execute `ls` in the current directory of the program.
list_dir.status().expect("process failed to execute");
println!();
// Change `ls` to execute in the root directory.
list_dir.current_dir("/");
// And then execute `ls` again but in the root directory.
list_dir.status().expect("process failed to execute");
RunImplementations
Constructs a new Command
for launching the program at
path program
, with the following default configuration:
- No arguments to the program
- Inherit the current process’s environment
- Inherit the current process’s working directory
- Inherit stdin/stdout/stderr for
spawn
orstatus
, but create pipes foroutput
Builder methods are provided to change these defaults and otherwise configure the process.
If program
is not an absolute path, the PATH
will be searched in
an OS-defined way.
The search path to be used may be controlled by setting the
PATH
environment variable on the Command,
but this has some implementation limitations on Windows
(see issue #37519).
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("sh")
.spawn()
.expect("sh command failed to start");
RunAdds an argument to pass to the program.
Only one argument can be passed per use. So instead of:
.arg("-C /path/to/repo")
Runusage would be:
.arg("-C")
.arg("/path/to/repo")
RunTo pass multiple arguments see args
.
Note that the argument is not passed through a shell, but given literally to the program. This means that shell syntax like quotes, escaped characters, word splitting, glob patterns, substitution, etc. have no effect.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.arg("-l")
.arg("-a")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunAdds multiple arguments to pass to the program.
To pass a single argument see arg
.
Note that the arguments are not passed through a shell, but given literally to the program. This means that shell syntax like quotes, escaped characters, word splitting, glob patterns, substitution, etc. have no effect.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.args(["-l", "-a"])
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunInserts or updates an environment variable mapping.
Note that environment variable names are case-insensitive (but case-preserving) on Windows, and case-sensitive on all other platforms.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.env("PATH", "/bin")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunAdds or updates multiple environment variable mappings.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
use std::env;
use std::collections::HashMap;
let filtered_env : HashMap<String, String> =
env::vars().filter(|&(ref k, _)|
k == "TERM" || k == "TZ" || k == "LANG" || k == "PATH"
).collect();
Command::new("printenv")
.stdin(Stdio::null())
.stdout(Stdio::inherit())
.env_clear()
.envs(&filtered_env)
.spawn()
.expect("printenv failed to start");
RunSets the working directory for the child process.
Platform-specific behavior
If the program path is relative (e.g., "./script.sh"
), it’s ambiguous
whether it should be interpreted relative to the parent’s working
directory or relative to current_dir
. The behavior in this case is
platform specific and unstable, and it’s recommended to use
canonicalize
to get an absolute program path instead.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.current_dir("/bin")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunConfiguration for the child process’s standard input (stdin) handle.
Defaults to inherit
when used with spawn
or status
, and
defaults to piped
when used with output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stdin(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunConfiguration for the child process’s standard output (stdout) handle.
Defaults to inherit
when used with spawn
or status
, and
defaults to piped
when used with output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stdout(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunConfiguration for the child process’s standard error (stderr) handle.
Defaults to inherit
when used with spawn
or status
, and
defaults to piped
when used with output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stderr(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
RunExecutes the command as a child process, waiting for it to finish and collecting all of its output.
By default, stdout and stderr are captured (and used to provide the resulting output). Stdin is not inherited from the parent and any attempt by the child process to read from the stdin stream will result in the stream immediately closing.
Examples
use std::process::Command;
use std::io::{self, Write};
let output = Command::new("/bin/cat")
.arg("file.txt")
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process");
println!("status: {}", output.status);
io::stdout().write_all(&output.stdout).unwrap();
io::stderr().write_all(&output.stderr).unwrap();
assert!(output.status.success());
RunExecutes a command as a child process, waiting for it to finish and collecting its status.
By default, stdin, stdout and stderr are inherited from the parent.
Examples
use std::process::Command;
let status = Command::new("/bin/cat")
.arg("file.txt")
.status()
.expect("failed to execute process");
println!("process finished with: {}", status);
assert!(status.success());
RunReturns the path to the program that was given to Command::new
.
Examples
use std::process::Command;
let cmd = Command::new("echo");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_program(), "echo");
Run1.57.0[src]pub fn get_args(&self) -> CommandArgs<'_>ⓘNotable traits for CommandArgs<'a>impl<'a> Iterator for CommandArgs<'a> type Item = &'a OsStr;
pub fn get_args(&self) -> CommandArgs<'_>ⓘNotable traits for CommandArgs<'a>impl<'a> Iterator for CommandArgs<'a> type Item = &'a OsStr;
impl<'a> Iterator for CommandArgs<'a> type Item = &'a OsStr;
Returns an iterator of the arguments that will be passed to the program.
This does not include the path to the program as the first argument;
it only includes the arguments specified with Command::arg
and
Command::args
.
Examples
use std::ffi::OsStr;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("echo");
cmd.arg("first").arg("second");
let args: Vec<&OsStr> = cmd.get_args().collect();
assert_eq!(args, &["first", "second"]);
Run1.57.0[src]pub fn get_envs(&self) -> CommandEnvs<'_>ⓘNotable traits for CommandEnvs<'a>impl<'a> Iterator for CommandEnvs<'a> type Item = (&'a OsStr, Option<&'a OsStr>);
pub fn get_envs(&self) -> CommandEnvs<'_>ⓘNotable traits for CommandEnvs<'a>impl<'a> Iterator for CommandEnvs<'a> type Item = (&'a OsStr, Option<&'a OsStr>);
impl<'a> Iterator for CommandEnvs<'a> type Item = (&'a OsStr, Option<&'a OsStr>);
Returns an iterator of the environment variables that will be set when the process is spawned.
Each element is a tuple (&OsStr, Option<&OsStr>)
, where the first
value is the key, and the second is the value, which is None
if
the environment variable is to be explicitly removed.
This only includes environment variables explicitly set with
Command::env
, Command::envs
, and Command::env_remove
. It
does not include environment variables that will be inherited by the
child process.
Examples
use std::ffi::OsStr;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("ls");
cmd.env("TERM", "dumb").env_remove("TZ");
let envs: Vec<(&OsStr, Option<&OsStr>)> = cmd.get_envs().collect();
assert_eq!(envs, &[
(OsStr::new("TERM"), Some(OsStr::new("dumb"))),
(OsStr::new("TZ"), None)
]);
RunReturns the working directory for the child process.
This returns None
if the working directory will not be changed.
Examples
use std::path::Path;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("ls");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_current_dir(), None);
cmd.current_dir("/bin");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_current_dir(), Some(Path::new("/bin")));
RunTrait Implementations
Sets the child process’s user ID. This translates to a
setuid
call in the child process. Failure in the setuid
call will cause the spawn to fail. Read more
Similar to uid
, but sets the group ID of the child process. This has
the same semantics as the uid
field. Read more
Sets the supplementary group IDs for the calling process. Translates to
a setgroups
call in the child process. Read more
Schedules a closure to be run just before the exec
function is
invoked. Read more
Performs all the required setup by this Command
, followed by calling
the execvp
syscall. Read more
Set executable argument Read more
Sets the process creation flags to be passed to CreateProcess
. Read more