Reputation: 36148
How do I call shell commands from inside of a Ruby program? How do I then get output from these commands back into Ruby?
Upvotes: 1267
Views: 656221
Reputation: 105183
Unfortunately, no methods mentioned here offer a one-liner that would 1) execute the command, 2) print its output to the console, and 3) raise exception if the exit code is non-zero. I created qbash
, a new gem that offers exactly such a one-liner:
require 'qbash`
stdout = qbash("echo 'Hello, world!'", log: $stdout)
It's also possible to configure it for a more advanced usage:
stdout, code = qbash(
[ # the array will automatically be joined into a space-separated line
"echo 'Hello, world!'",
"&& echo 'What is your name?'"
],
log: $stdout, # any object would work here, with .debug() or .print() method
both: true, # both stdout and exit code are returned
accept: [13, 18], # these exit codes will be accepted (won't lead to exceptions),
env: { # hash of environment variables
'SECRET_TOKEN' => 'abcdefg'
}
)
Under the hood, the gem is using Open3.popen2e
and /bin/bash -c
(that's why the name).
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 141
The easiest way is, for example:
reboot = `init 6`
puts reboot
Newer users please note that on linux this will reboot your system.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 23122
You can use format
method as below to print some information:
puts format('%s', `ps`)
puts format('%d MB', (`ps -o rss= -p #{Process.pid}`.to_i / 1024))
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 585
Not sure about shell commands. I used following for capturing system command's output into a variable val:
val = capture(:stdout) do
system("pwd")
end
puts val
shortened version:
val = capture(:stdout) { system("pwd") }
capture method is provided by active_support/core_ext/kernel/reporting.rb
Simlarly we can also capture standard errors too with :stderr
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 16737
This explanation is based on a commented Ruby script from a friend of mine. If you want to improve the script, feel free to update it at the link.
First, note that when Ruby calls out to a shell, it typically calls /bin/sh
, not Bash. Some Bash syntax is not supported by /bin/sh
on all systems.
Here are ways to execute a shell script:
cmd = "echo 'hi'" # Sample string that can be used
Kernel#`
, commonly called backticks – `cmd`
This is like many other languages, including Bash, PHP, and Perl.
Returns the result (i.e. standard output) of the shell command.
Docs: http://ruby-doc.org/core/Kernel.html#method-i-60
value = `echo 'hi'`
value = `#{cmd}`
Built-in syntax, %x( cmd )
Following the x
character is a delimiter, which can be any character.
If the delimiter is one of the characters (
, [
, {
, or <
,
the literal consists of the characters up to the matching closing delimiter,
taking account of nested delimiter pairs. For all other delimiters, the
literal comprises the characters up to the next occurrence of the
delimiter character. String interpolation #{ ... }
is allowed.
Returns the result (i.e. standard output) of the shell command, just like the backticks.
Docs: https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/master/syntax/literals_rdoc.html#label-Percent+Strings
value = %x( echo 'hi' )
value = %x[ #{cmd} ]
Kernel#system
Executes the given command in a subshell.
Returns true
if the command was found and run successfully, false
otherwise.
Docs: http://ruby-doc.org/core/Kernel.html#method-i-system
wasGood = system( "echo 'hi'" )
wasGood = system( cmd )
Kernel#exec
Replaces the current process by running the given external command.
Returns none, the current process is replaced and never continues.
Docs: http://ruby-doc.org/core/Kernel.html#method-i-exec
exec( "echo 'hi'" )
exec( cmd ) # Note: this will never be reached because of the line above
Here's some extra advice:
$?
, which is the same as $CHILD_STATUS
, accesses the status of the last system executed command if you use the backticks, system()
or %x{}
.
You can then access the exitstatus
and pid
properties:
$?.exitstatus
For more reading see:
Upvotes: 1476
Reputation: 430
This is not really an answer but maybe someone will find it useful:
When using TK GUI on Windows, and you need to call shell commands from rubyw, you will always have an annoying CMD window popping up for less then a second.
To avoid this you can use:
WIN32OLE.new('Shell.Application').ShellExecute('ipconfig > log.txt','','','open',0)
or
WIN32OLE.new('WScript.Shell').Run('ipconfig > log.txt',0,0)
Both will store the ipconfig
output inside log.txt
, but no windows will come up.
You will need to require 'win32ole'
inside your script.
system()
, exec()
and spawn()
will all pop up that annoying window when using TK and rubyw.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 13790
Given a command like attrib
:
require 'open3'
a="attrib"
Open3.popen3(a) do |stdin, stdout, stderr|
puts stdout.read
end
I've found that while this method isn't as memorable as
system("thecommand")
or
`thecommand`
in backticks, a good thing about this method compared to other methods is
backticks don't seem to let me puts
the command I run/store the command I want to run in a variable, and system("thecommand")
doesn't seem to let me get the output whereas this method lets me do both of those things, and it lets me access stdin, stdout and stderr independently.
See "Executing commands in ruby" and Ruby's Open3 documentation.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 1071
The backticks (`) method is the easiest one to call shell commands from Ruby. It returns the result of the shell command:
url_request = 'http://google.com'
result_of_shell_command = `curl #{url_request}`
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 17534
If you have a more complex case than the common case that can not be handled with ``
, then check out Kernel.spawn()
. This seems to be the most generic/full-featured provided by stock Ruby to execute external commands.
You can use it to:
The Ruby documentation has good enough examples:
env: hash
name => val : set the environment variable
name => nil : unset the environment variable
command...:
commandline : command line string which is passed to the standard shell
cmdname, arg1, ... : command name and one or more arguments (no shell)
[cmdname, argv0], arg1, ... : command name, argv[0] and zero or more arguments (no shell)
options: hash
clearing environment variables:
:unsetenv_others => true : clear environment variables except specified by env
:unsetenv_others => false : dont clear (default)
process group:
:pgroup => true or 0 : make a new process group
:pgroup => pgid : join to specified process group
:pgroup => nil : dont change the process group (default)
create new process group: Windows only
:new_pgroup => true : the new process is the root process of a new process group
:new_pgroup => false : dont create a new process group (default)
resource limit: resourcename is core, cpu, data, etc. See Process.setrlimit.
:rlimit_resourcename => limit
:rlimit_resourcename => [cur_limit, max_limit]
current directory:
:chdir => str
umask:
:umask => int
redirection:
key:
FD : single file descriptor in child process
[FD, FD, ...] : multiple file descriptor in child process
value:
FD : redirect to the file descriptor in parent process
string : redirect to file with open(string, "r" or "w")
[string] : redirect to file with open(string, File::RDONLY)
[string, open_mode] : redirect to file with open(string, open_mode, 0644)
[string, open_mode, perm] : redirect to file with open(string, open_mode, perm)
[:child, FD] : redirect to the redirected file descriptor
:close : close the file descriptor in child process
FD is one of follows
:in : the file descriptor 0 which is the standard input
:out : the file descriptor 1 which is the standard output
:err : the file descriptor 2 which is the standard error
integer : the file descriptor of specified the integer
io : the file descriptor specified as io.fileno
file descriptor inheritance: close non-redirected non-standard fds (3, 4, 5, ...) or not
:close_others => false : inherit fds (default for system and exec)
:close_others => true : dont inherit (default for spawn and IO.popen)
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 3931
If you really need Bash, per the note in the "best" answer.
First, note that when Ruby calls out to a shell, it typically calls
/bin/sh
, not Bash. Some Bash syntax is not supported by/bin/sh
on all systems.
If you need to use Bash, insert bash -c "your Bash-only command"
inside of your desired calling method:
quick_output = system("ls -la")
quick_bash = system("bash -c 'ls -la'")
To test:
system("echo $SHELL")
system('bash -c "echo $SHELL"')
Or if you are running an existing script file like
script_output = system("./my_script.sh")
Ruby should honor the shebang, but you could always use
system("bash ./my_script.sh")
to make sure, though there may be a slight overhead from /bin/sh
running /bin/bash
, you probably won't notice.
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 1261
Some things to think about when choosing between these mechanisms are:
You may need anything from simple backticks (``), system()
, and IO.popen
to full-blown Kernel.fork
/Kernel.exec
with IO.pipe
and IO.select
.
You may also want to throw timeouts into the mix if a sub-process takes too long to execute.
Unfortunately, it very much depends.
Upvotes: 32
Reputation: 11850
Here's a flowchart based on "When to use each method of launching a subprocess in Ruby". See also, "Trick an application into thinking its stdout is a terminal, not a pipe".
Upvotes: 410
Reputation: 19643
The answers above are already quite great, but I really want to share the following summary article: "6 Ways to Run Shell Commands in Ruby"
Basically, it tells us:
Kernel#exec
:
exec 'echo "hello $HOSTNAME"'
system
and $?
:
system 'false'
puts $?
Backticks (`):
today = `date`
IO#popen
:
IO.popen("date") { |f| puts f.gets }
Open3#popen3
-- stdlib:
require "open3"
stdin, stdout, stderr = Open3.popen3('dc')
Open4#popen4
-- a gem:
require "open4"
pid, stdin, stdout, stderr = Open4::popen4 "false" # => [26327, #<IO:0x6dff24>, #<IO:0x6dfee8>, #<IO:0x6dfe84>]
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 6045
Don't forget the spawn
command to create a background process to execute the specified command. You can even wait for its completion using the Process
class and the returned pid
:
pid = spawn("tar xf ruby-2.0.0-p195.tar.bz2")
Process.wait pid
pid = spawn(RbConfig.ruby, "-eputs'Hello, world!'")
Process.wait pid
The doc says: This method is similar to #system
but it doesn't wait for the command to finish.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 2129
Here's a cool one that I use in a ruby script on OS X (so that I can start a script and get an update even after toggling away from the window):
cmd = %Q|osascript -e 'display notification "Server was reset" with title "Posted Update"'|
system ( cmd )
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 16737
I'm definitely not a Ruby expert, but I'll give it a shot:
$ irb
system "echo Hi"
Hi
=> true
You should also be able to do things like:
cmd = 'ls'
system(cmd)
Upvotes: 29
Reputation: 1473
Here's the best article in my opinion about running shell scripts in Ruby: "6 Ways to Run Shell Commands in Ruby".
If you only need to get the output use backticks.
I needed more advanced stuff like STDOUT and STDERR so I used the Open4 gem. You have all the methods explained there.
Upvotes: 68
Reputation: 8999
One more option:
When you:
You can use shell redirection:
puts %x[cat bogus.txt].inspect
=> ""
puts %x[cat bogus.txt 2>&1].inspect
=> "cat: bogus.txt: No such file or directory\n"
The 2>&1
syntax works across Linux, Mac and Windows since the early days of MS-DOS.
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 5914
We can achieve it in multiple ways.
Using Kernel#exec
, nothing after this command is executed:
exec('ls ~')
Using backticks or %x
`ls ~`
=> "Applications\nDesktop\nDocuments"
%x(ls ~)
=> "Applications\nDesktop\nDocuments"
Using Kernel#system
command, returns true
if successful, false
if unsuccessful and returns nil
if command execution fails:
system('ls ~')
=> true
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 1603
Using the answers here and linked in Mihai's answer, I put together a function that meets these requirements:
As a bonus, this one will also return STDOUT in cases where the shell command exits successfully (0) and puts anything on STDOUT. In this manner, it differs from system
, which simply returns true
in such cases.
Code follows. The specific function is system_quietly
:
require 'open3'
class ShellError < StandardError; end
#actual function:
def system_quietly(*cmd)
exit_status=nil
err=nil
out=nil
Open3.popen3(*cmd) do |stdin, stdout, stderr, wait_thread|
err = stderr.gets(nil)
out = stdout.gets(nil)
[stdin, stdout, stderr].each{|stream| stream.send('close')}
exit_status = wait_thread.value
end
if exit_status.to_i > 0
err = err.chomp if err
raise ShellError, err
elsif out
return out.chomp
else
return true
end
end
#calling it:
begin
puts system_quietly('which', 'ruby')
rescue ShellError
abort "Looks like you don't have the `ruby` command. Odd."
end
#output: => "/Users/me/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.2-p136/bin/ruby"
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 5881
The way I like to do this is using the %x
literal, which makes it easy (and readable!) to use quotes in a command, like so:
directorylist = %x[find . -name '*test.rb' | sort]
Which, in this case, will populate file list with all test files under the current directory, which you can process as expected:
directorylist.each do |filename|
filename.chomp!
# work with file
end
Upvotes: 167
Reputation: 6005
My favourite is Open3
require "open3"
Open3.popen3('nroff -man') { |stdin, stdout, stderr| ... }
Upvotes: 47
Reputation: 615
You can also use the backtick operators (`), similar to Perl:
directoryListing = `ls /`
puts directoryListing # prints the contents of the root directory
Handy if you need something simple.
Which method you want to use depends on exactly what you're trying to accomplish; check the docs for more details about the different methods.
Upvotes: 13