52

Is there some way to run a (shell) command from Ruby displaying but also capturing the output? Maybe with the help of some gem?

What I mean by displaying is not printing it at the end, but as it appears, so the user gets the feedback of what's going on when running slow commands.

5 Answers 5

81

You can run system call like this:

`sleep --help`

Or like this

system "sleep --help"

Or

%x{ sleep --help }

In case of system it will print output and return true or nil, other two methods will return output

PS Oh. It is about displaying in real time.

So. You could use something like this:

system("ruby", "-e 100.times{|i| p i; sleep 1}", out: $stdout, err: :out)

To print data in realtime and store it in variable:

output = []
r, io = IO.pipe
fork do
  system("ruby", "-e 3.times{|i| p i; sleep 1}", out: io, err: :out)
end
io.close
r.each_line{|l| puts l; output << l.chomp}
#=> 0
#=> 1
#=> 2
p output
#=> ['0', '1', '2']

Or use popen

output = []
IO.popen("ruby -e '3.times{|i| p i; sleep 1}'").each do |line|
  p line.chomp
  output << line.chomp
end
#=> '0'
#=> '1'
#=> '2'
p output
#=> ['0', '1', '2']
7
  • 1
    I know those ways of running a command, none of them capture the output into a string and output it at the same time. Apr 19, 2012 at 9:21
  • I don't see any variant of system that takes out and err parameters? Is this Ruby 2.0?
    – mxk
    Nov 9, 2013 at 17:34
  • @Matthias for old ruby you need => ("hash rocket") notation, so: , out: io, err: :out becomes , :out => io, :err => :out
    – Simon B.
    Oct 29, 2014 at 15:02
  • system("ruby", "-e 3.times{|i| p i; sleep 1}", :out => io, :err => :out) NOT WORKING: in `system': can't convert Hash into String (TypeError)
    – user180574
    Oct 14, 2015 at 20:53
  • system with out: and err:, nice! Oct 24, 2015 at 1:34
17

I used open3 to captured the output of executed shell command from ruby code.

require 'open3'

stdout, stdeerr, status = Open3.capture3("ls")

puts stdout
3
  • This should be the accepted answer! It gives you 'results' that you can then work with, and it's part of the standard library.
    – aenw
    Jun 15, 2019 at 21:36
  • +80 that should do it :)
    – sonjz
    Jul 9, 2019 at 18:40
  • This does not answer the question: how to both display and capture the output of a long-running command. Oct 21, 2022 at 0:25
16

You can redirect the output

system 'uptime > results.log'

or save the results.

result = `uptime`
result = %x[uptime]

see here. Getting progress information or output in realtime is more complicated, I doubt that there is a simple solution. Maybe it is possible with advanced process management functions such as Open3.popen3. You could also try to use a pseudo terminal with pty and grap the output there.

1
  • Thanks. Helped me. Just add the following line, puts result . This will display the result in console. Jul 18, 2016 at 11:09
0

If you are willing to explore a solution outside the standard library, you may also use Mixlib::ShellOut to both stream output and capture it:

require 'mixlib/shellout'
cmd = 'while true; do date; sleep 2; done'
so = Mixlib::ShellOut.new(cmd)
so.live_stream = $stdout
so.run_command
out = so.stdout
0

Have a look at the Ruby docs for the non-blocking form of Open3.popen3:

https://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-3.1.2/libdoc/open3/rdoc/Open3.html#method-c-popen3

Although the name "popen3" is not as familiar as the "system()" command, it is currently the recommended method for running system commands from Ruby with several advantages over the system() command. There are several variations in the Open3 class: capture*, pipline*, popen*.

The docs are quite clear, so I won't repeat them here.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.