3

I am writing a program in Java that needs to use terminal command to work. My function basically looks like this :

public void sendLoginCommand() throws IOException
{
    System.out.println("\n------------Sending Login Command------------\n");
    String cmd="qskdjqhsdqsd";
    Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
    Process p=rt.exec(cmd);
}
public Process sendPassword(String password) throws IOException
{
    System.out.println("\n------------Sending Password------------\n");
    String cmd=password;
    Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
    Process p=rt.exec(cmd);
    return p;
}
public void login(String password) throws IOException
{
    sendLoginCommand();
    Process p = sendPassword(password);
    System.out.println("\n------------Reading Terminal Output------------\n");
    Reader in = new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream());

    in = new BufferedReader(in);
    char[] buffer = new char[20];
    int len = in.read(buffer);
    String s = new String(buffer, 0, len);
    System.out.println(s);
    if(s.equals("Password invalid.")) loggedIn=false;
    else loggedIn=true;
}

Here, the program sends correctly th p4 login command, but then, the terminal asks for a password. When I use the same lines that with the sendLoginCommand(), the program returns an error. Apparently, we can send only standard commands throught Process. I was hoping that someone knew how to send a normal string to the terminal

Thank you in advance

2
  • 1
    I must say well done for the mess you've done there. You are actually trying to start processes by using login and then password as the command line that starts that process. This is completely wrong, all the way. Apr 25, 2012 at 12:53
  • No, here, the "main" function is login(). First, it calls sendlogincommand() which successfully sends the command, but when the next function sendpassword() is called, i can't send the password because it is not a command. And also, you might say that the command "qsdqsdsdkqsdq" is not a command, well it is true, the original command was "p4 login"
    – Mtrompe
    Apr 25, 2012 at 12:57

4 Answers 4

3

Your immediate problem is that you are starting separate processes for each of the 'commands' you are invoking. The password 'command' is being issued to a process that is totally unaware of the previous 'login' command.

Having said that, your more dire problem is a serious misunderstanding of what the Process class is used for and how to interact with external programs from within Java.

Here's one tutorial that may help further your education on the topic, I would advise Googling for others.

0
1

I have found the answer to my question.

The problem was that the second response of the terminal was in fact in the first one, and the password had to be sent in the middle of it. Here is the code (I agree, my explanation is a little vague) :

    String s="";
    Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("p4 login");     
    BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));    
    char a=(char)in.read();
    while(a>0 && a<256)
    {

        a=(char)in.read();
        if(nb==14) new PrintWriter(p.getOutputStream(),true).println(password); 
        if(nb>16) s=s+a;
        nb++;
    }
    if(s.startsWith("User")) loggedIn=true;
    else loggedIn=false;
0

In order to communicate with a process, you don't start another process but write to its stdin. There's actually code in there that tries to do such a thing. Have sendLoginCommand return the created process; delete all code in sendPassword, in fact delete the whole method. In your main code write your password to the process's output stream. So what I'm saying is

new PrintWriter(sendLoginCommand().getOutputStream()).println(password);
13
  • I don't understand what I am supposed to do with p.getOutputStream() and the PrintWriter. Could you detail a little bit please?
    – Mtrompe
    Apr 25, 2012 at 13:17
  • Actually I'm sorry, it does not work. I thought it did because not errors were return but new PrintWriter(sendLoginCommand().getOutputStream()).println(password); does absolutely nothing, because when I try to retreive the output of the terminal afterwards, I get "Enter password", which is the output of the previous command : "p4 login"
    – Mtrompe
    Apr 25, 2012 at 14:27
  • Well, of course it is the output of that command! You are still not getting te basic principles. You have spawned a process calling 'Runtime.exec` and now you are communicating with it over its stdout and stdin. The process prints "Enter password" and that is what you read. The fact that you read it after having already sent the password doesn't change a thing. There is a possibility, though, that you are sending password too quickly. Try to first read the line saying "enter password", then send password. Apr 25, 2012 at 15:06
  • How can the fact that I read "Enter Password" be possible even after I have sent the password? Because my program needs to be able to read the output of the terminal after I have sent the password to know if it is correct or not
    – Mtrompe
    Apr 26, 2012 at 7:02
  • It is possible due to buffering. The moment your p4 process executes code that outputs that string is not at all the same moment when your Java code reads it. Think about it, how would that be even possible? Apr 26, 2012 at 7:04
0

As a side note, i strongly advice to use a pre-packaged library that already encapsulates all the technical stuff about the process communication in Java.

A good library about that is commons-exec (http://commons.apache.org/exec/.

It comes with command line helper, background thread to read the sysout/syserr output, an optional watchdog to kill the process after a given amount of time, and so on (it works of course on nearly all os).

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