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What I want to accomplish is to start a command line (CL) task (wrapped NSTask) and pipe (NSPipe) the character output through an NSTextField label in my UI, in real-time as a stream of characters. The purpose of the textfield is not to capture the output in any way, or even allow it to be read. It’s just to display it, partly as a UI decoration and partly as a kind of progress indicator. I want the user to see a stream of characters just flowing by (fast) as the CL task does its work.

I know how to wrap the CL task in an NSTask and get its output by setting [task setStandardOutput:outputPipe] and then read from that output with an NSFileHandle. And I think I know how to do what I want the "hard" way using one of the NSFileHandle reading methods and synchronously chopping the output into chunks and displaying those chunks one-by-one in the text field. But I’m hoping there might be some light-weight way that I haven’t thought of to sort of blast the raw ascii characters from stdout into the text field in real-time.

Anyone have an idea?

EDIT: Here is some working code based on @Peter Hosey's answer. It is doing what i want, but I don't know if I thoroughly grokked Peter's concept or if I am doing anything wonky in here, so please feel free to comment. Thanks again Peter!

notes on this code:

1) changing the scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval in the init from .001 to .005 is an interesting visual range for the text scrolling effect.

2) the label that i am using was just a simple text label created on my UI in interface builder. for my purposes, i didn't need to do the second part of Peter's answer with the right justified attributed string. i just set the text label's justification in interface builder.

@interface MyWrapper : NSObject

@property (assign) NSMutableData *_outputData;
@property (assign) NSFileHandle *_fileHandle;
@property (assign) IBOutlet NSTextField *label;
@property (assign) NSTimer *_timer;

-(void) readData:(NSNotification *)notification;
-(void) displayOutput;
-(void) doIt;

@end

@implementation MyWrapper

@synthesize _outputData, _fileHandle, label, _timer;

- (id)init {
    self = [super init];
    if (self) {

      [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] addObserver:self
                                               selector:@selector( readData: )
                                                   name:NSFileHandleReadCompletionNotification 
                                                 object:nil];
      _outputData = [[NSMutableData alloc] initWithCapacity:300];
      _timer = [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:.001 
                                               target:self 
                                             selector:@selector(displayOutput) 
                                             userInfo:nil 
                                              repeats:YES];
    }

    return self;
}
- (void)dealloc {
  [[NSNotificationCenter defaultCenter] removeObserver:self];  
  [_timer invalidate];
  [super dealloc];
}

-(void) readData:(NSNotification *)notification {

  if( [notification object] != _fileHandle )
    return;

  [_outputData appendData:[[notification userInfo] 
          objectForKey:NSFileHandleNotificationDataItem]];

  [_fileHandle readInBackgroundAndNotify];
}

-(void) displayOutput {

  if ([_outputData length] == 0) {
    return;
  }

  NSString *labelText = [label stringValue];
  NSData *nextByte;
  NSString *nextChar;

  // pull first character off of the outputData
  nextByte = [_outputData subdataWithRange:NSMakeRange(0, 1)];
  nextChar = [[NSString alloc]initWithData:nextByte
                                   encoding:NSASCIIStringEncoding];

  // get rid of first byte of data
  [_outputData replaceBytesInRange:NSMakeRange(0, 1) withBytes:NULL length:0];

  if (! [nextChar isEqualToString:@"\n"]) {
    if ([labelText length] > 29) {
      labelText = [labelText substringFromIndex:1];
    }

    labelText = [labelText stringByAppendingString:nextChar];
    [label setStringValue:labelText];
  }  
}

-(void)doIt {

  NSTask *theTask = [[NSTask alloc] init];
  NSPipe *outPipe =[NSPipe pipe];
  //write output to outputData in background
  _fileHandle = [outPipe fileHandleForReading];
  [_fileHandle readInBackgroundAndNotify];

  [theTask setLaunchPath:@"path/to/executable"];
  [theTask setStandardOutput:outPipe];
  [theTask setStandardError:[NSPipe pipe]];
  [theTask launch];
  [theTask waitUntilExit];  
}

@end

1 Answer 1

3

Asynchronous reading of the file handle, a timer, an NSMutableData that you limit to a fixed number of bytes (let's say 300) by keeping only the last bytes and deleting old bytes, and right justification in the text field.

For the last part, you'll need to make a mutable copy of the default paragraph style, set its alignment to right justification, and set the text field's attributed string value to an attributed string that has the paragraph style as one of its attributes.

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  • [wrinkled brow] are you saying to use the timer to periodically add new bytes to, and prune old bytes from the NSMutableData, and then re-display the NSMutableData in the text field? i'm kind of struggling in my mind on how to wire all that up, but i'll give it a try and report back with some code. thanks for taking the time to respond.
    – pjv
    Jul 10, 2011 at 8:45
  • @pjv: Almost. You add bytes to the NSMutableData in response to notifications from the file handle; you trim off and update the text field in response to the timer firing. Jul 10, 2011 at 12:06

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