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I have legacy code, and rewriting this will take me a long while. Until then I need a solution that "works", even if it is ugly.

The main class of the code generates a long HTML string and stores this in an @instance variable.

Unfortunately, the larger framework also sometimes directly puts out something, through puts or print, and so can be used in a .cgi script.

I need to be able to capture all output from that framework, possibly filter or process it, before I send it to the user/visitor.

Is it possible to capture all puts and print statements from a Ruby script, and handle this gracefully?

In the final form, I will have to use puts and print anyway, but I need to sanitize some things there, possibly redirect, also optionally log output BEFORE I use puts/print.

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  • If you found answer helpful, please consider selecting one. Nov 17, 2014 at 3:29

2 Answers 2

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Easy. By default puts and print output to the $stdout I/O channel. Reassign $stdout to a different file handle and output of those commands will go to the new channel.

Change where $stdout points.

File.open('spool.out', 'wb') do |fo|
  $stdout = fo

  puts 'hello world'

  $stdout = STDOUT
end

Save that to a file and run it. You should see a file appear called "spool.out" containing "hello world".

It's not necessary to wrap everything in a File.open block. All that's important is you reassign $stdout to a file handle, then reset it later, so it could also be done like this:

$stdout = File.open('spool.out', 'wb')

puts 'hello world'

$stdout.close
$stdout = STDOUT

At startup, a Ruby script has access to a number of different global variables and constants: $stdout will be the same as STDOUT, and $stderr will be the same as STDERR.

See "Does Ruby use $stdout for writing the output of puts and return?" and "Putting the results of pp (or anything outputted to console) into a string" for more information.

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  • that works well - I upvoted both results as they seem good; I can make only one the selected answer though, so it was yours
    – shevy
    Dec 27, 2014 at 16:06
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You could redefine the print/puts function to add new functionality. It could be done like so:

def print message
    #do something, like editing the message and logging it
    puts "Im here"
    super "#{message}:edited version"
end

print "hello world"

Result:

->Im here
->hello world:edited version

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