vote up 8 vote down star
6

Perl (and PHP) do this with backticks. For example, this

$output = `ls`;

returns a directory listing. (That's just an example; there are of course much better ways to get the list of files in a directory.)

The similar function, system("foo"), returns the operating system return code for the command foo. I'm talking about a variant that returns whatever foo prints to stdout.

How do other languages do this? Whichever languages does this most concisely/cleanly wins! (I'll add the perl backtick answer.)

PS: I'm mainly asking because I'm looking for the canonical name for such a function.

PPS: I'm going with "backtick"; though maybe I could coin "syslurp".

flag
Code-challenge set and answered for a system shell 'ls' in Java (in a platform independent way), see below (reference to a DZones Java Snippets code page) – VonC Oct 26 '08 at 1:09
VonC would like to advertise the following: for certain languages, this can become a code-challenge: stackoverflow.com/questions/172184 – dreeves Oct 30 '08 at 20:06

27 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

Perl:

$output = `foo`;

ADDED: This is really a multi-way tie. The above is also valid PHP, and Ruby, for example, uses the same backtick notation as well.

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vote up 3 vote down

Mathematica:

output = Import["!foo", "Text"];
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vote up 8 vote down

Python:

import os
output = os.popen("foo").read()
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The semicolons are not necessary. – J.F. Sebastian Oct 25 '08 at 20:04
gone. perl still wins by character count :) – dreeves Oct 25 '08 at 23:05
when did this turn into code golf? :) – Jeremy Michael Cantrell Dec 2 '08 at 20:14
It would have turned into code golf when Perl was invented, but APL was ahead of Perl. – Windows programmer Dec 16 '08 at 23:09
1  
As of python 2.5, you should use the subprocess module. – Aaron Digulla May 25 at 9:15
vote up 6 vote down

In shell

OUTPUT=`ls`

or alternatively

OUTPUT=$(ls)

This second method is better because it allows nesting, but isn't supported by all shells, unlike the first method.

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1  
Actually, you can nest using backticks, but you don't want to go there. – Leon Timmermans Oct 25 '08 at 23:19
1  
You can nest backticks if you escape them, but it gets ugly really fast. – Adam Rosenfield Nov 25 '08 at 3:27
Dudes .. shell script is ugly. – troelskn Dec 12 '08 at 19:24
Anyone who can declare variables in C-based languages can escape backticks and escapes in shell scripts. – Windows programmer Dec 16 '08 at 23:08
vote up 5 vote down

Ruby: either backticks or the '%x' builtin syntax.

puts `ls`;
puts %x{ls};
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vote up 3 vote down

In PHP

$output = `ls`;

or

$output = shell_exec('ls');
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vote up 6 vote down

An alternative method in perl

$output = qx/ls/;

This had the advantage that you can choose your delimiters, making it possible to use ` in the command (though IMHO you should reconsider your design if you really need to do that). Another important advantage is that if you use single quotes as delimiter, variables will not be interpolated (a very useful)

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That's the same method, backticks are just syntactic sugar for this. – Svante Dec 12 '08 at 19:23
vote up 5 vote down

Erlang:

os:cmd("ls")
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Is the stdout captured or directed to caller's stdout? – eduffy Dec 12 '08 at 19:23
It's captured and returned as a string. – JesperE Dec 15 '08 at 10:12
vote up 5 vote down

Yet another way to do it in Perl (TIMTOWTDI)

$output = <<`END`;
ls
END

This is specially useful when embedding a relatively large shell script in a Perl program

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IT's not really a different way, as know you. It's just using different quoting mechanisms. :) – brian d foy Oct 25 '08 at 22:53
True, but I'm having the impression few people know about this trick – Leon Timmermans Oct 25 '08 at 23:48
I think that there is a semicolon missing after the first line. – Svante Dec 12 '08 at 19:25
"embedding a relatively large shell script in a Perl program" - a phrase which will surely be the source of many nightmares to come for me! – Dave Rolsky Jan 11 at 11:50
vote up 5 vote down

[At the request of Alexman and dreeves -- see comments --, you will find at this DZones Java Snippet page a full version Os-independent for making, in this instance, a 'ls'. This is a direct answer to their code-challenge.
What follows below is just the core: Runtime.exec, plus 2 thread to listen to stdout and stderr. ]

Java "Simple!":

E:\classes\com\javaworld\jpitfalls\article2>java GoodWindowsExec "dir *.java"
Executing cmd.exe /C dir *.java
...

Or in java code

String output = GoodWindowsExec.execute("dir");

But to do that, you need to code...
... this is embarrassing.

import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
class StreamGobbler extends Thread
{
    InputStream is;
    String type;
    StringBuffer output = new StringBuffer();

    StreamGobbler(InputStream is, String type)
    {
        this.is = is;
        this.type = type;
    }

    public void run()
    {
        try
        {
            InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
            BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
            String line=null;
            while ( (line = br.readLine()) != null)
                System.out.println(type + ">" + line);
                output.append(line+"\r\n")
            } catch (IOException ioe)
              {
                ioe.printStackTrace();  
              }
    }
    public String getOutput()
    {
        return this.output.toString();
    }
}
public class GoodWindowsExec
{
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        if (args.length < 1)
        {
            System.out.println("USAGE: java GoodWindowsExec <cmd>");
            System.exit(1);
        }
    }
    public static String execute(String aCommand)
    {
        String output = "";
        try
        {            
            String osName = System.getProperty("os.name" );
            String[] cmd = new String[3];
            if( osName.equals( "Windows 95" ) )
            {
                cmd[0] = "command.com" ;
                cmd[1] = "/C" ;
                cmd[2] = aCommand;
            }
            else if( osName.startsWith( "Windows" ) )
            {
                cmd[0] = "cmd.exe" ;
                cmd[1] = "/C" ;
                cmd[2] = aCommand;
            }

            Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
            System.out.println("Executing " + cmd[0] + " " + cmd[1] 
                               + " " + cmd[2]);
            Process proc = rt.exec(cmd);
            // any error message?
            StreamGobbler errorGobbler = new 
                StreamGobbler(proc.getErrorStream(), "ERROR");            

            // any output?
            StreamGobbler outputGobbler = new 
                StreamGobbler(proc.getInputStream(), "OUTPUT");

            // kick them off
            errorGobbler.start();
            outputGobbler.start();

            // any error???
            int exitVal = proc.waitFor();
            System.out.println("ExitValue: " + exitVal);   

            output = outputGobbler.getOutput();
            System.out.println("Final output: " + output);   

        } catch (Throwable t)
          {
            t.printStackTrace();
          }
        return output;
    }
}
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can you get rid of the command line stuff and show how to get the output into a string in the java code itself? – dreeves Oct 25 '08 at 20:00
1  
Done: String output = GoodWindowsExec.execute("dir"); – VonC Oct 25 '08 at 20:19
1  
Where's the AbstractFactoryBuilderFactory.buildExecFactory() call? – Axeman Oct 25 '08 at 22:33
Right here, Sir, right here: books.google.fr/books?id=M_eLGmh7dGwC&pg=PA35… – VonC Oct 25 '08 at 22:54
ok, but seriously, how would you do this in java? :) also, is the above windows-specific? is there an os-independent way to do this? – dreeves Oct 25 '08 at 23:09
show 7 more comments
vote up 6 vote down

Python

from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, STDOUT

output = Popen(['ls', '-lt'], stdout=PIPE, stderr=STDOUT).communicate()[0]

print(output)
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vote up 3 vote down

Yet another way (or 2!) in Perl....

open my $pipe, 'ps |';
my @output = < $pipe >;
say @output;

open can also be written like so...

open my $pipe, '-|', 'ps'

/I3az/

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I was thinking of that one too, but I don't think the "various languages" part of this thread is getting done. – Axeman Oct 25 '08 at 22:31
There should be a smoke my $pipe; in perl... – David Schmitt Oct 27 '08 at 21:50
vote up 2 vote down

C (with glibc extension):

#define _GNU_SOURCE
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
    char *s = NULL;
    FILE *p = popen("ls", "r");
    getdelim(&s, NULL, '\0', p);
    pclose(p);
    printf("%s", s);
    return 0;
}

Okay, not really concise or clean. That's life in C...

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Concise (as C can be for this sort of thing), but not portable and also leaks memory. – Adam Rosenfield Nov 25 '08 at 3:29
vote up 1 vote down

J:

output=:2!:0'ls'
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vote up 3 vote down

Haskell:

import Control.Exception
import System.IO
import System.Process
main = bracket (runInteractiveCommand "ls") close $ \(_, hOut, _, _) -> do
    output <- hGetContents hOut
    putStr output
  where close (hIn, hOut, hErr, pid) =
          mapM_ hClose [hIn, hOut, hErr] >> waitForProcess pid

With MissingH installed:

import System.Cmd.Utils
main = do
    (pid, output) <- pipeFrom "ls" []
    putStr output
    forceSuccess pid

This is an easy operation in "glue" languages like Perl and Ruby, but Haskell isn't.

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vote up 3 vote down

Years ago I wrote a plugin for jEdit that interfaced to a native application. This is what I used to get the streams off the running executable. Only thing left to do is while((String s = stdout.readLine())!=null){...}:

/* File:    IOControl.java
 *
 * created: 10 July 2003
 * author:  dsm
 */
package org.jpop.io;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.io.PrintStream;

/**
 *  Controls the I/O for a process. When using the std[in|out|err] streams, they must all be put on
 *  different threads to avoid blocking!
 *
 * @author     dsm
 * @version    1.5
 */
public class IOControl extends Object {
    private Process process;
    private BufferedReader stdout;
    private BufferedReader stderr;
    private PrintStream stdin;

    /**
     *  Constructor for the IOControl object
     *
     * @param  process  The process to control I/O for
     */
    public IOControl(Process process) {
        this.process = process;
        this.stdin = new PrintStream(process.getOutputStream());
        this.stdout = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getInputStream()));
        this.stderr = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getErrorStream()));
    }

    /**
     *  Gets the stdin attribute of the IOControl object
     *
     * @return    The stdin value
     */
    public PrintStream getStdin() {
        return this.stdin;
    }

    /**
     *  Gets the stdout attribute of the IOControl object
     *
     * @return    The stdout value
     */
    public BufferedReader getStdout() {
        return this.stdout;
    }

    /**
     *  Gets the stderr attribute of the IOControl object
     *
     * @return    The stderr value
     */
    public BufferedReader getStderr() {
        return this.stderr;
    }

    /**
     *  Gets the process attribute of the IOControl object. To monitor the process (as opposed to
     *  just letting it run by itself) its necessary to create a thread like this: <pre>
     *. IOControl ioc;
     *.
     *. new Thread(){
     *.     public void run(){
     *.         while(true){    // only necessary if you want the process to respawn
     *.             try{
     *.                 ioc = new IOControl(Runtime.getRuntime().exec("procname"));
     *.                 // add some code to handle the IO streams
     *.                 ioc.getProcess().waitFor();
     *.             }catch(InterruptedException ie){
     *.                 // deal with exception
     *.             }catch(IOException ioe){
     *.                 // deal with exception
     *.             }
     *.
     *.             // a break condition can be included here to terminate the loop
     *.         }               // only necessary if you want the process to respawn
     *.     }
     *. }.start();
     *  </pre>
     *
     * @return    The process value
     */
    public Process getProcess() {
        return this.process;
    }
}
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vote up 2 vote down

Don't forget Tcl:

set result [exec ls]
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vote up 3 vote down

Well, since this is system dependent, there are many languages that do not have a built-in wrapper for the various system calls needed.

For example, Common Lisp itself was not designed to run on any specific system. SBCL (the Steel Banks Common Lisp implementation), though, does provide an extension for Unix-like systems, as do most other CL implementations. This is much more "mighty" than just getting the output, of course (you have control over the running process, can specify all kinds of stream directions, etc., confer to the SBCL manual, chapter 6.3), but it is easy to write a little macro for this specific purpose:

(defmacro with-input-from-command ((stream-name command args) &body body)
  "Binds the output stream of command to stream-name, then executes the body
   in an implicit progn."
  `(with-open-stream
       (,stream-name
         (sb-ext:process-output (sb-ext:run-program ,command
                                                    ,args
                                                    :search t
                                                    :output :stream)))
     ,@body))

Now, you can use it like this:

(with-input-from-command (ls "ls" '("-l"))
  ;;do fancy stuff with the ls stream
  )

Perhaps you want to slurp it all into one string. The macro is trivial (though perhaps more concise code is possible):

(defmacro syslurp (command args)
  "Returns the output from command as a string. command is to be supplied
   as string, args as a list of strings."
  (let ((istream (gensym))
        (ostream (gensym))
        (line (gensym)))
    `(with-input-from-command (,istream ,command ,args)
       (with-output-to-string (,ostream)
         (loop (let ((,line (read-line ,istream nil)))
                 (when (null ,line) (return))
                 (write-line ,line ,ostream)))))))

Now you can get a string with this call:

(syslurp "ls" '("-l"))
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Thanks! Very handy! This seems to me both illustrative of lisp's power that it's so easy to build this from scratch from very general tools (compare to the abomination that is java!), but also illustrative of lisp's primary problem: that things like syslurp aren't prepackaged in standard libraries. – dreeves Dec 13 '08 at 21:37
1  
Oh, there are many libraries. Some regarding system interaction are listed at cliki.net/compatibility%20layers – Svante Dec 13 '08 at 22:26
vote up 1 vote down

Perl, another way:

use IPC::Run3

my ($stdout, $stderr);
run3 ['ls'], undef, \$stdout, \$stderr
    or die "ls failed";

Useful because you can feed the command input, and get back both stderr and stdout separately. Nowhere near as neat/scary/slow/disturbing as IPC::Run, which can set up pipes to subroutines.

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vote up 1 vote down

In C on Posix conformant systems:

#include <stdio.h> 

FILE* stream = popen("/path/to/program", "rw");
fprintf(stream, "foo\n"); /* Use like you would a file stream. */
fclose(stream);
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vote up -1 vote down

Granted, it is not the smaller ( from all the languages available ) but it shouldn't be that verbose.

This version is dirty. Exceptions should be handled, reading may be improved. This is just to show how a java version could start.

Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec( "cmd /c " + command );
InputStream i = p.getInputStream();
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
for(  int c = 0 ; ( c =  i.read() ) > -1  ; ) {
    sb.append( ( char ) c );
}

Complete program below.

import java.io.*;

public class Test { 
    public static void main ( String [] args ) throws IOException { 
        String result = execute( args[0] );
        System.out.println( result );
    }
    private static String execute( String command ) throws IOException  { 
        Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec( "cmd /c " + command );
        InputStream i = p.getInputStream();
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for(  int c = 0 ; ( c =  i.read() ) > -1  ; ) {
            sb.append( ( char ) c );
        }
        i.close();
        return sb.toString();
    }
}

Sample ouput ( using the type command )

C:\oreyes\samples\java\readinput>java Test "type hello.txt"
This is a sample file
with some
lines

Sample output ( dir )

 C:\oreyes\samples\java\readinput>java Test "dir"
 El volumen de la unidad C no tiene etiqueta.
 El nĂºmero de serie del volumen es:

 Directorio de C:\oreyes\samples\java\readinput

12/16/2008  05:51 PM    <DIR>          .
12/16/2008  05:51 PM    <DIR>          ..
12/16/2008  05:50 PM                42 hello.txt
12/16/2008  05:38 PM             1,209 Test.class
12/16/2008  05:47 PM               682 Test.java
               3 archivos          1,933 bytes
               2 dirs            840 bytes libres

Try any

java Test netstat
java Test tasklist
java Test "taskkill /pid 416"

EDIT

I must admit I'm not 100% sure this is the "best" way to do it. Feel free to post references and/or code to show how can it be improved or what's wrong with this.

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"I cannot figure out why nobody posted a Java solution already." Other than VonC and dsm? ;) – mmyers Dec 17 '08 at 20:17
Well I mean, a real solution. dms ended up with "Now you just have to: while((String s = stdout.readLine())!=null){...}:" Which is the question in first place. And VonC posted a lot of code that make everyone believe Java is that fat ( it is verbose but not that much! ) It takes only 5 lines aprox. – Oscar Reyes Dec 17 '08 at 21:47
-1 This solution can cause a deadlock. You must read stdout (and probably stderr) in a thread. – Aaron Digulla May 25 at 9:19
@Aaron: Really?! I don't see how, I've tried several small commands and never got a deadlock. But probably I'm missing something. Please post the problematic command or a way to produce the deadlock. – Oscar Reyes May 25 at 15:11
javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-12-2000/… mentions: "The JDK's Javadoc documentation provides the answer to this question: Because some native platforms only provide limited buffer size for standard input and output streams, failure to promptly write the input stream or read the output stream of the subprocess may cause the subprocess to block, and even deadlock.". – hlovdal Jun 24 at 13:17
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Why there is still no c# guy here :)

This is how to do it in C#. The built-in way.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Diagnostics;

namespace TestConsole
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            Process p = new Process();

            p.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
            p.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
            p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
            p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
            p.StartInfo.FileName = "cmd";
            p.StartInfo.Arguments = "/c dir";
            p.Start();

            string res = p.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd();
            Console.WriteLine(res);
        }

    }
}
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Are you trying to make c# look bad? :) – Kobi Sep 3 at 10:12
vote up 1 vote down

Icon/Unicon:

stream := open("ls", "p")
while line := read(stream) do { 
    # stuff
}

The docs call this a pipe. One of the good things is that it makes the output look like you're just reading a file. It also means you can write to the app's stdin, if you must.

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vote up 3 vote down

C# 3.0, less verbose than this one:

using System;
using System.Diagnostics;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        var info = new ProcessStartInfo("cmd", "/c dir") { UseShellExecute = false, RedirectStandardOutput = true };
        Console.WriteLine(Process.Start(info).StandardOutput.ReadToEnd());
    }
}

Caveat: Production code should properly dispose the Process object...

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vote up 1 vote down

Here's another Lisp way:

(defun execute (program parameters &optional (buffer-size 1000))
  (let ((proc (sb-ext:run-program program parameters :search t :output :stream))
        (output (make-array buffer-size :adjustable t :fill-pointer t 
                            :element-type 'character)))
    (with-open-stream (stream (sb-ext:process-output proc))
      (setf (fill-pointer output) (read-sequence output stream)))
    output))

Then, to get your string:

(execute "cat" '("/etc/hosts"))

If you want to run a command that creates prints a great deal of info to STDOUT, you can run it like this:

(execute "big-writer" '("some" "parameters") 1000000)

The last parameter preallocates a large amount of space for the output from big-writer. I'm guessing this function could be faster than reading the output stream one line at a time.

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vote up 1 vote down

Lua:

    foo = io.popen("ls"):read("*a")
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vote up 1 vote down

Clozure Common Lisp:

(with-output-to-string (stream)
   (run-program "ls" '("-l") :output stream))

LispWorks

(with-output-to-string (*standard-output*)
  (sys:call-system-showing-output "ls -l" :prefix "" :show-cmd nil))
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