I am trying to implement a terminal emulator in Java. It is supposed to be able to host both cmd.exe on Windows and bash on Unix-like systems (I would like to support at least Linux and Mac OS X). The problem I have is that both cmd.exe
and bash
repeat on their standard output whatever I send to their standard input.
For example, in bash, I type "ls
", hit enter, at which point the terminal emulator sends the input line to bash's stdin and flushes the stream. The process then outputs the input line again "ls\n
" and then the output of the ls
command.
This is a problem, because other programs apart from bash
and cmd.exe
don't do that. If I run, inside either bash, or cmd.exe
, the command "python -i
", the python interactive shell does not repeat the input in the way bash
and cmd.exe
does. This means a workaround would have to know what process the actual output came from. I doubt that's what actual terminal emulators do.
Running "bash -i
" doesn't change this behaviour. As far as I know, cmd.exe
doesn't have distinct "interactive" and "noninteractive" modes.
EDIT: I am creating the host process using the ProcessBuilder
class. I am reading the stdout and stderr and writing to the stdin of the process using a technique similar to the stream gobbler. I don't set any environment variables before I start the host process. The exact commands I use to start the processes are bash -i
for bash and cmd
for cmd.exe. I'll try to post minimal code example as soon as I manage to create one.
bash
: hide user input. tech-recipes.com/rx/278/… Not sure how portable this is, though.echo ls | bash
don't do anything like that.stty -echo
command to turn off echo. There's some ansi sequence you could use on Windows, but (1) I can't remember what it is; and (2) you can't guarantee that ansi.sys will be present on the target system.cmd.exe
with/c
parameter, which means "execute the following command and exit". Not sure whether this would solve your problem.