46

Is there a way to invoke a system command, like ls or fuser in Rust? How about capturing its output?

75

std::process::Command allows for that.

There are multiple ways to spawn a child process and execute an arbitrary command on the machine:

  • spawn — runs the program and returns a value with details
  • output — runs the program and returns the output
  • status — runs the program and returns the exit code

One simple example from the docs:

use std::process::Command;

Command::new("ls")
        .arg("-l")
        .arg("-a")
        .spawn()
        .expect("ls command failed to start");
9

a very clear example from the docs:

use std::process::Command;
let output = Command::new("/bin/cat")
                     .arg("file.txt")
                     .output()
                     .expect("failed to execute process");

println!("status: {}", output.status);
println!("stdout: {}", String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stdout));
println!("stderr: {}", String::from_utf8_lossy(&output.stderr));

assert!(output.status.success());
6

It is indeed possible! The relevant module is std::run.

let mut options = std::run::ProcessOptions::new();
let process = std::run::Process::new("ls", &[your, arguments], options);

ProcessOptions’ standard file descriptors default to None (create a new pipe), so you can just use process.output() (for example) to read from its output.

If you want to run the command and get all its output after it’s done, there’s wait_with_output for that.

Process::new, as of yesterday, returns an Option<Process> instead of a Process, by the way.

  • 23
    For all searchers: std::run has been removed, see std::io::process instead (answer below). – jgillich Oct 10 '14 at 20:55
  • 2
    It's std::process now as of rustc 1.19.0. – WiSaGaN Jul 29 '17 at 4:52

Your Answer

By clicking "Post Your Answer", you acknowledge that you have read our updated terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy, and that your continued use of the website is subject to these policies.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.