How can I execute a terminal command (like grep
) from my Objective-C Cocoa application?
12 Answers
You can use NSTask
. Here's an example that would run '/usr/bin/grep foo bar.txt
'.
int pid = [[NSProcessInfo processInfo] processIdentifier];
NSPipe *pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
NSFileHandle *file = pipe.fileHandleForReading;
NSTask *task = [[NSTask alloc] init];
task.launchPath = @"/usr/bin/grep";
task.arguments = @[@"foo", @"bar.txt"];
task.standardOutput = pipe;
[task launch];
NSData *data = [file readDataToEndOfFile];
[file closeFile];
NSString *grepOutput = [[NSString alloc] initWithData: data encoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding];
NSLog (@"grep returned:\n%@", grepOutput);
NSPipe
and NSFileHandle
are used to redirect the standard output of the task.
For more detailed information on interacting with the operating system from within your Objective-C application, you can see this document on Apple's Development Center: Interacting with the Operating System.
Edit: Included fix for NSLog problem
If you are using NSTask to run a command-line utility via bash, then you need to include this magic line to keep NSLog working:
//The magic line that keeps your log where it belongs
task.standardOutput = pipe;
An explanation is here: https://web.archive.org/web/20141121094204/https://cocoadev.com/HowToPipeCommandsWithNSTask
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1Yup, 'arguments = [NSArray arrayWithObjects: @"-e", @"foo", @"bar.txt", nil];' Jan 5, 2009 at 8:47
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16There's a small glitch in your answer. NSPipe has a buffer (set at the OS level), which is flushed when it's read. If the buffer fills up, NSTask will hang, and your app will hang too, indefinitely. No error message will appear. This can happen if the NSTask returns a lot of info. The solution is to use
NSMutableData *data = [NSMutableData dataWithCapacity:512];
. Then,while ([task isRunning]) { [data appendData:[file readDataToEndOfFile]]; }
. And I "believe" you should have one more[data appendData:[file readDataToEndOfFile]];
after the while-loop exits.– DaveSep 27, 2011 at 22:49 -
3Errors won't come up unless you do this (they just get printed in the log): [task setStandardError:pipe]; Aug 7, 2012 at 22:32
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1Dave's comment is a good one. However, you might want to use availableData instead of readDataToEndOfFile, because availableData will block when there's no data. Important if the command that is being executed consumes much CPU and results in little output, such as gcc. Aug 1, 2013 at 15:22
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1This could be updated with ARC and with Obj-C array literals. E.g. pastebin.com/sRvs3CqD– bames53Sep 25, 2013 at 23:39
kent's article gave me a new idea. this runCommand method doesn't need a script file, just runs a command by a line:
- (NSString *)runCommand:(NSString *)commandToRun
{
NSTask *task = [[NSTask alloc] init];
[task setLaunchPath:@"/bin/sh"];
NSArray *arguments = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:
@"-c" ,
[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@", commandToRun],
nil];
NSLog(@"run command:%@", commandToRun);
[task setArguments:arguments];
NSPipe *pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
[task setStandardOutput:pipe];
NSFileHandle *file = [pipe fileHandleForReading];
[task launch];
NSData *data = [file readDataToEndOfFile];
NSString *output = [[NSString alloc] initWithData:data encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
return output;
}
You can use this method like this:
NSString *output = runCommand(@"ps -A | grep mysql");
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1This handles most cases well, but if you run it in a loop, it eventually raises an exception due to too many open file handles. Can be fixed by adding: [file closeFile]; after readDataToEndOfFile. May 15, 2016 at 19:54
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@DavidStein : I think using autoreleasepool to wrap runCommand method seems to be rather than. Actually, above code doesn't consider non-ARC as well.– KenialMay 17, 2016 at 0:39
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@Kenial: Oh, that's a much better solution. It also releases the resources promptly upon leaving the scope. May 19, 2016 at 7:02
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/bin/ps: Operation not permitted , i'm not getting any success, lead ? Feb 23, 2018 at 12:32
in the spirit of sharing... this is a method I use frequently to run shell scripts. you can add a script to your product bundle (in the copy phase of the build) and then have the script be read and run at runtime. note: this code looks for the script in the privateFrameworks sub-path. warning: this could be a security risk for deployed products, but for our in-house development it is an easy way to customize simple things (like which host to rsync to...) without re-compiling the application, but just editing the shell script in the bundle.
//------------------------------------------------------
-(void) runScript:(NSString*)scriptName
{
NSTask *task;
task = [[NSTask alloc] init];
[task setLaunchPath: @"/bin/sh"];
NSArray *arguments;
NSString* newpath = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@/%@",[[NSBundle mainBundle] privateFrameworksPath], scriptName];
NSLog(@"shell script path: %@",newpath);
arguments = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:newpath, nil];
[task setArguments: arguments];
NSPipe *pipe;
pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
[task setStandardOutput: pipe];
NSFileHandle *file;
file = [pipe fileHandleForReading];
[task launch];
NSData *data;
data = [file readDataToEndOfFile];
NSString *string;
string = [[NSString alloc] initWithData: data encoding: NSUTF8StringEncoding];
NSLog (@"script returned:\n%@", string);
}
//------------------------------------------------------
Edit: Included fix for NSLog problem
If you are using NSTask to run a command-line utility via bash, then you need to include this magic line to keep NSLog working:
//The magic line that keeps your log where it belongs
[task setStandardInput:[NSPipe pipe]];
In context:
NSPipe *pipe;
pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
[task setStandardOutput: pipe];
//The magic line that keeps your log where it belongs
[task setStandardInput:[NSPipe pipe]];
An explanation is here: http://www.cocoadev.com/index.pl?NSTask
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2
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I want to run this command "system_profiler SPApplicationsDataType -xml" but i am getting this error "launch path not accessible" Jul 29, 2015 at 12:20
Here's how to do it in Swift
Changes for Swift 3.0:
NSPipe
has been renamedPipe
NSTask
has been renamedProcess
This is based on inkit's Objective-C answer above. He wrote it as a category on NSString
—
For Swift, it becomes an extension of String
.
extension String.runAsCommand() -> String
extension String {
func runAsCommand() -> String {
let pipe = Pipe()
let task = Process()
task.launchPath = "/bin/sh"
task.arguments = ["-c", String(format:"%@", self)]
task.standardOutput = pipe
let file = pipe.fileHandleForReading
task.launch()
if let result = NSString(data: file.readDataToEndOfFile(), encoding: String.Encoding.utf8.rawValue) {
return result as String
}
else {
return "--- Error running command - Unable to initialize string from file data ---"
}
}
}
Usage:
let input = "echo hello"
let output = input.runAsCommand()
print(output) // prints "hello"
or just:
print("echo hello".runAsCommand()) // prints "hello"
Example:
@IBAction func toggleFinderShowAllFiles(_ sender: AnyObject) {
var newSetting = ""
let readDefaultsCommand = "defaults read com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles"
let oldSetting = readDefaultsCommand.runAsCommand()
// Note: the Command results are terminated with a newline character
if (oldSetting == "0\n") { newSetting = "1" }
else { newSetting = "0" }
let writeDefaultsCommand = "defaults write com.apple.finder AppleShowAllFiles \(newSetting) ; killall Finder"
_ = writeDefaultsCommand.runAsCommand()
}
Note the Process
result as read from the Pipe
is an NSString
object. It might be an error string and it can also be an empty string, but it should always be an NSString
.
So, as long as it's not nil, the result can cast as a Swift String
and returned.
If for some reason no NSString
at all can be initialized from the file data, the function returns an error message. The function could have been written to return an optional String?
, but that would be awkward to use and wouldn't serve a useful purpose because it's so unlikely for this to occur.
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1
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If you don’t need the output. Add the @discardableResult argument infront or above the runCommand method. This will let you call the method without having to put it in a variable. Aug 3, 2019 at 5:21
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let result = String(bytes: fileHandle.readDataToEndOfFile(), encoding: String.Encoding.utf8) is ok Oct 7, 2019 at 15:38
Objective-C (see below for Swift)
Cleaned up the code in the top answer to make it more readable, less redundant, added the benefits of the one-line method and made into an NSString category
@interface NSString (ShellExecution)
- (NSString*)runAsCommand;
@end
Implementation:
@implementation NSString (ShellExecution)
- (NSString*)runAsCommand {
NSPipe* pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
NSTask* task = [[NSTask alloc] init];
[task setLaunchPath: @"/bin/sh"];
[task setArguments:@[@"-c", [NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@", self]]];
[task setStandardOutput:pipe];
NSFileHandle* file = [pipe fileHandleForReading];
[task launch];
return [[NSString alloc] initWithData:[file readDataToEndOfFile] encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
}
@end
Usage:
NSString* output = [@"echo hello" runAsCommand];
And if you're having problems with output encoding:
// Had problems with `lsof` output and Japanese-named files, this fixed it
NSString* output = [@"export LANG=en_US.UTF-8;echo hello" runAsCommand];
Hope it's as useful to you as it will be to future me. (Hi, you!)
Swift 4
Here's a Swift example making use of Pipe
, Process
, and String
extension String {
func run() -> String? {
let pipe = Pipe()
let process = Process()
process.launchPath = "/bin/sh"
process.arguments = ["-c", self]
process.standardOutput = pipe
let fileHandle = pipe.fileHandleForReading
process.launch()
return String(data: fileHandle.readDataToEndOfFile(), encoding: .utf8)
}
}
Usage:
let output = "echo hello".run()
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2Indeed, your code was very useful to me! I changed it to Swift and posted it as another answer below.– ElmerCatAug 27, 2015 at 3:14
fork, exec, and wait should work, if you're not really looking for a Objective-C specific way. fork
creates a copy of the currently running program, exec
replaces the currently running program with a new one, and wait
waits for the subprocess to exit. For example (without any error checking):
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
pid_t p = fork();
if (p == 0) {
/* fork returns 0 in the child process. */
execl("/other/program/to/run", "/other/program/to/run", "foo", NULL);
} else {
/* fork returns the child's PID in the parent. */
int status;
wait(&status);
/* The child has exited, and status contains the way it exited. */
}
/* The child has run and exited by the time execution gets to here. */
There's also system, which runs the command as if you typed it from the shell's command line. It's simpler, but you have less control over the situation.
I'm assuming you're working on a Mac application, so the links are to Apple's documentation for these functions, but they're all POSIX
, so you should be to use them on any POSIX-compliant system.
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I know this is an very old answer but i need to say this: this is an excelent way to use trheads to handle the excecution. the only downside is that it creates a copy of the entire program. so for a cocoa application i would go with @GordonWilson for a nicer aproach, and if i'm working on a command line application this is the best way to do it. thanks (sorry my bad english) Feb 17, 2013 at 21:26
There is also good old POSIX system("echo -en '\007'");
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6DO NOT RUN THIS COMMAND. (In case you do not know what this command does)– justinDec 8, 2009 at 23:18
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4
-
Won't this throw an error in the console?
Incorrect NSStringEncoding value 0x0000 detected. Assuming NSStringEncodingASCII. Will stop this compatibility mapping behavior in the near future.
– cwdDec 17, 2011 at 18:47 -
1
-
just run /usr/bin/echo or something. rm -rf is harsh, and unicode in the console still sucks :) Jan 3, 2017 at 15:57
I wrote this "C" function, because NSTask
is obnoxious..
NSString * runCommand(NSString* c) {
NSString* outP; FILE *read_fp; char buffer[BUFSIZ + 1];
int chars_read; memset(buffer, '\0', sizeof(buffer));
read_fp = popen(c.UTF8String, "r");
if (read_fp != NULL) {
chars_read = fread(buffer, sizeof(char), BUFSIZ, read_fp);
if (chars_read > 0) outP = $UTF8(buffer);
pclose(read_fp);
}
return outP;
}
NSLog(@"%@", runCommand(@"ls -la /"));
total 16751
drwxrwxr-x+ 60 root wheel 2108 May 24 15:19 .
drwxrwxr-x+ 60 root wheel 2108 May 24 15:19 ..
…
oh, and for the sake of being complete / unambiguous…
#define $UTF8(A) ((NSString*)[NSS stringWithUTF8String:A])
Years later, C
is still a bewildering mess, to me.. and with little faith in my ability to correct my gross shortcomings above - the only olive branch I offer is a rezhuzhed version of @inket's answer that is barest of bones, for my fellow purists / verbosity-haters...
id _system(id cmd) {
return !cmd ? nil : ({ NSPipe* pipe; NSTask * task;
[task = NSTask.new setValuesForKeysWithDictionary:
@{ @"launchPath" : @"/bin/sh",
@"arguments" : @[@"-c", cmd],
@"standardOutput" : pipe = NSPipe.pipe}]; [task launch];
[NSString.alloc initWithData:
pipe.fileHandleForReading.readDataToEndOfFile
encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]; });
}
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1outP is undefined on any error, chars_read is too small for the return value of fread() on any architecture where sizeof(ssize_t) != sizeof(int), what if we want more output than BUFSIZ bytes? What if the output isn't UTF-8? What if pclose() returns an error? How do we report the error of fread()? Mar 11, 2014 at 10:45
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@ObjectiveC-oder D'oh - I dunno. Please, tell me (as in.. edit away)! Dec 2, 2014 at 1:30
In addition to the several excellent answers above, I use the following code to process the output of the command in the background and avoid the blocking mechanism of [file readDataToEndOfFile]
.
- (void)runCommand:(NSString *)commandToRun
{
NSTask *task = [[NSTask alloc] init];
[task setLaunchPath:@"/bin/sh"];
NSArray *arguments = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:
@"-c" ,
[NSString stringWithFormat:@"%@", commandToRun],
nil];
NSLog(@"run command:%@", commandToRun);
[task setArguments:arguments];
NSPipe *pipe = [NSPipe pipe];
[task setStandardOutput:pipe];
NSFileHandle *file = [pipe fileHandleForReading];
[task launch];
[self performSelectorInBackground:@selector(collectTaskOutput:) withObject:file];
}
- (void)collectTaskOutput:(NSFileHandle *)file
{
NSData *data;
do
{
data = [file availableData];
NSLog(@"%@", [[NSString alloc] initWithData:data encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding] );
} while ([data length] > 0); // [file availableData] Returns empty data when the pipe was closed
// Task has stopped
[file closeFile];
}
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1For me the line that made all the difference was [self performSelectorInBackground:@selector(collectTaskOutput:) withObject:file]; May 1, 2019 at 14:06
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If you're trying to do this in Swift,
NSTask
was renamed toProcess
. Sep 9, 2021 at 2:39
Custos Mortem said:
I'm surprised no one really got into blocking/non-blocking call issues
For blocking/non-blocking call issues regarding NSTask
read below:
asynctask.m -- sample code that shows how to implement asynchronous stdin, stdout & stderr streams for processing data with NSTask
Source code of asynctask.m is available at GitHub.
Or since Objective C is just C with some OO layer on top you can use the posix conterparts:
int execl(const char *path, const char *arg0, ..., const char *argn, (char *)0);
int execle(const char *path, const char *arg0, ..., const char *argn, (char *)0, char *const envp[]);
int execlp(const char *file, const char *arg0, ..., const char *argn, (char *)0);
int execlpe(const char *file, const char *arg0, ..., const char *argn, (char *)0, char *const envp[]);
int execv(const char *path, char *const argv[]);
int execve(const char *path, char *const argv[], char *const envp[]);
int execvp(const char *file, char *const argv[]);
int execvpe(const char *file, char *const argv[], char *const envp[]);
They are included from unistd.h header file.
If the Terminal command requires Administrator Privilege (aka sudo
), use AuthorizationExecuteWithPrivileges
instead.
The following will create a file named "com.stackoverflow.test" is the root directory "/System/Library/Caches".
AuthorizationRef authorizationRef;
FILE *pipe = NULL;
OSStatus err = AuthorizationCreate(nil,
kAuthorizationEmptyEnvironment,
kAuthorizationFlagDefaults,
&authorizationRef);
char *command= "/usr/bin/touch";
char *args[] = {"/System/Library/Caches/com.stackoverflow.test", nil};
err = AuthorizationExecuteWithPrivileges(authorizationRef,
command,
kAuthorizationFlagDefaults,
args,
&pipe);
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5
-
2.. but it keeps working regardless, as it's the only way to do this, and many installers rely on that, I believe. Dec 15, 2016 at 11:34
/usr/bin
wheregrep
lives.