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I want to execute wsl commands from java.

I'm trying to do this using Process and ProcessBuilder.

As I understand, there are two ways to do this:

  1. Run wsl along with command as argument (for example: wsl ls -l) (do this per-command).
  2. Run wsl, and then execute the commands one by one.

But there are some problems with 1 and 2.

With point 1:

  1. When the command terminates, the process does not stop. So even if i run wsl ls, I can not determine the moment when I can call next command.
  2. wsl does not save the state between such calls, so it's not very convenient

With point 2:

Since wsl does not show bash prompt, I can not track when the command stopped displaying information. For example:

ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("wsl");
pb.redirectErrorStream(true);
Process p = pb.start();
Thread.sleep(1000);
OutputStreamWriter osw = new OutputStreamWriter(p.getOutputStream());
osw.write("ls\n");
osw.flush();

And all I can read is:

build.gradle
gradle
gradlew
gradlew.bat
out
settings.gradle
src 

No selya@selya-pc:/mnt/c/Users/selya$ read. So I can't use it as a separator between commands. I think that wsl somehow tracks, in what environment it was launched, for example, through isatty(), and therefore the output is different.

With both:

Аs far as I know, for programs that are running outside the terminal, stdout is not buffered. So there are some problems with, for example, sudo, because it asks fro a password without newline/flush ([sudo] password for selya:), therefore I can't read this line...

I found a solution - pass command as argument to unbuffer util, for example:

wsl unbuffer -p sudo apt-get update 

(-p stands for pipeline).

But other problems still remain. Is there any way to do this? Or maybe there is lib for it? Even c or c++ lib will suit my needs...

P.S. I tried to find a solution for several days. Russian-speaking SO didn't help me, that's why I'm here. Sorry for my English...

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  • There seems to be several questions here: 1. Why is there no output when running wsl from Java, 2. Why does wsl ls not show a bash prompt, 3. How do I determine when a wsl command exits?, 4. How do I separate output from multiple sequential shell commands in the same bash shell? 5. How do I run wsl commands programmatically from C++? StackOverflow works better if you ask a single question per post. Can you edit your post and ask a single question that will help you do what you want? (For example: "How do I run a wsl command with sudo and provide a password programmatically?") Apr 30, 2018 at 22:15
  • Have you considered adding your own separator with e.g. ls; echo "__END__" ? Apr 30, 2018 at 23:41

2 Answers 2

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The problem was solved with the help of pty4j. It works on linux, mac and windows. (It works like pseudo terminal on linux, but have nice java interface).

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  • 2
    Could you perhaps elaborate on/specify what you did with the help of pty4j to start up and execute multiple commands in WSL <version> sequentially? Or even present a Minimal Working Example (MWE)? Either would be greatly appreciated!
    – a.t.
    Jun 1, 2019 at 12:54
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I was able to use point 2 (run wsl and then pipe commands to process.outputWriter() for the STDIN) with Baeldung's tutorial with no issues. The big gotchas:

  1. That output stream flush() call prevents a hang
  2. With the tutorial you are started in the Windows Home directory, not the linux home directory.
  3. You need to write exit\n to prevent a hang

I haven't needed to run SUDO yet though.

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