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Octave includes some high-level commands like system
and
popen
for starting subprocesses. If you want to run another
program to perform some task and then look at its output, you will
probably want to use these functions.
Octave also provides several very low-level Unix-like functions which can also be used for starting subprocesses, but you should probably only use them if you can’t find any way to do what you need with the higher-level functions.
Execute a shell command specified by string.
If the optional argument type is "async"
, the process is
started in the background and the process ID of the child process is
returned immediately. Otherwise, the child process is started and Octave
waits until it exits. If the type argument is omitted, it defaults to
the value "sync"
.
If system is called with one or more output arguments, or if the
optional argument return_output is true and the subprocess is started
synchronously, then the output from the command is returned as a variable.
Otherwise, if the subprocess is executed synchronously, its output is sent
to the standard output. To send the output of a command executed with
system
through the pager, use a command like
[output, text] = system ("cmd"); disp (text);
or
printf ("%s\n", nthargout (2, "system", "cmd"));
The system
function can return two values. The first is the
exit status of the command and the second is any output from the
command that was written to the standard output stream. For example,
[status, output] = system ("echo foo; exit 2");
will set the variable output
to the string ‘foo’, and the
variable status
to the integer ‘2’.
For commands run asynchronously, status is the process id of the command shell that is started to run the command.
Execute a system command if running under a Unix-like operating system, otherwise do nothing.
Octave waits for the external command to finish before returning the exit status of the program in status and any output in text.
When called with no output argument, or the "-echo"
argument is
given, then text is also sent to standard output.
Execute a system command if running under a Windows-like operating system, otherwise do nothing.
Octave waits for the external command to finish before returning the exit status of the program in status and any output in text.
When called with no output argument, or the "-echo"
argument is
given, then text is also sent to standard output.
Open the file file in Octave or in an external application based on the file type as determined by the file name extension.
Recognized file types are
.m
Open file in the editor.
.mat
Load the file in the base workspace.
.exe
Execute the program (on Windows systems only).
Other file types are opened in the appropriate external application.
Invoke Perl script scriptfile, possibly with a list of command line arguments.
Return output in output and optional status in status. If scriptfile is not an absolute file name it is searched for in the current directory and then in the Octave loadpath.
Invoke Python script scriptfile, possibly with a list of command line arguments.
Return output in output and optional status in status. If scriptfile is not an absolute file name it is searched for in the current directory and then in the Octave loadpath.
Start a process and create a pipe.
The name of the command to run is given by command. The argument mode may be
"r"
The pipe will be connected to the standard output of the process, and open for reading.
"w"
The pipe will be connected to the standard input of the process, and open for writing.
The file identifier corresponding to the input or output stream of the process is returned in fid.
For example:
fid = popen ("ls -ltr / | tail -3", "r"); while (ischar (s = fgets (fid))) fputs (stdout, s); endwhile -| drwxr-xr-x 33 root root 3072 Feb 15 13:28 etc -| drwxr-xr-x 3 root root 1024 Feb 15 13:28 lib -| drwxrwxrwt 15 root root 2048 Feb 17 14:53 tmp
See also: popen2.
Close a file identifier that was opened by popen
.
The function fclose
may also be used for the same purpose.
Start a subprocess with two-way communication.
The name of the process is given by command, and args is an array of strings containing options for the command.
The file identifiers for the input and output streams of the subprocess are returned in in and out. If execution of the command is successful, pid contains the process ID of the subprocess. Otherwise, pid is -1.
For example:
[in, out, pid] = popen2 ("sort", "-r"); fputs (in, "these\nare\nsome\nstrings\n"); fclose (in); EAGAIN = errno ("EAGAIN"); done = false; do s = fgets (out); if (ischar (s)) fputs (stdout, s); elseif (errno () == EAGAIN) sleep (0.1); fclear (out); else done = true; endif until (done) fclose (out); waitpid (pid); -| these -| strings -| some -| are
Note that popen2
, unlike popen
, will not "reap" the
child process. If you don’t use waitpid
to check the child’s
exit status, it will linger until Octave exits.
Query or set the internal variable that specifies a colon separated list of directories to append to the shell PATH when executing external programs.
The initial value of is taken from the environment variable
OCTAVE_EXEC_PATH
, but that value can be overridden by the command
line argument --exec-path PATH.
When called from inside a function with the "local"
option, the
variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls.
The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
See also: IMAGE_PATH, OCTAVE_HOME.
In most cases, the following functions simply decode their arguments and
make the corresponding Unix system calls. For a complete example of how
they can be used, look at the definition of the function popen2
.
Create a copy of the current process.
Fork can return one of the following values:
You are in the parent process. The value returned from fork
is the
process id of the child process. You should probably arrange to wait for
any child processes to exit.
You are in the child process. You can call exec
to start another
process. If that fails, you should probably call exit
.
The call to fork
failed for some reason. You must take evasive
action. A system dependent error message will be waiting in msg.
Replace current process with a new process.
Calling exec
without first calling fork
will terminate your
current Octave process and replace it with the program named by file.
For example,
exec ("ls" "-l")
will run ls
and return you to your shell prompt.
If successful, exec
does not return. If exec
does return,
err will be nonzero, and msg will contain a system-dependent
error message.
Create a pipe and return the reading and writing ends of the pipe into read_fd and write_fd respectively.
If successful, err is 0 and msg is an empty string. Otherwise, err is nonzero and msg contains a system-dependent error message.
See also: mkfifo.
Duplicate a file descriptor.
If successful, fid is greater than zero and contains the new file ID. Otherwise, fid is negative and msg contains a system-dependent error message.
Wait for process pid to terminate.
The pid argument can be:
Wait for any child process.
Wait for any child process whose process group ID is equal to that of the Octave interpreter process.
Wait for termination of the child process with ID pid.
The options argument can be a bitwise OR of zero or more of the following constants:
0
Wait until signal is received or a child process exits (this is the default if the options argument is missing).
WNOHANG
Do not hang if status is not immediately available.
WUNTRACED
Report the status of any child processes that are stopped, and whose status has not yet been reported since they stopped.
WCONTINUE
Return if a stopped child has been resumed by delivery of SIGCONT
.
This value may not be meaningful on all systems.
If the returned value of pid is greater than 0, it is the process ID of the child process that exited. If an error occurs, pid will be less than zero and msg will contain a system-dependent error message. The value of status contains additional system-dependent information about the subprocess that exited.
See also: WCONTINUE, WCOREDUMP, WEXITSTATUS, WIFCONTINUED, WIFSIGNALED, WIFSTOPPED, WNOHANG, WSTOPSIG, WTERMSIG, WUNTRACED.
Return the numerical value of the option argument that may be
passed to waitpid
to indicate that it should also return if a stopped
child has been resumed by delivery of a SIGCONT
signal.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
true if the child produced a core dump.
This function should only be employed if WIFSIGNALED
returned true.
The macro used to implement this function is not specified in POSIX.1-2001
and is not available on some Unix implementations (e.g., AIX, SunOS).
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
the exit status of the child.
This function should only be employed if WIFEXITED
returned true.
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
true if the child process was resumed by delivery of SIGCONT
.
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
true if the child process was terminated by a signal.
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
true if the child process was stopped by delivery of a signal.
This is only possible if the call was done using WUNTRACED
or when
the child is being traced (see ptrace(2)).
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
true if the child terminated normally.
See also: waitpid, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Return the numerical value of the option argument that may be
passed to waitpid
to indicate that it should return its status
immediately instead of waiting for a process to exit.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
the number of the signal which caused the child to stop.
This function should only be employed if WIFSTOPPED
returned true.
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WTERMSIG, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WIFCONTINUED.
Given status from a call to waitpid
, return
the number of the signal that caused the child process to terminate.
This function should only be employed if WIFSIGNALED
returned true.
See also: waitpid, WIFEXITED, WEXITSTATUS, WIFSIGNALED, WCOREDUMP, WIFSTOPPED, WSTOPSIG, WIFCONTINUED.
Return the numerical value of the option argument that may be
passed to waitpid
to indicate that it should also return if the child
process has stopped but is not traced via the ptrace
system call
Change the properties of the open file fid.
The following values may be passed as request:
F_DUPFD
Return a duplicate file descriptor.
F_GETFD
Return the file descriptor flags for fid.
F_SETFD
Set the file descriptor flags for fid.
F_GETFL
Return the file status flags for fid. The following codes may be returned (some of the flags may be undefined on some systems).
O_RDONLY
Open for reading only.
O_WRONLY
Open for writing only.
O_RDWR
Open for reading and writing.
O_APPEND
Append on each write.
O_CREAT
Create the file if it does not exist.
O_NONBLOCK
Non-blocking mode.
O_SYNC
Wait for writes to complete.
O_ASYNC
Asynchronous I/O.
F_SETFL
Set the file status flags for fid to the value specified by arg.
The only flags that can be changed are O_APPEND
and
O_NONBLOCK
.
If successful, err is 0 and msg is an empty string. Otherwise, err is nonzero and msg contains a system-dependent error message.
Send signal sig to process pid.
If pid is positive, then signal sig is sent to pid.
If pid is 0, then signal sig is sent to every process in the process group of the current process.
If pid is -1, then signal sig is sent to every process except process 1.
If pid is less than -1, then signal sig is sent to every process in the process group -pid.
If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed.
Return 0 if successful, otherwise return -1.
Return a structure containing Unix signal names and their defined values.
Next: Process ID Information, Previous: Networking Utilities, Up: System Utilities [Contents][Index]