Running programs§

Many programs need to be able to run other programs, and we need to pass information to them and receive their output and exit status. Running a program in Raku is as easy as:

run 'git', 'status';

This line runs the program named "git" and passes "git" and "status" to its command-line. It will find the program using the %*ENV<PATH> setting.

If you would like to run a program by sending a command-line to the shell, there's a tool for that as well. All shell metacharacters are interpreted by the shell, including pipes, redirects, environment variable substitutions and so on.

shell 'ls -lR | gzip -9 > ls-lR.gz';

Caution should be taken when using shell with user input.

The Proc object§

Both run and shell return a Proc object, which can be used to communicate with the process in more detail. Please note that unless you close all output pipes, the program will usually not terminate.

my $git = run 'git', 'log', '--oneline', :out;
for $git.out.lines -> $line {
    my ($sha, $subject) = $line.split: ' ', 2;
    say "$subject [$sha]";
}
$git.out.close();

If the program fails (exits with a non-zero exit code), it will throw an exception when the returned Proc object is sunk. You can save it into a variable, even anonymous one, to prevent the sinking:

$ = run '/bin/false'; # does not sink the Proc and so does not throw

You can tell the Proc object to capture output as a filehandle by passing the :out and :err flags. You may also pass input via the :in flag.

my $echo = run 'echo', 'Hello, world', :out;
my $cat  = run 'cat', '-n', :in($echo.out), :out;
say $cat.out.get;
$cat.out.close();

You may also use Proc to capture the PID, send signals to the application, and check the exitcode.

my $crontab = run 'crontab', '-l';
if $crontab.exitcode == 0 {
    say 'crontab -l ran ok';
}
else {
    say 'something went wrong';
}

Example with shell§

Suppose there is a utility that will takes input from STDIN and outputs to STDOUT, but there isn't yet a Raku wrapper. For this example, lets use sass, which preprocesses a more convenient form of CSS called SCSS into standard CSS. In a terminal the utility would be used as sass --stdin

We want to convert multiple strings of SCSS into CSS. The code below only converts one string and captures the output into a variable, but it should be obvious how to adapt this into a loop.

    #| process with utility, first check it exists in the environment
    my $proc = shell( <<sass --version>>, :out, :merge);
    exit note 'Cannot run sass' unless $proc.out.slurp(:close) ~~ / \d \. \d+ /;

    # start loop here for multiple SCSS strings
    # set up the process for stdin.
    $proc = shell( <<sass --stdin --style=compressed>>, :in, :err, :out );
    my $scss = q:to/SCSS/;
        div.rendered-formula {
            display: flex;
            justify-content: space-around;
            align-items: center;
            img.logo {
                align-self: center;
            }
        }
        SCSS
    # now pipe the SCSS string into the process as STDIN (remembering to close the pipe)
    $proc.in.spurt($scss,:close);
    # extract the output or the error
    my $error  = $_ with $proc.err.slurp(:close);
    my $output = $_ with $proc.out.slurp(:close);

    # end loop here

The Proc::Async object§

When you need more control over the communication with and from another process, you will want to make use of Proc::Async. This class provides support for asynchronous communication with a program, as well as the ability to send signals to that program.

# Get ready to run the program
my $log = Proc::Async.new('tail', '-f',  '/var/log/system.log');
$log.stdout.tap(-> $buf { print $buf });
$log.stderr.tap(-> $buf { $*ERR.print($buf) });

# Start the program
my $done = $log.start;
sleep 10;

# Tell the program to stop
$log.kill('QUIT');

# Wait for the program to finish
await $done;

The small program above uses the "tail" program to print out the contents of the log named system.log for 10 seconds and then tells the program to stop with a QUIT signal.

Whereas Proc provides access to output using IO::Handles, Proc::Async provides access using asynchronous supplies (see Supply).

If you want to run a program and do some work while you wait for the original program to finish, the start routine returns a Promise, which is kept when the program quits.

Use the write method to pass data into the program.