process.pl -- Create processes and redirect I/O
The module library(process) implements interaction with child processes
and unifies older interfaces such as shell/[1,2], open(pipe(command),
...)
etc. This library is modelled after SICStus 4.
The main interface is formed by process_create/3. If the process id is requested the process must be waited for using process_wait/2. Otherwise the process resources are reclaimed automatically.
In addition to the predicates, this module defines a file search path
(see file_search_path/2 and absolute_file_name/3) named path
that
locates files on the system's search path for executables. E.g. the
following finds the executable for ls
:
?- absolute_file_name(path(ls), Path, [access(execute)]).
Incompatibilities and current limitations
- Where SICStus distinguishes between an internal process id and the OS process id, this implementation does not make this distinction. This implies that is_process/1 is incomplete and unreliable.
- SICStus only supports ISO 8859-1 (latin-1). This implementation supports arbitrary OS multibyte interaction using the default locale.
- It is unclear what the
detached(true)
option is supposed to do. Disable signals in the child? Usesetsid()
to detach from the session? The current implementation usessetsid()
on Unix systems. - An extra option
env([Name=Value, ...])
is added to process_create/3.
- process_create(+Exe, +Args:list, +Options) is det
- Create a new process running the file Exe and using arguments
from the given list. Exe is a file specification as handed to
absolute_file_name/3. Typically one use the
path
file alias to specify an executable file on the current PATH. Args is a list of arguments that are handed to the new process. On Unix systems, each element in the list becomes a seperate argument in the new process. In Windows, the arguments are simply concatenated to form the commandline. Each argument itself is either a primitive or a list of primitives. A primitive is either atomic or a termfile(Spec)
. Usingfile(Spec)
, the system inserts a filename using the OS filename conventions which is properly quoted if needed.Options:
- stdin(Spec)
- stdout(Spec)
- stderr(Spec)
- Bind the standard streams of the new process. Spec is one of
the terms below. If
pipe(Pipe)
is used, the Prolog stream is a stream in text-mode using the encoding of the default locale. The encoding can be changed using set_stream/2. The optionsstdout
andstderr
may use the same stream, in which case both output streams are connected to the same Prolog stream.- std
- Just share with the Prolog I/O streams
- null
- Bind to a null stream. Reading from such a stream returns end-of-file, writing produces no output
- pipe(-Stream)
- Attach input and/or output to a Prolog stream.
- cwd(+Directory)
- Run the new process in Directory. Directory can be a compound specification, which is converted using absolute_file_name/3.
- env(+List)
- Specify the environment for the new process. List is a list of Name=Value terms. Note that the current implementation does not pass any environment variables. If unspecified, the environment is inherited from the Prolog process.
- process(-PID)
- Unify PID with the process id of the created process.
- detached(+Bool)
- In Unix: If
true
, detach the process from the terminal Currently mapped tosetsid()
; Also creates a new process group for the child In Windows: Iftrue
, detach the process from the current job via the CREATE_BREAKAWAY_FROM_JOB flag. In Vista and beyond, processes launched from the shell directly have the 'compatibility assistant' attached to them automatically unless they have a UAC manifest embedded in them. This means that you will get a permission denied error if you try and assign the newly-created PID to a job you create yourself. - window(+Bool)
- If
true
, create a window for the process (Windows only) - priority(+Priority)
- In Unix: specifies the process priority for the newly created process. Priority must be an integer between -20 and 19. Positive values are nicer to others, and negative values are less so. The default is zero. Users are free to lower their own priority. Only the super-user may raise it to less-than zero.
If the user specifies the
process(-PID)
option, he must call process_wait/2 to reclaim the process. Without this option, the system will wait for completion of the process after the last pipe stream is closed.If the process is not waited for, it must succeed with status 0. If not, an process_error is raised.
Windows notes
On Windows this call is an interface to the CreateProcess() API. The commandline consists of the basename of Exe and the arguments formed from Args. Arguments are separated by a single space. If all characters satisfy
iswalnum()
it is unquoted. If the argument contains a double-quote it is quoted using single quotes. If both single and double quotes appear a domain_error is raised, otherwise double-quote are used.The CreateProcess() API has many options. Currently only the
CREATE_NO_WINDOW
options is supported through thewindow(+Bool)
option. If omitted, the default is to use this option if the application has no console. Future versions are likely to support more window specific options and replace win_exec/2.Examples
First, a very simple example that behaves the same as
shell('ls -l')
, except for error handling:?- process_create(path(ls), ['-l'], []).
The following example uses grep to find all matching lines in a file.
grep(File, Pattern, Lines) :- setup_call_cleanup( process_create(path(grep), [ Pattern, file(File) ], [ stdout(pipe(Out)) ]), read_lines(Out, Lines), close(Out)). read_lines(Out, Lines) :- read_line_to_codes(Out, Line1), read_lines(Line1, Out, Lines). read_lines(end_of_file, _, []) :- !. read_lines(Codes, Out, [Line|Lines]) :- atom_codes(Line, Codes), read_line_to_codes(Out, Line2), read_lines(Line2, Out, Lines).
- process_id(-PID) is det
- True if PID is the process id of the running Prolog process.
- process_id(+Process, -PID) is det
- PID is the process id of Process. Given that they are united in SWI-Prolog, this is a simple unify.
- is_process(+PID) is semidet
- True if PID might be a process. Succeeds for any positive integer.
- process_release(+PID)
- Release process handle. In this implementation this is the same
as
process_wait(PID, _)
. - process_wait(+PID, -Status) is det
- process_wait(+PID, -Status, +Options) is det
- True if PID completed with Status. This call normally blocks
until the process is finished. Options:
- timeout(+Timeout)
- Default:
infinite
. If this option is a number, the waits for a maximum of Timeout seconds and unifies Status withtimeout
if the process does not terminate within Timeout. In this case PID is not invalidated. On Unix systems only timeout 0 andinfinite
are supported. A 0-value can be used to poll the status of the process. - release(+Bool)
- Do/do not release the process. We do not support this flag
and a domain_error is raised if
release(false)
is provided.
- process_kill(+PID) is det
- process_kill(+PID, +Signal) is det
- Send signal to process PID. Default is
term
. Signal is an integer, Unix signal name (e.g.SIGSTOP
) or the more Prolog friendly variation one gets after removingSIG
and downcase the result:stop
. On Windows systems, Signal is ignored and the process is terminated using the TerminateProcess() API. On Windows systems PID must be obtained from process_create/3, while any PID is allowed on Unix systems. - process_group_kill(+PID) is det
- process_group_kill(+PID, +Signal) is det
- Send signal to the group containing process PID. Default is
term
. See process_wait/1 for a description of signal handling. In Windows, the same restriction on PID applies: it must have been created from process_create/3, and the the group is terminated via the TerminateJobObject API. - process_wait(+PID, -Status) is det
- process_wait(+PID, -Status, +Options) is det
- True if PID completed with Status. This call normally blocks
until the process is finished. Options:
- timeout(+Timeout)
- Default:
infinite
. If this option is a number, the waits for a maximum of Timeout seconds and unifies Status withtimeout
if the process does not terminate within Timeout. In this case PID is not invalidated. On Unix systems only timeout 0 andinfinite
are supported. A 0-value can be used to poll the status of the process. - release(+Bool)
- Do/do not release the process. We do not support this flag
and a domain_error is raised if
release(false)
is provided.
- process_kill(+PID) is det
- process_kill(+PID, +Signal) is det
- Send signal to process PID. Default is
term
. Signal is an integer, Unix signal name (e.g.SIGSTOP
) or the more Prolog friendly variation one gets after removingSIG
and downcase the result:stop
. On Windows systems, Signal is ignored and the process is terminated using the TerminateProcess() API. On Windows systems PID must be obtained from process_create/3, while any PID is allowed on Unix systems. - process_group_kill(+PID) is det
- process_group_kill(+PID, +Signal) is det
- Send signal to the group containing process PID. Default is
term
. See process_wait/1 for a description of signal handling. In Windows, the same restriction on PID applies: it must have been created from process_create/3, and the the group is terminated via the TerminateJobObject API.