External process
Managing external processes from R is not trivial, and this
class aims to help with this deficiency. It is essentially a small
wrapper around the system
base R function, to return the process
id of the started process, and set its standard output and error
streams. The process id is then used to manage the process.
Running Windows batch files (.bat
or .cmd
files) may be complicated
because of the cmd.exe
command line parsing rules. For example you
cannot easily have whitespace in both the command (path) and one of the
arguments. To work around these limitations you need to start a
cmd.exe
shell explicitly and use its call
command. For example:
process$new("cmd.exe", c("/c", "call", bat_file, "arg 1", "arg 2"))
This works even if bat_file
contains whitespace characters.
The poll_io()
function polls the standard output and standard
error connections of a process, with a timeout. If there is output
in either of them, or they are closed (e.g. because the process exits)
poll_io()
returns immediately.
In addition to polling a single process, the poll()
function
can poll the output of several processes, and returns as soon as any
of them has generated output (or exited).
processx kills processes that are not referenced any more (if cleanup
is set to TRUE
), or the whole subprocess tree (if cleanup_tree
is
also set to TRUE
).
The cleanup happens when the references of the processes object are
garbage collected. To clean up earlier, you can call the kill()
or
kill_tree()
method of the process(es), from an on.exit()
expression,
or an error handler:
process_manager <- function() { on.exit({ try(p1$kill(), silent = TRUE) try(p2$kill(), silent = TRUE) }, add = TRUE) p1 <- process$new("sleep", "3") p2 <- process$new("sleep", "10") p1$wait() p2$wait() } process_manager()
If you interrupt process_manager()
or an error happens then both p1
and p2
are cleaned up immediately. Their connections will also be
closed. The same happens at a regular exit.
new()
Start a new process in the background, and then return immediately.
process$new( command = NULL, args = character(), stdin = NULL, stdout = NULL, stderr = NULL, pty = FALSE, pty_options = list(), connections = list(), poll_connection = NULL, env = NULL, cleanup = TRUE, cleanup_tree = FALSE, wd = NULL, echo_cmd = FALSE, supervise = FALSE, windows_verbatim_args = FALSE, windows_hide_window = FALSE, windows_detached_process = !cleanup, encoding = "", post_process = NULL )
command
Character scalar, the command to run.
Note that this argument is not passed to a shell, so no
tilde-expansion or variable substitution is performed on it.
It should not be quoted with base::shQuote()
. See
base::normalizePath()
for tilde-expansion. If you want to run
.bat
or .cmd
files on Windows, make sure you read the
'Batch files' section above.
args
Character vector, arguments to the command. They will be passed to the process as is, without a shell transforming them, They don't need to be escaped.
stdin
What to do with the standard input. Possible values:
NULL
: set to the null device, i.e. no standard input is
provided;
a file name, use this file as standard input;
"|"
: create a (writeable) connection for stdin.
""
(empty string): inherit it from the main R process. If the
main R process does not have a standard input stream, e.g. in
RGui on Windows, then an error is thrown.
stdout
What to do with the standard output. Possible values:
NULL
: discard it;
a string, redirect it to this file;
"|"
: create a connection for it.
""
(empty string): inherit it from the main R process. If the
main R process does not have a standard output stream, e.g. in
RGui on Windows, then an error is thrown.
stderr
What to do with the standard error. Possible values:
NULL
: discard it;
a string, redirect it to this file;
"|"
: create a connection for it;
"2>&1"
: redirect it to the same connection (i.e. pipe or file)
as stdout
. "2>&1"
is a way to keep standard output and error
correctly interleaved.
""
(empty string): inherit it from the main R process. If the
main R process does not have a standard error stream, e.g. in
RGui on Windows, then an error is thrown.
pty
Whether to create a pseudo terminal (pty) for the
background process. This is currently only supported on Unix
systems, but not supported on Solaris.
If it is TRUE
, then the stdin
, stdout
and stderr
arguments
must be NULL
. If a pseudo terminal is created, then processx
will create pipes for standard input and standard output. There is
no separate pipe for standard error, because there is no way to
distinguish between stdout and stderr on a pty. Note that the
standard output connection of the pty is blocking, so we always
poll the standard output connection before reading from it using
the $read_output()
method. Also, because $read_output_lines()
could still block if no complete line is available, this function
always fails if the process has a pty. Use $read_output()
to
read from ptys.
pty_options
Unix pseudo terminal options, a named list. see
default_pty_options()
for details and defaults.
connections
A list of processx connections to pass to the child process. This is an experimental feature currently.
poll_connection
Whether to create an extra connection to the
process that allows polling, even if the standard input and
standard output are not pipes. If this is NULL
(the default),
then this connection will be only created if standard output and
standard error are not pipes, and connections
is an empty list.
If the poll connection is created, you can query it via
p$get_poll_connection()
and it is also included in the response
to p$poll_io()
and poll()
. The numeric file descriptor of the
poll connection comes right after stderr
(2), and the
connections listed in connections
.
env
Environment variables of the child process. If NULL
,
the parent's environment is inherited. On Windows, many programs
cannot function correctly if some environment variables are not
set, so we always set HOMEDRIVE
, HOMEPATH
, LOGONSERVER
,
PATH
, SYSTEMDRIVE
, SYSTEMROOT
, TEMP
, USERDOMAIN
,
USERNAME
, USERPROFILE
and WINDIR
. To append new environment
variables to the ones set in the current process, specify
"current"
in env
, without a name, and the appended ones with
names. The appended ones can overwrite the current ones.
cleanup
Whether to kill the process when the process
object is garbage collected.
cleanup_tree
Whether to kill the process and its child
process tree when the process
object is garbage collected.
wd
Working directory of the process. It must exist.
If NULL
, then the current working directory is used.
echo_cmd
Whether to print the command to the screen before running it.
supervise
Whether to register the process with a supervisor.
If TRUE
, the supervisor will ensure that the process is
killed when the R process exits.
windows_verbatim_args
Whether to omit quoting the arguments on Windows. It is ignored on other platforms.
windows_hide_window
Whether to hide the application's window on Windows. It is ignored on other platforms.
windows_detached_process
Whether to use the
DETACHED_PROCESS
flag on Windows. If this is TRUE
, then
the child process will have no attached console, even if the
parent had one.
encoding
The encoding to assume for stdin
, stdout
and
stderr
. By default the encoding of the current locale is
used. Note that processx
always reencodes the output of the
stdout
and stderr
streams in UTF-8 currently.
If you want to read them without any conversion, on all platforms,
specify "UTF-8"
as encoding.
post_process
An optional function to run when the process has
finished. Currently it only runs if $get_result()
is called.
It is only run once.
R6 object representing the process.
finalize()
Cleanup method that is called when the process
object is garbage
collected. If requested so in the process constructor, then it
eliminates all processes in the process's subprocess tree.
process$finalize()
kill()
Terminate the process. It also terminate all of its child
processes, except if they have created a new process group (on Unix),
or job object (on Windows). It returns TRUE
if the process
was terminated, and FALSE
if it was not (because it was
already finished/dead when processx
tried to terminate it).
process$kill(grace = 0.1, close_connections = TRUE)
grace
Currently not used.
close_connections
Whether to close standard input, standard output, standard error connections and the poll connection, after killing the process.
kill_tree()
Process tree cleanup. It terminates the process
(if still alive), together with any child (or grandchild, etc.)
processes. It uses the ps package, so that needs to be installed,
and ps needs to support the current platform as well. Process tree
cleanup works by marking the process with an environment variable,
which is inherited in all child processes. This allows finding
descendents, even if they are orphaned, i.e. they are not connected
to the root of the tree cleanup in the process tree any more.
$kill_tree()
returns a named integer vector of the process ids that
were killed, the names are the names of the processes (e.g. "sleep"
,
"notepad.exe"
, "Rterm.exe"
, etc.).
process$kill_tree(grace = 0.1, close_connections = TRUE)
grace
Currently not used.
close_connections
Whether to close standard input, standard output, standard error connections and the poll connection, after killing the process.
signal()
Send a signal to the process. On Windows only the
SIGINT
, SIGTERM
and SIGKILL
signals are interpreted,
and the special 0 signal. The first three all kill the process. The 0
signal returns TRUE
if the process is alive, and FALSE
otherwise. On Unix all signals are supported that the OS supports,
and the 0 signal as well.
process$signal(signal)
signal
An integer scalar, the id of the signal to send to
the process. See tools::pskill()
for the list of signals.
interrupt()
Send an interrupt to the process. On Unix this is a
SIGINT
signal, and it is usually equivalent to pressing CTRL+C at
the terminal prompt. On Windows, it is a CTRL+BREAK keypress.
Applications may catch these events. By default they will quit.
process$interrupt()
get_pid()
Query the process id.
process$get_pid()
Integer scalar, the process id of the process.
is_alive()
Check if the process is alive.
process$is_alive()
Logical scalar.
wait()
Wait until the process finishes, or a timeout happens.
Note that if the process never finishes, and the timeout is infinite
(the default), then R will never regain control. In some rare cases,
$wait()
might take a bit longer than specified to time out. This
happens on Unix, when another package overwrites the processx
SIGCHLD
signal handler, after the processx process has started.
One such package is parallel, if used with fork clusters, e.g.
through parallel::mcparallel()
.
process$wait(timeout = -1)
timeout
Timeout in milliseconds, for the wait or the I/O polling.
It returns the process itself, invisibly.
get_exit_status()
$get_exit_status
returns the exit code of the process if it has
finished and NULL
otherwise. On Unix, in some rare cases, the exit
status might be NA
. This happens if another package (or R itself)
overwrites the processx SIGCHLD
handler, after the processx process
has started. In these cases processx cannot determine the real exit
status of the process. One such package is parallel, if used with
fork clusters, e.g. through the parallel::mcparallel()
function.
process$get_exit_status()
format()
format(p)
or p$format()
creates a string representation of the
process, usually for printing.
process$format()
print()
print(p)
or p$print()
shows some information about the
process on the screen, whether it is running and it's process id, etc.
process$print()
get_start_time()
$get_start_time()
returns the time when the process was
started.
process$get_start_time()
is_supervised()
$is_supervised()
returns whether the process is being tracked by
supervisor process.
process$is_supervised()
supervise()
$supervise()
if passed TRUE
, tells the supervisor to start
tracking the process. If FALSE
, tells the supervisor to stop
tracking the process. Note that even if the supervisor is disabled
for a process, if it was started with cleanup = TRUE
, the process
will still be killed when the object is garbage collected.
process$supervise(status)
status
Whether to turn on of off the supervisor for this process.
read_output()
$read_output()
reads from the standard output connection of the
process. If the standard output connection was not requested, then
then it returns an error. It uses a non-blocking text connection. This
will work only if stdout="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will throw an
error.
process$read_output(n = -1)
n
Number of characters or lines to read.
read_error()
$read_error()
is similar to $read_output
, but it reads
from the standard error stream.
process$read_error(n = -1)
n
Number of characters or lines to read.
read_output_lines()
$read_output_lines()
reads lines from standard output connection
of the process. If the standard output connection was not requested,
then it returns an error. It uses a non-blocking text connection.
This will work only if stdout="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will
throw an error.
process$read_output_lines(n = -1)
n
Number of characters or lines to read.
read_error_lines()
$read_error_lines()
is similar to $read_output_lines
, but
it reads from the standard error stream.
process$read_error_lines(n = -1)
n
Number of characters or lines to read.
is_incomplete_output()
$is_incomplete_output()
return FALSE
if the other end of
the standard output connection was closed (most probably because the
process exited). It return TRUE
otherwise.
process$is_incomplete_output()
is_incomplete_error()
$is_incomplete_error()
return FALSE
if the other end of
the standard error connection was closed (most probably because the
process exited). It return TRUE
otherwise.
process$is_incomplete_error()
has_input_connection()
$has_input_connection()
return TRUE
if there is a connection
object for standard input; in other words, if stdout="|"
. It returns
FALSE
otherwise.
process$has_input_connection()
has_output_connection()
$has_output_connection()
returns TRUE
if there is a connection
object for standard output; in other words, if stdout="|"
. It returns
FALSE
otherwise.
process$has_output_connection()
has_error_connection()
$has_error_connection()
returns TRUE
if there is a connection
object for standard error; in other words, if stderr="|"
. It returns
FALSE
otherwise.
process$has_error_connection()
has_poll_connection()
$has_poll_connection()
return TRUE
if there is a poll connection,
FALSE
otherwise.
process$has_poll_connection()
get_input_connection()
$get_input_connection()
returns a connection object, to the
standard input stream of the process.
process$get_input_connection()
get_output_connection()
$get_output_connection()
returns a connection object, to the
standard output stream of the process.
process$get_output_connection()
get_error_connection()
$get_error_conneciton()
returns a connection object, to the
standard error stream of the process.
process$get_error_connection()
read_all_output()
$read_all_output()
waits for all standard output from the process.
It does not return until the process has finished.
Note that this process involves waiting for the process to finish,
polling for I/O and potentially several readLines()
calls.
It returns a character scalar. This will return content only if
stdout="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will throw an error.
process$read_all_output()
read_all_error()
$read_all_error()
waits for all standard error from the process.
It does not return until the process has finished.
Note that this process involves waiting for the process to finish,
polling for I/O and potentially several readLines()
calls.
It returns a character scalar. This will return content only if
stderr="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will throw an error.
process$read_all_error()
read_all_output_lines()
$read_all_output_lines()
waits for all standard output lines
from a process. It does not return until the process has finished.
Note that this process involves waiting for the process to finish,
polling for I/O and potentially several readLines()
calls.
It returns a character vector. This will return content only if
stdout="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will throw an error.
process$read_all_output_lines()
read_all_error_lines()
$read_all_error_lines()
waits for all standard error lines from
a process. It does not return until the process has finished.
Note that this process involves waiting for the process to finish,
polling for I/O and potentially several readLines()
calls.
It returns a character vector. This will return content only if
stderr="|"
was used. Otherwise, it will throw an error.
process$read_all_error_lines()
write_input()
$write_input()
writes the character vector (separated by sep
) to
the standard input of the process. It will be converted to the specified
encoding. This operation is non-blocking, and it will return, even if
the write fails (because the write buffer is full), or if it suceeds
partially (i.e. not the full string is written). It returns with a raw
vector, that contains the bytes that were not written. You can supply
this raw vector to $write_input()
again, until it is fully written,
and then the return value will be raw(0)
(invisibly).
process$write_input(str, sep = "\n")
str
Character or raw vector to write to the standard input
of the process. If a character vector with a marked encoding,
it will be converted to encoding
.
sep
Separator to add between str
elements if it is a
character vector. It is ignored if str
is a raw vector.
Leftover text (as a raw vector), that was not written.
get_input_file()
$get_input_file()
if the stdin
argument was a filename,
this returns the absolute path to the file. If stdin
was "|"
or
NULL
, this simply returns that value.
process$get_input_file()
get_output_file()
$get_output_file()
if the stdout
argument was a filename,
this returns the absolute path to the file. If stdout
was "|"
or
NULL
, this simply returns that value.
process$get_output_file()
get_error_file()
$get_error_file()
if the stderr
argument was a filename,
this returns the absolute path to the file. If stderr
was "|"
or
NULL
, this simply returns that value.
process$get_error_file()
poll_io()
$poll_io()
polls the process's connections for I/O. See more in
the Polling section, and see also the poll()
function
to poll on multiple processes.
process$poll_io(timeout)
timeout
Timeout in milliseconds, for the wait or the I/O polling.
get_poll_connection()
$get_poll_connetion()
returns the poll connection, if the process has
one.
process$get_poll_connection()
get_result()
$get_result()
returns the result of the post processesing function.
It can only be called once the process has finished. If the process has
no post-processing function, then NULL
is returned.
process$get_result()
as_ps_handle()
$as_ps_handle()
returns a ps::ps_handle object, corresponding to
the process.
process$as_ps_handle()
get_name()
Calls ps::ps_name()
to get the process name.
process$get_name()
get_exe()
Calls ps::ps_exe()
to get the path of the executable.
process$get_exe()
get_cmdline()
Calls ps::ps_cmdline()
to get the command line.
process$get_cmdline()
get_status()
Calls ps::ps_status()
to get the process status.
process$get_status()
get_username()
calls ps::ps_username()
to get the username.
process$get_username()
get_wd()
Calls ps::ps_cwd()
to get the current working directory.
process$get_wd()
get_cpu_times()
Calls ps::ps_cpu_times()
to get CPU usage data.
process$get_cpu_times()
get_memory_info()
Calls ps::ps_memory_info()
to get memory data.
process$get_memory_info()
suspend()
Calls ps::ps_suspend()
to suspend the process.
process$suspend()
resume()
Calls ps::ps_resume()
to resume a suspended process.
process$resume()
p <- process$new("sleep", "2") p$is_alive() p p$kill() p$is_alive() p <- process$new("sleep", "1") p$is_alive() Sys.sleep(2) p$is_alive()
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