Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package exec provides an injectable interface and implementations for running commands.
Index ¶
Examples ¶
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var ErrExecutableNotFound = osexec.ErrNotFound
ErrExecutableNotFound is returned if the executable is not found.
Functions ¶
This section is empty.
Types ¶
type Cmd ¶
type Cmd interface { // Run runs the command to the completion. Run() error // CombinedOutput runs the command and returns its combined standard output // and standard error. This follows the pattern of package os/exec. CombinedOutput() ([]byte, error) // Output runs the command and returns standard output, but not standard err Output() ([]byte, error) SetDir(dir string) SetStdin(in io.Reader) SetStdout(out io.Writer) SetStderr(out io.Writer) SetEnv(env []string) // StdoutPipe and StderrPipe for getting the process' Stdout and Stderr as // Readers StdoutPipe() (io.ReadCloser, error) StderrPipe() (io.ReadCloser, error) // Start and Wait are for running a process non-blocking Start() error Wait() error // Stops the command by sending SIGTERM. It is not guaranteed the // process will stop before this function returns. If the process is not // responding, an internal timer function will send a SIGKILL to force // terminate after 10 seconds. Stop() }
Cmd is an interface that presents an API that is very similar to Cmd from os/exec. As more functionality is needed, this can grow. Since Cmd is a struct, we will have to replace fields with get/set method pairs.
type CodeExitError ¶
CodeExitError is an implementation of ExitError consisting of an error object and an exit code (the upper bits of os.exec.ExitStatus).
func (CodeExitError) Error ¶
func (e CodeExitError) Error() string
func (CodeExitError) ExitStatus ¶
func (e CodeExitError) ExitStatus() int
ExitStatus is for checking the error code
func (CodeExitError) Exited ¶
func (e CodeExitError) Exited() bool
Exited is to check if the process has finished
func (CodeExitError) String ¶
func (e CodeExitError) String() string
type ExitError ¶
ExitError is an interface that presents an API similar to os.ProcessState, which is what ExitError from os/exec is. This is designed to make testing a bit easier and probably loses some of the cross-platform properties of the underlying library.
type ExitErrorWrapper ¶
ExitErrorWrapper is an implementation of ExitError in terms of os/exec ExitError. Note: standard exec.ExitError is type *os.ProcessState, which already implements Exited().
func (ExitErrorWrapper) ExitStatus ¶
func (eew ExitErrorWrapper) ExitStatus() int
ExitStatus is part of the ExitError interface.
type Interface ¶
type Interface interface { // Command returns a Cmd instance which can be used to run a single command. // This follows the pattern of package os/exec. Command(cmd string, args ...string) Cmd // CommandContext returns a Cmd instance which can be used to run a single command. // // The provided context is used to kill the process if the context becomes done // before the command completes on its own. For example, a timeout can be set in // the context. CommandContext(ctx context.Context, cmd string, args ...string) Cmd // LookPath wraps os/exec.LookPath LookPath(file string) (string, error) }
Interface is an interface that presents a subset of the os/exec API. Use this when you want to inject fakeable/mockable exec behavior.
func New ¶
func New() Interface
New returns a new Interface which will os/exec to run commands.
Example ¶
package main import ( "bytes" "fmt" "k8s.io/utils/exec" ) func main() { exec := exec.New() cmd := exec.Command("echo", "Bonjour!") buff := bytes.Buffer{} cmd.SetStdout(&buff) if err := cmd.Run(); err != nil { panic(err) } fmt.Println(buff.String()) }
Output: Bonjour!
Example (StderrPipe) ¶
package main import ( "fmt" "io/ioutil" "k8s.io/utils/exec" ) func main() { cmd := exec.New().Command("/bin/sh", "-c", "echo 'We can read from stderr via pipe!' >&2") stderrPipe, err := cmd.StderrPipe() if err != nil { panic(err) } stderr := make(chan []byte) go func() { b, err := ioutil.ReadAll(stderrPipe) if err != nil { panic(err) } stderr <- b }() if err := cmd.Start(); err != nil { panic(err) } received := <-stderr if err := cmd.Wait(); err != nil { panic(err) } fmt.Println(string(received)) }
Output: We can read from stderr via pipe!