Open3.pipeline_w
starts a list of commands as a pipeline with a pipe which connects to stdin of the first command.
Open3.pipeline_w(cmd1, cmd2, ... [, opts]) {|first_stdin, wait_threads| ... } first_stdin, wait_threads = Open3.pipeline_w(cmd1, cmd2, ... [, opts]) ... first_stdin.close
Each cmd is a string or an array. If it is an array, the elements are passed to Process.spawn
.
cmd: commandline command line string which is passed to a shell [env, commandline, opts] command line string which is passed to a shell [env, cmdname, arg1, ..., opts] command name and one or more arguments (no shell) [env, [cmdname, argv0], arg1, ..., opts] command name and arguments including argv[0] (no shell) Note that env and opts are optional, as for Process.spawn.
Example:
Open3.pipeline_w("bzip2 -c", :out=>"/tmp/hello.bz2") {|i, ts| i.puts "hello" }
Open3.pipeline
starts a list of commands as a pipeline. It waits for the completion of the commands. No pipes are created for stdin of the first command and stdout of the last command.
status_list = Open3.pipeline(cmd1, cmd2, ... [, opts])
Each cmd is a string or an array. If it is an array, the elements are passed to Process.spawn
.
cmd: commandline command line string which is passed to a shell [env, commandline, opts] command line string which is passed to a shell [env, cmdname, arg1, ..., opts] command name and one or more arguments (no shell) [env, [cmdname, argv0], arg1, ..., opts] command name and arguments including argv[0] (no shell) Note that env and opts are optional, as Process.spawn.
Example:
fname = "/usr/share/man/man1/ruby.1.gz" p Open3.pipeline(["zcat", fname], "nroff -man", "less") #=> [#<Process::Status: pid 11817 exit 0>, # #<Process::Status: pid 11820 exit 0>, # #<Process::Status: pid 11828 exit 0>] fname = "/usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz" Open3.pipeline(["zcat", fname], "nroff -man", "colcrt") # convert PDF to PS and send to a printer by lpr pdf_file = "paper.pdf" printer = "printer-name" Open3.pipeline(["pdftops", pdf_file, "-"], ["lpr", "-P#{printer}"]) # count lines Open3.pipeline("sort", "uniq -c", :in=>"names.txt", :out=>"count") # cyclic pipeline r,w = IO.pipe w.print "ibase=14\n10\n" Open3.pipeline("bc", "tee /dev/tty", :in=>r, :out=>w) #=> 14 # 18 # 22 # 30 # 42 # 58 # 78 # 106 # 202
Open3.pipeline
starts a list of commands as a pipeline. It waits for the completion of the commands. No pipes are created for stdin of the first command and stdout of the last command.
status_list = Open3.pipeline(cmd1, cmd2, ... [, opts])
Each cmd is a string or an array. If it is an array, the elements are passed to Process.spawn
.
cmd: commandline command line string which is passed to a shell [env, commandline, opts] command line string which is passed to a shell [env, cmdname, arg1, ..., opts] command name and one or more arguments (no shell) [env, [cmdname, argv0], arg1, ..., opts] command name and arguments including argv[0] (no shell) Note that env and opts are optional, as Process.spawn.
Example:
fname = "/usr/share/man/man1/ruby.1.gz" p Open3.pipeline(["zcat", fname], "nroff -man", "less") #=> [#<Process::Status: pid 11817 exit 0>, # #<Process::Status: pid 11820 exit 0>, # #<Process::Status: pid 11828 exit 0>] fname = "/usr/share/man/man1/ls.1.gz" Open3.pipeline(["zcat", fname], "nroff -man", "colcrt") # convert PDF to PS and send to a printer by lpr pdf_file = "paper.pdf" printer = "printer-name" Open3.pipeline(["pdftops", pdf_file, "-"], ["lpr", "-P#{printer}"]) # count lines Open3.pipeline("sort", "uniq -c", :in=>"names.txt", :out=>"count") # cyclic pipeline r,w = IO.pipe w.print "ibase=14\n10\n" Open3.pipeline("bc", "tee /dev/tty", :in=>r, :out=>w) #=> 14 # 18 # 22 # 30 # 42 # 58 # 78 # 106 # 202
Splits a string into an array of tokens in the same way the UNIX Bourne shell does.
argv = Shellwords.split('here are "two words"') argv #=> ["here", "are", "two words"]
Note, however, that this is not a command line parser. Shell metacharacters except for the single and double quotes and backslash are not treated as such.
argv = Shellwords.split('ruby my_prog.rb | less') argv #=> ["ruby", "my_prog.rb", "|", "less"]
String#shellsplit
is a shortcut for this function.
argv = 'here are "two words"'.shellsplit argv #=> ["here", "are", "two words"]
Splits a string into an array of tokens in the same way the UNIX Bourne shell does.
argv = Shellwords.split('here are "two words"') argv #=> ["here", "are", "two words"]
Note, however, that this is not a command line parser. Shell metacharacters except for the single and double quotes and backslash are not treated as such.
argv = Shellwords.split('ruby my_prog.rb | less') argv #=> ["ruby", "my_prog.rb", "|", "less"]
String#shellsplit
is a shortcut for this function.
argv = 'here are "two words"'.shellsplit argv #=> ["here", "are", "two words"]
Returns the singleton instance.
Gets the resource limit of the process. cur_limit means current (soft) limit and max_limit means maximum (hard) limit.
resource indicates the kind of resource to limit. It is specified as a symbol such as :CORE
, a string such as "CORE"
or a constant such as Process::RLIMIT_CORE
. See Process.setrlimit
for details.
cur_limit and max_limit may be Process::RLIM_INFINITY
, Process::RLIM_SAVED_MAX
or Process::RLIM_SAVED_CUR
. See Process.setrlimit
and the system getrlimit(2) manual for details.
Sets the resource limit of the process. cur_limit means current (soft) limit and max_limit means maximum (hard) limit.
If max_limit is not given, cur_limit is used.
resource indicates the kind of resource to limit. It should be a symbol such as :CORE
, a string such as "CORE"
or a constant such as Process::RLIMIT_CORE
. The available resources are OS dependent. Ruby may support following resources.
total available memory (bytes) (SUSv3, NetBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD but 4.4BSD-Lite)
core size (bytes) (SUSv3)
CPU time (seconds) (SUSv3)
data segment (bytes) (SUSv3)
file size (bytes) (SUSv3)
total size for mlock(2) (bytes) (4.4BSD, GNU/Linux)
allocation for POSIX message queues (bytes) (GNU/Linux)
ceiling on process’s nice(2) value (number) (GNU/Linux)
file descriptors (number) (SUSv3)
number of processes for the user (number) (4.4BSD, GNU/Linux)
RSS
resident memory size (bytes) (4.2BSD, GNU/Linux)
ceiling on the process’s real-time priority (number) (GNU/Linux)
CPU time for real-time process (us) (GNU/Linux)
all socket buffers (bytes) (NetBSD, FreeBSD)
number of queued signals allowed (signals) (GNU/Linux)
stack size (bytes) (SUSv3)
cur_limit and max_limit may be :INFINITY
, "INFINITY"
or Process::RLIM_INFINITY
, which means that the resource is not limited. They may be Process::RLIM_SAVED_MAX
, Process::RLIM_SAVED_CUR
and corresponding symbols and strings too. See system setrlimit(2) manual for details.
The following example raises the soft limit of core size to the hard limit to try to make core dump possible.
Process.setrlimit(:CORE, Process.getrlimit(:CORE)[1])
Returns a list of signal names mapped to the corresponding underlying signal numbers.
Signal.list #=> {"EXIT"=>0, "HUP"=>1, "INT"=>2, "QUIT"=>3, "ILL"=>4, "TRAP"=>5, "IOT"=>6, "ABRT"=>6, "FPE"=>8, "KILL"=>9, "BUS"=>7, "SEGV"=>11, "SYS"=>31, "PIPE"=>13, "ALRM"=>14, "TERM"=>15, "URG"=>23, "STOP"=>19, "TSTP"=>20, "CONT"=>18, "CHLD"=>17, "CLD"=>17, "TTIN"=>21, "TTOU"=>22, "IO"=>29, "XCPU"=>24, "XFSZ"=>25, "VTALRM"=>26, "PROF"=>27, "WINCH"=>28, "USR1"=>10, "USR2"=>12, "PWR"=>30, "POLL"=>29}
Expands lazy
enumerator to an array. See Enumerable#to_a
.
Indicated whether this Cipher
instance uses an Authenticated Encryption mode.
Called when an alias is found to anchor
. anchor
will be the name of the anchor found.
Here we have an example of an array that references itself in YAML:
--- &ponies - first element - *ponies
&ponies is the anchor, *ponies is the alias. In this case, alias is called with “ponies”.
Get the output style, canonical or not.
Set
the output style to canonical, or not.
Exit parser. Return value is Symbol_Value_Stack.