I am trying to accomplish two things:
I am running cygwin on Windows7 to execute my unix shell commands and I need to automate the process by writing a Java app. I already know how to use the windows shell through Java using the 'Process class' and
Runtime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c dir")
. I need to be able to do the same with unix commands: i.e.:ls -la
and so forth. What should I look into?Is there a way to remember a shell's state? explanation: when I use:
Runtime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c dir")
, I always get 开发者_如何学编程a listing of my home directory. If I doRuntime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c cd <some-folder>")
and then doRuntime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c dir")
again, I will still get the listing of my home folder. Is there a way to tell the process to remember its state, like a regular shell would?
It seems that the bash
command line proposed by Paŭlo does not work:
C:\cygwin\bin>bash -c ls -la
-la: ls: command not found
I am having trouble figuring out the technicalities.
This is my code:
p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("C:\\cygwin\\bin\\bash.exe -c ls -la");
reader2 = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
line = reader2.readLine();
line
ends up having a null value.
I added this to my .bash_profile:
#BASH
export BASH_HOME=/cygdrive/c/cygwin
export PATH=$BASH_HOME/bin:$PATH
I added the following as well:
System Properties -> advanced -> Environment variables -> user variebales -> variable:
BASH
, value:c:\cygwin\bin
Still nothing...
However, if I execute this instead, it works!
p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("c:\\cygwin\\bin\\ls -la ~/\"Eclipse_Workspace/RenameScript/files copy\"");
1. Calling unix commands:
You simply need to call your unix shell (e.g. the bash delivered with cygwin) instead of cmd
.
bash -c "ls -la"
should do. Of course, if your command is an external program, you could simply call it directly:
ls -la
When starting this from Java, it is best to use the variant which takes a string array, as then you don't have Java let it parse to see where the arguments start and stop:
Process p =
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"C:\\cygwin\\bin\\bash.exe",
"-c", "ls -la"},
new String[]{"PATH=/cygdrive/c/cygwin/bin"});
The error message in your example (ls: command not found
) seems to show that your bash can't find the ls
command. Maybe you need to put it into the PATH variable (see above for a way to do this from Java).
Maybe instead of /cygdrive/c/cygwin/bin
, the right directory name would be /usr/bin
.
(Everything is a bit complicated here by having to bridge between Unix and Windows conventions everywhere.)
The simple ls
command can be called like this:
Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"C:\\cygwin\\bin\\ls.exe", "-la"});
2. Invoking multiple commands:
There are basically two ways of invoking multiple commands in one shell:
- passing them all at once to the shell; or
- passing them interactively to the shell.
For the first way, simply give multiple commands as argument to the -c
option, separated by ;
or \n
(a newline), like this:
bash -c "cd /bin/ ; ls -la"
or from Java (adapting the example above):
Process p =
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"C:\\cygwin\\bin\\bash.exe",
"-c", "cd /bin/; ls -la"},
new String[]{"PATH=/cygdrive/c/cygwin/bin"});
Here the shell will parse the command line as, and execute it as a script. If it contains multiple commands, they will all be executed, if the shell does not somehow exit before for some reason (like an exit
command). (I'm not sure if the Windows cmd
does work in a similar way. Please test and report.)
Instead of passing the bash (or cmd or whatever shell you are using) the commands on the command line, you can pass them via the Process' input stream.
- A shell started in "input mode" (e.g. one which got neither the
-c
option nor a shell script file argument) will read input from the stream, and interpret the first line as a command (or several ones). - Then it will execute this command. The command itself might read more input from the stream, if it wants.
- Then the shell will read the next line, interpret it as a command, and execute.
- (In some cases the shell has to read more than one line, for example for long strings or composed commands like if or loops.)
- This will go on until either the end of the stream (e.g. stream.close() at your side) or executing an explicit
exit
command (or some other reasons to exit).
Here would be an example for this:
Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"C:\\cygwin\\bin\\bash.exe", "-s"});
InputStream outStream = p.getInputStream(); // normal output of the shell
InputStream errStream = p.getInputStream(); // error output of the shell
// TODO: start separate threads to read these streams
PrintStream ps = new PrintStream(p.getOutputStream());
ps.println("cd /bin/");
ps.println("ls -la");
ps.println("exit");
ps.close();
You do not need cygwin here. There are several pure Java libraries implementing SSH protocol. Use them. BTW they will solve your second problem. You will open session and execute command withing the same session, so the shell state will be preserved automatically.
One example would be JSch.
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