[−][src]Crate xshell
xshell makes it easy to write cross-platform "bash" scripts in Rust.
It provides a cmd! macro for running subprocesses, as well as a number of
basic file manipulation utilities.
use xshell::{cmd, read_file}; let name = "Julia"; let output = cmd!("echo hello {name}!").read()?; assert_eq!(output, "hello Julia!"); let err = read_file("feeling-lucky.txt").unwrap_err(); assert_eq!( err.to_string(), "`feeling-lucky.txt`: no such file or directory (os error 2)", );
The intended use-case is various bits of glue code, which could be written
in bash or python. The original motivation is
xtask development.
Goals: fast compile times, ergonomics, clear error messages.
Non goals: completeness, robustness / misuse resistance.
For "heavy-duty" code, consider using duct or std::process::Command
instead.
API Overview
For a real-world example, see this crate's own CI script:
https://github.com/matklad/xshell/blob/master/examples/ci.rs
cmd! Macro
Read output of the process into String. The final newline will be
stripped.
let output = cmd!("date --iso").read()?; assert!(output.chars().all(|c| "01234567890-".contains(c)));
If the exist status is non-zero, an error is returned.
let err = cmd!("false").read().unwrap_err(); assert_eq!( err.to_string(), "command `false` failed, exit code: 1", );
Run the process, inheriting stdout and stderr. The command is echoed to stdout.
cmd!("echo hello!").run()?;
Output
$ echo hello!
hello!
Interpolation is supported via {name} syntax. Use {name...} to
interpolate sequence of values.
let greeting = "Guten Tag"; let people = &["Spica", "Boarst", "Georgina"]; assert_eq!( cmd!("echo {greeting} {people...}").to_string(), r#"echo "Guten Tag" Spica Boarst Georgina"# );
Note that the argument with a space is handled correctly. This is because
cmd! macro parses the string template at compile time. The macro hands the
interpolated values to the underlying std::process::Command as is and is
not vulnerable to shell
injection.
Single quotes in literal arguments are supported:
assert_eq!( cmd!("echo 'hello world'").to_string(), r#"echo "hello world""#, )
Splat syntax is used for optional arguments idiom.
let check = if true { &["--", "--check"] } else { &[][..] }; assert_eq!( cmd!("cargo fmt {check...}").to_string(), "cargo fmt -- --check" ); let dry_run = if true { Some("--dry-run") } else { None }; assert_eq!( cmd!("git push {dry_run...}").to_string(), "git push --dry-run" );
xshell does not provide API for creating command pipelines. If you need
pipelines, consider using duct instead. Alternatively, you can convert
xshell::Cmd into std::process::Command:
let command: std::process::Command = cmd!("echo 'hello world'").into();
Manipulating the Environment
Instead of cd and export, xshell uses RAII based pushd and pushenv
use xshell::{cwd, pushd, pushenv}; let initial_dir = cwd()?; { let _p = pushd("src")?; assert_eq!( cwd()?, initial_dir.join("src"), ); } assert_eq!(cwd()?, initial_dir); assert!(std::env::var("MY_VAR").is_err()); let _e = pushenv("MY_VAR", "92"); assert_eq!( std::env::var("MY_VAR").as_deref(), Ok("92") );
Working with Files
xshell provides the following utilities, which are mostly re-exports from
std::fs module with paths added to error messages: rm_rf, read_file,
write_file, mkdir_p, cp, read_dir, cwd.
Maintenance
Minimum Supported Rust Version: 1.47.0. MSRV bump is not considered semver breaking. MSRV is updated conservatively.
The crate isn't comprehensive. Additional functionality is added on as-needed bases, as long as it doesn't compromise compile times. Function-level docs are an especially welcome addition :-)
Implementation details
The design is heavily inspired by the Juila language:
Smaller influences are the duct crate and Ruby's
FileUtils
module.
The cmd! macro uses a simple proc-macro internally. It doesn't depend on
helper libraries, so the fixed-cost impact on compile times is moderate.
Compiling a trivial program with cmd!("date --iso") takes one second.
Equivalent program using only std::process::Command compiles in 0.25
seconds.
To make IDEs infer correct types without expanding proc-macro, it is wrapped into a declarative macro which supplies type hints.
Environment manipulation mutates global state and might have surprising interactions with threads. Internally, everything is protected by a global shell lock, so all functions in this crate are thread safe. However, functions outside of xshell's control might experience race conditions:
use std::{thread, fs}; use xshell::{pushd, read_file}; let t1 = thread::spawn(|| { let _p = pushd("./src"); }); // This is guaranteed to work: t2 will block while t1 is in `pushd`. let t2 = thread::spawn(|| { let res = read_file("./src/lib.rs"); assert!(res.is_ok()); }); // This is a race: t3 might observe difference cwds depending on timing. let t3 = thread::spawn(|| { let res = fs::read_to_string("./src/lib.rs"); assert!(res.is_ok() || res.is_err()); });
Naming
xshell is an ex-shell, for those who grew tired of bash.
xshell is an x-platform shell, for those who don't want to run build.sh on windows.
xshell is built for xtask.
xshell uses x-traordinary level of trickery,
just like xtask does.
Macros
| cmd | 
Structs
| Cmd | |
| Error | |
| Pushd | |
| Pushenv | 
Functions
| cp | |
| cwd | |
| mkdir_p | |
| pushd | |
| pushenv | |
| read_dir | |
| read_file | |
| rm_rf | |
| write_file | 
Type Definitions
| Result |