pub struct Command { /* private fields */ }
Expand description
A process builder, providing fine-grained control over how a new process should be spawned.
A default configuration can be
generated using
Command::new(program)
, where
program
gives a path to the
program to be executed. Additional builder methods allow the configuration
to be changed (for example, by adding arguments) prior to spawning:
use std::process::Command;
let output = if cfg!(target_os = "windows") {
Command::new("cmd")
.args(["/C", "echo hello"])
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process")
} else {
Command::new("sh")
.arg("-c")
.arg("echo hello")
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process")
let hello = output.stdout;
Run
Command
can be reused to spawn multiple processes. The builder methods
change the command without needing to immediately spawn the process.
use std::process::Command;
let mut echo_hello = Command::new("sh");
echo_hello.arg("-c")
.arg("echo hello");
let hello_1 = echo_hello.output().expect("failed to execute process");
let hello_2 = echo_hello.output().expect("failed to execute process");
Run
Similarly, you can call builder methods after spawning a process and then spawn a new process with the modified settings.
use std::process::Command;
let mut list_dir = Command::new("ls");
// Execute `ls` in the current directory of the program.
list_dir.status().expect("process failed to execute");
println!();
// Change `ls` to execute in the root directory.
list_dir.current_dir("/");
// And then execute `ls` again but in the root directory.
list_dir.status().expect("process failed to execute");
Run
Implementations §
source
§
impl
Command
impl Command
source
pub fn
new
<S:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>>(program: S) ->
Command
pub fn new <S: AsRef < OsStr >>(program: S) -> Command
Constructs a new
Command
for launching the program at
path
program
, with the following default configuration:
spawn
or
status
, but create pipes for
output
Builder methods are provided to change these defaults and otherwise configure the process.
If
program
is not an absolute path, the
PATH
will be searched in
an OS-defined way.
The search path to be used may be controlled by setting the
PATH
environment variable on the Command,
but this has some implementation limitations on Windows
(see issue #37519).
Platform-specific behavior
Note on Windows: For executable files with the .exe extension, it can be omitted when specifying the program for this Command. However, if the file has a different extension, a filename including the extension needs to be provided, otherwise the file won’t be found.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("sh")
.spawn()
.expect("sh command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
arg
<S:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>>(&mut self, arg: S) -> &mut
Command
pub fn arg <S: AsRef < OsStr >>(&mut self, arg: S) -> &mut Command
Adds an argument to pass to the program.
Only one argument can be passed per use. So instead of:
.arg("-C /path/to/repo")
Run
usage would be:
.arg("-C")
.arg("/path/to/repo")
Run
To pass multiple arguments see
args
.
Note that the argument is not passed through a shell, but given literally to the program. This means that shell syntax like quotes, escaped characters, word splitting, glob patterns, substitution, etc. have no effect.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.arg("-l")
.arg("-a")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
args
<I, S>(&mut self, args: I) -> &mut
Command
where
I:
IntoIterator
<Item = S>,
S:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
pub fn args <I, S>(&mut self, args: I) -> &mut Command where I: IntoIterator <Item = S>, S: AsRef < OsStr >,
Adds multiple arguments to pass to the program.
To pass a single argument see
arg
.
Note that the arguments are not passed through a shell, but given literally to the program. This means that shell syntax like quotes, escaped characters, word splitting, glob patterns, substitution, etc. have no effect.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.args(["-l", "-a"])
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
env
<K, V>(&mut self, key: K, val: V) -> &mut
Command
where
K:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
V:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
pub fn env <K, V>(&mut self, key: K, val: V) -> &mut Command where K: AsRef < OsStr >, V: AsRef < OsStr >,
Inserts or updates an explicit environment variable mapping.
This method allows you to add an environment variable mapping to the spawned process or
overwrite a previously set value. You can use
Command::envs
to set multiple environment
variables simultaneously.
Child processes will inherit environment variables from their parent process by default.
Environment variables explicitly set using
Command::env
take precedence over inherited
variables. You can disable environment variable inheritance entirely using
Command::env_clear
or for a single key using
Command::env_remove
.
Note that environment variable names are case-insensitive (but case-preserving) on Windows and case-sensitive on all other platforms.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.env("PATH", "/bin")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
1.19.0
·
source
pub fn
envs
<I, K, V>(&mut self, vars: I) -> &mut
Command
where
I:
IntoIterator
<Item =
(K, V)
>,
K:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
V:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
pub fn envs <I, K, V>(&mut self, vars: I) -> &mut Command where I: IntoIterator <Item = (K, V) >, K: AsRef < OsStr >, V: AsRef < OsStr >,
Inserts or updates multiple explicit environment variable mappings.
This method allows you to add multiple environment variable mappings to the spawned process
or overwrite previously set values. You can use
Command::env
to set a single environment
variable.
Child processes will inherit environment variables from their parent process by default.
Environment variables explicitly set using
Command::envs
take precedence over inherited
variables. You can disable environment variable inheritance entirely using
Command::env_clear
or for a single key using
Command::env_remove
.
Note that environment variable names are case-insensitive (but case-preserving) on Windows and case-sensitive on all other platforms.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
use std::env;
use std::collections::HashMap;
let filtered_env : HashMap<String, String> =
env::vars().filter(|&(ref k, _)|
k == "TERM" || k == "TZ" || k == "LANG" || k == "PATH"
).collect();
Command::new("printenv")
.stdin(Stdio::null())
.stdout(Stdio::inherit())
.env_clear()
.envs(&filtered_env)
.spawn()
.expect("printenv failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
env_remove
<K:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>>(&mut self, key: K) -> &mut
Command
pub fn env_remove <K: AsRef < OsStr >>(&mut self, key: K) -> &mut Command
Removes an explicitly set environment variable and prevents inheriting it from a parent process.
This method will remove the explicit value of an environment variable set via
Command::env
or
Command::envs
. In addition, it will prevent the spawned child
process from inheriting that environment variable from its parent process.
After calling
Command::env_remove
, the value associated with its key from
Command::get_envs
will be
None
.
To clear all explicitly set environment variables and disable all environment variable
inheritance, you can use
Command::env_clear
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.env_remove("PATH")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
env_clear
(&mut self) -> &mut
Command
pub fn env_clear (&mut self) -> &mut Command
Clears all explicitly set environment variables and prevents inheriting any parent process environment variables.
This method will remove all explicitly added environment variables set via
Command::env
or
Command::envs
. In addition, it will prevent the spawned child process from inheriting
any environment variable from its parent process.
After calling
Command::env_remove
, the iterator from
Command::get_envs
will be
empty.
You can use
Command::env_remove
to clear a single mapping.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.env_clear()
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
current_dir
<P:
AsRef
<
Path
>>(&mut self, dir: P) -> &mut
Command
pub fn current_dir <P: AsRef < Path >>(&mut self, dir: P) -> &mut Command
Sets the working directory for the child process.
Platform-specific behavior
If the program path is relative (e.g.,
"./script.sh"
), it’s ambiguous
whether it should be interpreted relative to the parent’s working
directory or relative to
current_dir
. The behavior in this case is
platform specific and unstable, and it’s recommended to use
canonicalize
to get an absolute program path instead.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::Command;
Command::new("ls")
.current_dir("/bin")
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
stdin
<T:
Into
<
Stdio
>>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut
Command
pub fn stdin <T: Into < Stdio >>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut Command
Configuration for the child process’s standard input (stdin) handle.
Defaults to
inherit
when used with
spawn
or
status
, and
defaults to
piped
when used with
output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stdin(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
stdout
<T:
Into
<
Stdio
>>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut
Command
pub fn stdout <T: Into < Stdio >>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut Command
Configuration for the child process’s standard output (stdout) handle.
Defaults to
inherit
when used with
spawn
or
status
, and
defaults to
piped
when used with
output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stdout(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
stderr
<T:
Into
<
Stdio
>>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut
Command
pub fn stderr <T: Into < Stdio >>(&mut self, cfg: T) -> &mut Command
Configuration for the child process’s standard error (stderr) handle.
Defaults to
inherit
when used with
spawn
or
status
, and
defaults to
piped
when used with
output
.
Examples
Basic usage:
use std::process::{Command, Stdio};
Command::new("ls")
.stderr(Stdio::null())
.spawn()
.expect("ls command failed to start");
Run
source
pub fn
output
(&mut self) ->
Result
<
Output
>
pub fn output (&mut self) -> Result < Output >
Executes the command as a child process, waiting for it to finish and collecting all of its output.
By default, stdout and stderr are captured (and used to provide the resulting output). Stdin is not inherited from the parent and any attempt by the child process to read from the stdin stream will result in the stream immediately closing.
Examples
use std::process::Command;
use std::io::{self, Write};
let output = Command::new("/bin/cat")
.arg("file.txt")
.output()
.expect("failed to execute process");
println!("status: {}", output.status);
io::stdout().write_all(&output.stdout).unwrap();
io::stderr().write_all(&output.stderr).unwrap();
assert!(output.status.success());
Run
source
pub fn
status
(&mut self) ->
Result
<
ExitStatus
>
pub fn status (&mut self) -> Result < ExitStatus >
Executes a command as a child process, waiting for it to finish and collecting its status.
By default, stdin, stdout and stderr are inherited from the parent.
Examples
1.57.0
·
source
pub fn
get_program
(&self) -> &
OsStr
pub fn get_program (&self) -> & OsStr
Returns the path to the program that was given to
Command::new
.
Examples
use std::process::Command;
let cmd = Command::new("echo");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_program(), "echo");
Run
1.57.0
·
source
pub fn
get_args
(&self) ->
CommandArgs
<'_>
ⓘ
pub fn get_args (&self) -> CommandArgs <'_> ⓘ
Returns an iterator of the arguments that will be passed to the program.
This does not include the path to the program as the first argument;
it only includes the arguments specified with
Command::arg
and
Command::args
.
Examples
use std::ffi::OsStr;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("echo");
cmd.arg("first").arg("second");
let args: Vec<&OsStr> = cmd.get_args().collect();
assert_eq!(args, &["first", "second"]);
Run
1.57.0
·
source
pub fn
get_envs
(&self) ->
CommandEnvs
<'_>
ⓘ
pub fn get_envs (&self) -> CommandEnvs <'_> ⓘ
Returns an iterator of the environment variables explicitly set for the child process.
Environment variables explicitly set using
Command::env
,
Command::envs
, and
Command::env_remove
can be retrieved with this method.
Note that this output does not include environment variables inherited from the parent process.
Each element is a tuple key/value pair
(&OsStr, Option<&OsStr>)
. A
None
value
indicates its key was explicitly removed via
Command::env_remove
. The associated key for
the
None
value will no longer inherit from its parent process.
An empty iterator can indicate that no explicit mappings were added or that
Command::env_clear
was called. After calling
Command::env_clear
, the child process
will not inherit any environment variables from its parent process.
Examples
use std::ffi::OsStr;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("ls");
cmd.env("TERM", "dumb").env_remove("TZ");
let envs: Vec<(&OsStr, Option<&OsStr>)> = cmd.get_envs().collect();
assert_eq!(envs, &[
(OsStr::new("TERM"), Some(OsStr::new("dumb"))),
(OsStr::new("TZ"), None)
]);
Run
1.57.0
·
source
pub fn
get_current_dir
(&self) ->
Option
<&
Path
>
pub fn get_current_dir (&self) -> Option <& Path >
Returns the working directory for the child process.
This returns
None
if the working directory will not be changed.
Examples
use std::path::Path;
use std::process::Command;
let mut cmd = Command::new("ls");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_current_dir(), None);
cmd.current_dir("/bin");
assert_eq!(cmd.get_current_dir(), Some(Path::new("/bin")));
Run
Trait Implementations §
source
§
impl
CommandExt
for
Command
Available on
Unix
only.
impl CommandExt for Command
source
§
fn
uid
(&mut self, id:
u32
) -> &mut
Command
fn uid (&mut self, id: u32 ) -> &mut Command
setuid
call in the child process. Failure in the
setuid
call will cause the spawn to fail.
source
§
fn
gid
(&mut self, id:
u32
) -> &mut
Command
fn gid (&mut self, id: u32 ) -> &mut Command
uid
, but sets the group ID of the child process. This has
the same semantics as the
uid
field.
source
§
fn
groups
(&mut self, groups: &[
u32
]) -> &mut
Command
fn groups (&mut self, groups: &[ u32 ]) -> &mut Command
setgroups
#90747
)
setgroups
call in the child process.
source
§
unsafe fn
pre_exec
<F>(&mut self, f: F) -> &mut
Command
where
F:
FnMut
() ->
Result
<
()
> +
Send
+
Sync
+ 'static,
unsafe fn pre_exec <F>(&mut self, f: F) -> &mut Command where F: FnMut () -> Result < () > + Send + Sync + 'static,
exec
function is
invoked.
Read more
source
§
fn
arg0
<S>(&mut self, arg: S) -> &mut
Command
where
S:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>,
fn arg0 <S>(&mut self, arg: S) -> &mut Command where S: AsRef < OsStr >,
1.16.0
·
source
§
impl
CommandExt
for
Command
Available on
Windows
only.
impl CommandExt for Command
source
§
fn
creation_flags
(&mut self, flags:
u32
) -> &mut
Command
fn creation_flags (&mut self, flags: u32 ) -> &mut Command
source
§
fn
force_quotes
(&mut self, enabled:
bool
) -> &mut
Command
fn force_quotes (&mut self, enabled: bool ) -> &mut Command
windows_process_extensions_force_quotes
#82227
)
"
) characters.
Read more
source
§
fn
raw_arg
<S:
AsRef
<
OsStr
>>(&mut self, raw_text: S) -> &mut
Command
fn raw_arg <S: AsRef < OsStr >>(&mut self, raw_text: S) -> &mut Command
source
§
fn
async_pipes
(&mut self, always_async:
bool
) -> &mut
Command
fn async_pipes (&mut self, always_async: bool ) -> &mut Command
windows_process_extensions_async_pipes
#98289
)
process::Command
creates pipes, request that our side is always async.
Read more
source
§
impl
CommandExt
for
Command
Available on
Linux
only.
impl CommandExt for Command
source
§
impl
Debug
for
Command
impl Debug for Command
source
§
fn
fmt
(&self, f: &mut
Formatter
<'_>) ->
Result
fn fmt (&self, f: &mut Formatter <'_>) -> Result
Format the program and arguments of a Command for display. Any non-utf8 data is lossily converted using the utf8 replacement character.
The default format approximates a shell invocation of the program along with its arguments. It does not include most of the other command properties. The output is not guaranteed to work (e.g. due to lack of shell-escaping or differences in path resolution) On some platforms you can use the alternate syntax to show more fields.
Note that the debug implementation is platform-specific.