Shell implements an idiomatic Ruby interface for common UNIX shell commands.
It provides users the ability to execute commands with filters and pipes,
like sh
/csh
by using native facilities of Ruby.
Examples
Temp file creation
In this example we will create three tmpFile
's in three
different folders under the /tmp
directory.
sh = Shell.cd("/tmp") # Change to the /tmp directory sh.mkdir "shell-test-1" unless sh.exists?("shell-test-1") # make the 'shell-test-1' directory if it doesn't already exist sh.cd("shell-test-1") # Change to the /tmp/shell-test-1 directory for dir in ["dir1", "dir3", "dir5"] if !sh.exists?(dir) sh.mkdir dir # make dir if it doesnt' already exist sh.cd(dir) do # change to the `dir` directory f = sh.open("tmpFile", "w") # open a new file in write mode f.print "TEST\n" # write to the file f.close # close the file handler end print sh.pwd # output the process working directory end end
Temp file creationg with self
This example is identical to the first, except we're using Shell::CommandProcessor#transact.
Shell::CommandProcessor#transact
executes the given block against self, in this case sh
; our Shell object. Within the block we can substitute
sh.cd
to cd
, because the scope within the block
uses sh
already.
sh = Shell.cd("/tmp") sh.transact do mkdir "shell-test-1" unless exists?("shell-test-1") cd("shell-test-1") for dir in ["dir1", "dir3", "dir5"] if !exists?(dir) mkdir dir cd(dir) do f = open("tmpFile", "w") f.print "TEST\n" f.close end print pwd end end end
Pipe /etc/printcap into a file
In this example we will read the operating system file
/etc/printcap
, generated by cupsd
, and then
output it to a new file relative to the pwd
of
sh
.
sh = Shell.new sh.cat("/etc/printcap") | sh.tee("tee1") > "tee2" (sh.cat < "/etc/printcap") | sh.tee("tee11") > "tee12" sh.cat("/etc/printcap") | sh.tee("tee1") >> "tee2" (sh.cat < "/etc/printcap") | sh.tee("tee11") >> "tee12"