Runs a command-line script shell that supports interactive and batch modes. This command is experimental and unsupported.
jrunscript [options] [arguments]
The command-line options. See Options.
Arguments, when used, follow immediately after options or the command name. See Arguments.
The jrunscript
command is a language-independent command-line script shell. The jrunscript
command supports both an interactive (read-eval-print) mode and a batch (-f
option) mode of script execution. By default, JavaScript is the language used, but the -l
option can be used to specify a different language. By using Java to scripting language communication, the jrunscript
command supports an exploratory programming style.
Indicate where any class files are that the script needs to access.
Same as -classpath
path
.
Sets a Java system property.
Passes flag
directly to the Java Virtual Machine where the jrunscript
command is running.
Uses the specified scripting language. By default, JavaScript is used. To use other scripting languages, you must specify the corresponding script engine's JAR file with the -cp
or -classpath
option.
Evaluates the specified script. This option can be used to run one-line scripts that are specified completely on the command line.
Specifies the character encoding used to read script files.
Evaluates the specified script file (batch mode).
Reads and evaluates a script from standard input (interactive mode).
Displays a help message and exits.
Displays a help message and exits.
Lists all script engines available and exits.
If arguments are present and if no -e
or -f
option is used, then the first argument is the script file and the rest of the arguments, if any, are passed to the script. If arguments and -e
or the -f
option are used, then all arguments are passed to the script. If arguments, -e
and -f
are missing, then interactive mode is used. Script arguments are available to a script in an engine variable named arguments
of type String
array.
jrunscript -e "print('hello world')" jrunscript -e "cat('http://www.example.com')"
jrunscript -l js -f test.js
jrunscript js> print('Hello World\n'); Hello World js> 34 + 55 89.0 js> t = new java.lang.Thread(function() { print('Hello World\n'); }) Thread[Thread-0,5,main] js> t.start() js> Hello World js>
The test.js file is the script file. The arg1
, arg2
and arg3
arguments are passed to the script. The script can access these arguments with an arguments array.
jrunscript test.js arg1 arg2 arg3
If JavaScript is used, then before it evaluates a user defined script, the jrunscript
command initializes certain built-in functions and objects, which are documented in the API Specification for jrunscript JavaScript built-ins:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/tools/share/jsdocs/overview-summary.html