public final class ProcessBuilder extends Object
Each ProcessBuilder
instance manages a collection
of process attributes. The start()
method creates a new
Process
instance with those attributes. The start()
method can be invoked repeatedly from the same instance
to create new subprocesses with identical or related attributes.
Each process builder manages these process attributes:
System.getenv()
).
user.dir
.
Process.getOutputStream()
. However, standard input may
be redirected to another source using
redirectInput
.
In this case, Process.getOutputStream()
will return a
null output stream, for which:
Process.getInputStream()
and
Process.getErrorStream()
. However, standard output and
standard error may be redirected to other destinations using
redirectOutput
and
redirectError
.
In this case, Process.getInputStream()
and/or
Process.getErrorStream()
will return a null input
stream, for which:
false
, meaning that the standard output and error
output of a subprocess are sent to two separate streams, which can
be accessed using the Process.getInputStream()
and Process.getErrorStream()
methods.
If the value is set to true
, then:
redirectOutput
redirectError
method is ignored when creating a subprocess
Process.getErrorStream()
will
always be a null input stream
Modifying a process builder's attributes will affect processes
subsequently started by that object's start()
method, but
will never affect previously started processes or the Java process
itself.
Most error checking is performed by the start()
method.
It is possible to modify the state of an object so that start()
will fail. For example, setting the command attribute to
an empty list will not throw an exception unless start()
is invoked.
Note that this class is not synchronized.
If multiple threads access a ProcessBuilder
instance
concurrently, and at least one of the threads modifies one of the
attributes structurally, it must be synchronized externally.
Starting a new process which uses the default working directory and environment is easy:
Process p = new ProcessBuilder("myCommand", "myArg").start();
Here is an example that starts a process with a modified working directory and environment, and redirects standard output and error to be appended to a log file:
ProcessBuilder pb =
new ProcessBuilder("myCommand", "myArg1", "myArg2");
Map<String, String> env = pb.environment();
env.put("VAR1", "myValue");
env.remove("OTHERVAR");
env.put("VAR2", env.get("VAR1") + "suffix");
pb.directory(new File("myDir"));
File log = new File("log");
pb.redirectErrorStream(true);
pb.redirectOutput(Redirect.appendTo(log));
Process p = pb.start();
assert pb.redirectInput() == Redirect.PIPE;
assert pb.redirectOutput().file() == log;
assert p.getInputStream().read() == -1;
To start a process with an explicit set of environment
variables, first call Map.clear()
before adding environment variables.
Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
---|---|
static class |
ProcessBuilder.Redirect
Represents a source of subprocess input or a destination of
subprocess output.
|
Constructor and Description |
---|
ProcessBuilder(List<String> command)
Constructs a process builder with the specified operating
system program and arguments.
|
ProcessBuilder(String... command)
Constructs a process builder with the specified operating
system program and arguments.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
List<String> |
command()
Returns this process builder's operating system program and
arguments.
|
ProcessBuilder |
command(List<String> command)
Sets this process builder's operating system program and
arguments.
|
ProcessBuilder |
command(String... command)
Sets this process builder's operating system program and
arguments.
|
File |
directory()
Returns this process builder's working directory.
|
ProcessBuilder |
directory(File directory)
Sets this process builder's working directory.
|
Map<String,String> |
environment()
Returns a string map view of this process builder's environment.
|
ProcessBuilder |
inheritIO()
Sets the source and destination for subprocess standard I/O
to be the same as those of the current Java process.
|
ProcessBuilder.Redirect |
redirectError()
Returns this process builder's standard error destination.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectError(File file)
Sets this process builder's standard error destination to a file.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectError(ProcessBuilder.Redirect destination)
Sets this process builder's standard error destination.
|
boolean |
redirectErrorStream()
Tells whether this process builder merges standard error and
standard output.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectErrorStream(boolean redirectErrorStream)
Sets this process builder's
redirectErrorStream property. |
ProcessBuilder.Redirect |
redirectInput()
Returns this process builder's standard input source.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectInput(File file)
Sets this process builder's standard input source to a file.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectInput(ProcessBuilder.Redirect source)
Sets this process builder's standard input source.
|
ProcessBuilder.Redirect |
redirectOutput()
Returns this process builder's standard output destination.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectOutput(File file)
Sets this process builder's standard output destination to a file.
|
ProcessBuilder |
redirectOutput(ProcessBuilder.Redirect destination)
Sets this process builder's standard output destination.
|
Process |
start()
Starts a new process using the attributes of this process builder.
|
public ProcessBuilder(List<String> command)
command
list. Subsequent
updates to the list will be reflected in the state of the
process builder. It is not checked whether
command
corresponds to a valid operating system
command.command
- the list containing the program and its argumentsNullPointerException
- if the argument is nullpublic ProcessBuilder(String... command)
command
array, in the same order. It is not checked whether
command
corresponds to a valid operating system
command.command
- a string array containing the program and its argumentspublic ProcessBuilder command(List<String> command)
command
list. Subsequent updates to the list will
be reflected in the state of the process builder. It is not
checked whether command
corresponds to a valid
operating system command.command
- the list containing the program and its argumentsNullPointerException
- if the argument is nullpublic ProcessBuilder command(String... command)
command
array, in the same order. It is not
checked whether command
corresponds to a valid
operating system command.command
- a string array containing the program and its argumentspublic List<String> command()
public Map<String,String> environment()
System.getenv()
). Subprocesses subsequently started by
this object's start()
method will use this map as
their environment.
The returned object may be modified using ordinary Map
operations. These modifications will be
visible to subprocesses started via the start()
method. Two ProcessBuilder
instances always
contain independent process environments, so changes to the
returned map will never be reflected in any other
ProcessBuilder
instance or the values returned by
System.getenv
.
If the system does not support environment variables, an empty map is returned.
The returned map does not permit null keys or values.
Attempting to insert or query the presence of a null key or
value will throw a NullPointerException
.
Attempting to query the presence of a key or value which is not
of type String
will throw a ClassCastException
.
The behavior of the returned map is system-dependent. A
system may not allow modifications to environment variables or
may forbid certain variable names or values. For this reason,
attempts to modify the map may fail with
UnsupportedOperationException
or
IllegalArgumentException
if the modification is not permitted by the operating system.
Since the external format of environment variable names and values is system-dependent, there may not be a one-to-one mapping between them and Java's Unicode strings. Nevertheless, the map is implemented in such a way that environment variables which are not modified by Java code will have an unmodified native representation in the subprocess.
The returned map and its collection views may not obey the
general contract of the Object.equals(java.lang.Object)
and
Object.hashCode()
methods.
The returned map is typically case-sensitive on all platforms.
If a security manager exists, its
checkPermission
method
is called with a
RuntimePermission
("getenv.*")
permission.
This may result in a SecurityException
being thrown.
When passing information to a Java subprocess, system properties are generally preferred over environment variables.
SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and its
checkPermission
method doesn't allow access to the process environmentRuntime.exec(String[],String[],java.io.File)
,
System.getenv()
public File directory()
start()
method will use this as their working directory.
The returned value may be null
-- this means to use
the working directory of the current Java process, usually the
directory named by the system property user.dir
,
as the working directory of the child process.public ProcessBuilder directory(File directory)
start()
method will use this as their working directory.
The argument may be null
-- this means to use the
working directory of the current Java process, usually the
directory named by the system property user.dir
,
as the working directory of the child process.directory
- the new working directorypublic ProcessBuilder redirectInput(ProcessBuilder.Redirect source)
start()
method obtain their standard input from this source.
If the source is Redirect.PIPE
(the initial value), then the standard input of a
subprocess can be written to using the output stream
returned by Process.getOutputStream()
.
If the source is set to any other value, then
Process.getOutputStream()
will return a
null output stream.
source
- the new standard input sourceIllegalArgumentException
- if the redirect does not correspond to a valid source
of data, that is, has type
WRITE
or
APPEND
public ProcessBuilder redirectOutput(ProcessBuilder.Redirect destination)
start()
method send their standard output to this destination.
If the destination is Redirect.PIPE
(the initial value), then the standard output of a subprocess
can be read using the input stream returned by Process.getInputStream()
.
If the destination is set to any other value, then
Process.getInputStream()
will return a
null input stream.
destination
- the new standard output destinationIllegalArgumentException
- if the redirect does not correspond to a valid
destination of data, that is, has type
READ
public ProcessBuilder redirectError(ProcessBuilder.Redirect destination)
start()
method send their standard error to this destination.
If the destination is Redirect.PIPE
(the initial value), then the error output of a subprocess
can be read using the input stream returned by Process.getErrorStream()
.
If the destination is set to any other value, then
Process.getErrorStream()
will return a
null input stream.
If the redirectErrorStream
attribute has been set true
, then the redirection set
by this method has no effect.
destination
- the new standard error destinationIllegalArgumentException
- if the redirect does not correspond to a valid
destination of data, that is, has type
READ
public ProcessBuilder redirectInput(File file)
This is a convenience method. An invocation of the form
redirectInput(file)
behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
redirectInput
(Redirect.from(file))
.
file
- the new standard input sourcepublic ProcessBuilder redirectOutput(File file)
This is a convenience method. An invocation of the form
redirectOutput(file)
behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
redirectOutput
(Redirect.to(file))
.
file
- the new standard output destinationpublic ProcessBuilder redirectError(File file)
This is a convenience method. An invocation of the form
redirectError(file)
behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
redirectError
(Redirect.to(file))
.
file
- the new standard error destinationpublic ProcessBuilder.Redirect redirectInput()
start()
method obtain their standard input from this source.
The initial value is Redirect.PIPE
.public ProcessBuilder.Redirect redirectOutput()
start()
method redirect their standard output to this destination.
The initial value is Redirect.PIPE
.public ProcessBuilder.Redirect redirectError()
start()
method redirect their standard error to this destination.
The initial value is Redirect.PIPE
.public ProcessBuilder inheritIO()
This is a convenience method. An invocation of the form
pb.inheritIO()
behaves in exactly the same way as the invocation
pb.redirectInput(Redirect.INHERIT)
.redirectOutput(Redirect.INHERIT)
.redirectError(Redirect.INHERIT)
This gives behavior equivalent to most operating system
command interpreters, or the standard C library function
system()
.public boolean redirectErrorStream()
If this property is true
, then any error output
generated by subprocesses subsequently started by this object's
start()
method will be merged with the standard
output, so that both can be read using the
Process.getInputStream()
method. This makes it easier
to correlate error messages with the corresponding output.
The initial value is false
.
redirectErrorStream
propertypublic ProcessBuilder redirectErrorStream(boolean redirectErrorStream)
redirectErrorStream
property.
If this property is true
, then any error output
generated by subprocesses subsequently started by this object's
start()
method will be merged with the standard
output, so that both can be read using the
Process.getInputStream()
method. This makes it easier
to correlate error messages with the corresponding output.
The initial value is false
.
redirectErrorStream
- the new property valuepublic Process start() throws IOException
The new process will
invoke the command and arguments given by command()
,
in a working directory as given by directory()
,
with a process environment as given by environment()
.
This method checks that the command is a valid operating system command. Which commands are valid is system-dependent, but at the very least the command must be a non-empty list of non-null strings.
A minimal set of system dependent environment variables may
be required to start a process on some operating systems.
As a result, the subprocess may inherit additional environment variable
settings beyond those in the process builder's environment()
.
If there is a security manager, its
checkExec
method is called with the first component of this object's
command
array as its argument. This may result in
a SecurityException
being thrown.
Starting an operating system process is highly system-dependent. Among the many things that can go wrong are:
In such cases an exception will be thrown. The exact nature
of the exception is system-dependent, but it will always be a
subclass of IOException
.
Subsequent modifications to this process builder will not
affect the returned Process
.
Process
object for managing the subprocessNullPointerException
- if an element of the command list is nullIndexOutOfBoundsException
- if the command is an empty list (has size 0
)SecurityException
- if a security manager exists and
checkExec
method doesn't allow creation of the subprocess, or
checkRead
method
denies read access to the file, or
checkWrite
method
denies write access to the file
IOException
- if an I/O error occursRuntime.exec(String[], String[], java.io.File)
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
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