1
1
mirror of https://github.com/wez/wezterm.git synced 2024-12-26 23:04:49 +03:00
wezterm/pty/examples/whoami.rs
2020-01-20 15:23:55 -08:00

48 lines
1.8 KiB
Rust

//! This is a conceptually simple example that spawns the `whoami` program
//! to print your username. It is made more complex because there are multiple
//! pipes involved and it is easy to get blocked/deadlocked if care and attention
//! is not paid to those pipes!
use portable_pty::{CommandBuilder, NativePtySystem, PtySize, PtySystem};
fn main() {
let pty_system = NativePtySystem::default();
let pair = pty_system
.openpty(PtySize {
rows: 24,
cols: 80,
pixel_width: 0,
pixel_height: 0,
})
.unwrap();
let cmd = CommandBuilder::new("whoami");
let mut child = pair.slave.spawn_command(cmd).unwrap();
// Release any handles owned by the slave: we don't need it now
// that we've spawned the child.
drop(pair.slave);
let mut reader = pair.master.try_clone_reader().unwrap();
println!("child status: {:?}", child.wait().unwrap());
// We hold handles on the pty. Now that the child is complete
// there are no processes remaining that will write to it until
// we spawn more. We're not going to do that in this example,
// so we should close it down. If we didn't drop it explicitly
// here, then the attempt to read its output would block forever
// waiting for a future child that will never be spawned.
drop(pair.master);
// Consume the output from the child
let mut s = String::new();
reader.read_to_string(&mut s).unwrap();
// We print with escapes escaped because the windows conpty
// implementation synthesizes title change escape sequences
// in the output stream and it can be confusing to see those
// printed out raw in another terminal.
print!("output: ");
for c in s.escape_debug() {
print!("{}", c);
}
}