2010-06-17 00:40:25 +01:00
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/* $Id$
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Part of SWI-Prolog
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Author: Jan Wielemaker
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E-mail: J.Wielemak@uva.nl
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WWW: http://www.swi-prolog.org
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Copyright (C): 2008-2009, University of Amsterdam
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
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as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
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of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public
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License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
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Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
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As a special exception, if you link this library with other files,
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compiled with a Free Software compiler, to produce an executable, this
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library does not by itself cause the resulting executable to be covered
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by the GNU General Public License. This exception does not however
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invalidate any other reasons why the executable file might be covered by
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the GNU General Public License.
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*/
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:- module(process,
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[ process_create/3, % +Exe, +Args, +Options
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process_wait/2, % +PID, -Status
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process_wait/3, % +PID, -Status, +Options
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process_id/1, % -PID
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process_id/2, % +Process, -PID
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is_process/1, % +PID
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process_release/1, % +PID
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process_kill/1, % +PID
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process_kill/2 % +PID, -Signal
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]).
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:- use_module(library(shlib)).
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:- use_module(library(lists)).
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:- use_module(library(option)).
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2010-08-03 21:10:09 +01:00
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:- use_module(library(error)).
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2010-06-17 00:40:25 +01:00
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:- use_foreign_library(foreign(process)).
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/** <module> Create processes and redirect I/O
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The module library(process) implements interaction with child processes
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and unifies older interfaces such as shell/[1,2], open(pipe(command),
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...) etc. This library is modelled after SICStus 4.
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The main interface is formed by process_create/3. If the process id is
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requested the process must be waited for using process_wait/2. Otherwise
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the process resources are reclaimed automatically.
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In addition to the predicates, this module defines a file search path
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(see user:file_search_path/2 and absolute_file_name/3) named =path= that
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locates files on the system's search path for executables. E.g. the
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following finds the executable for =ls=:
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==
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?- absolute_file_name(path(ls), Path, [access(execute)]).
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==
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*|Incompatibilities and current limitations|*
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* Where SICStus distinguishes between an internal process id and
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the OS process id, this implements does not make this distinction.
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This implies that is_process/1 is incomplete and unreliable.
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* SICStus only supports ISO 8859-1 (latin-1). This implementation
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supports arbitrary OS multibyte interaction using the default
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locale.
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* It is unclear what the detached(true) option is supposed to do. Disable
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signals in the child? Use setsid() to detach from the session? The
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current implementation uses setsid()
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* An extra option env([Name=Value, ...]) is added to
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process_create/3.
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@tbd Implement detached option in process_create/3
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@compat SICStus 4
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*/
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/*******************************
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* PATH HANDLING *
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*******************************/
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:- multifile
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user:file_search_path/2.
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:- dynamic
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user:file_search_path/2.
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user:file_search_path(path, Dir) :-
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getenv('PATH', Path),
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( current_prolog_flag(windows, true)
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-> atomic_list_concat(Dirs, (;), Path)
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; atomic_list_concat(Dirs, :, Path)
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),
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member(Dir, Dirs).
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%% process_create(+Exe, +Args:list, +Options) is det.
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%
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% Create a new process running the file Exe and using arguments
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% from the given list. Exe is a file specification as handed to
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% absolute_file_name/3. Typically one use the =path= file alias to
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% specify an executable file on the current PATH. Args is a list
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% of arguments that are handed to the new process. On Unix
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% systems, each element in the list becomes a seperate argument in
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% the new process. In Windows, the arguments are simply
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% concatenated to form the commandline. Each argument itself is
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% either a primitive or a list of primitives. A primitive is
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% either atomic or a term file(Spec). Using file(Spec), the system
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% inserts a filename using the OS filename conventions which is
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% properly quoted if needed.
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%
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% Options:
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%
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% * stdin(Spec)
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% * stdout(Spec)
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% * stderr(Spec)
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% Bind the standard streams of the new process. Spec is one of
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% the terms below. If pipe(Pipe) is used, the Prolog stream is
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% a stream in text-mode using the encoding of the default
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% locale. The encoding can be changed using set_stream/2.
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%
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% * std
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% Just share with the Prolog I/O streams
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% * null
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% Bind to a _null_ stream. Reading from such a stream
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% returns end-of-file, writing produces no output
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% * pipe(-Stream)
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% Attach input and/or output to a Prolog stream.
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%
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% * cwd(+Directory)
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% Run the new process in Directory. Directory can be a
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% compound specification, which is converted using
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% absolute_file_name/3.
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% * env(+List)
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% Specify the environment for the new process. List is
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% a list of Name=Value terms. Note that the current
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% implementation does not pass any environment variables.
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% If unspecified, the environment is inherited from the
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% Prolog process.
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% * process(-PID)
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% Unify PID with the process id of the created process.
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% * detached(+Bool)
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% If =true=, detach the process from the terminal (Unix only)
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% Currently mapped to setsid();
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% * window(+Bool)
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% If =true=, create a window for the process (Windows only)
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%
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% If the user specifies the process(-PID) option, he *must* call
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% process_wait/2 to reclaim the process. Without this option, the
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% system will wait for completion of the process after the last
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% pipe stream is closed.
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%
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% If the process is not waited for, it must succeed with status 0.
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% If not, an process_error is raised.
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%
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% *|Windows notes|*
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%
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% On Windows this call is an interface to the CreateProcess() API.
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% The commandline consists of the basename of Exe and the
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% arguments formed from Args. Arguments are separated by a single
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% space. If all characters satisfy iswalnum() it is unquoted. If
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% the argument contains a double-quote it is quoted using single
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% quotes. If both single and double quotes appear a domain_error
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% is raised, otherwise double-quote are used.
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%
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% The CreateProcess() API has many options. Currently only the
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% =CREATE_NO_WINDOW= options is supported through the
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% window(+Bool) option. If omitted, the default is to use this
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% option if the application has no console. Future versions are
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% likely to support more window specific options and replace
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% win_exec/2.
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%
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% *Examples*
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%
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% First, a very simple example that behaves the same as
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% =|shell('ls -l')|=, except for error handling:
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%
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% ==
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% ?- process_create(path(ls), ['-l'], []).
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% ==
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%
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% @tbd The detach options is a no-op.
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% @error process_error(Exe, Status) where Status is one of
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% exit(Code) or killed(Signal). Raised if the process
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% does not exit with status 0.
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process_create(Exe, Args, Options) :-
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exe_options(ExeOptions),
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absolute_file_name(Exe, PlProg, ExeOptions),
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must_be(list, Args),
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maplist(map_arg, Args, Av),
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prolog_to_os_filename(PlProg, Prog),
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Term =.. [Prog|Av],
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expand_cwd_option(Options, Options1),
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process_create(Term, Options1).
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exe_options(Options) :-
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current_prolog_flag(windows, true), !,
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Options = [ extensions(['',exe,com]), access(read) ].
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exe_options(Options) :-
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Options = [ access(execute) ].
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expand_cwd_option(Options0, Options) :-
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select_option(cwd(Spec), Options0, Options1), !,
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( compound(Spec)
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-> absolute_file_name(Spec, PlDir, [file_type(directory), access(read)]),
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prolog_to_os_filename(PlDir, Dir),
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Options = [cwd(Dir)|Options1]
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; exists_directory(Spec)
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-> Options = Options0
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; existence_error(directory, Spec)
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).
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expand_cwd_option(Options, Options).
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%% map_arg(+ArgIn, -Arg) is det.
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%
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% Map an individual argument. Primitives are either file(Spec) or
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% an atomic value (atom, string, number). If ArgIn is a non-empty
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% list, all elements are converted and the results are
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% concatenated.
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map_arg([], []) :- !.
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map_arg(List, Arg) :-
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is_list(List), !,
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maplist(map_arg_prim, List, Prims),
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atomic_list_concat(Prims, Arg).
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map_arg(Prim, Arg) :-
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map_arg_prim(Prim, Arg).
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map_arg_prim(file(Spec), File) :- !,
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( compound(Spec)
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-> absolute_file_name(Spec, PlFile)
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; PlFile = Spec
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),
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prolog_to_os_filename(PlFile, File).
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map_arg_prim(Arg, Arg).
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%% process_id(-PID) is det.
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%
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% True if PID is the process id of the running Prolog process.
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%
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% @deprecated Use current_prolog_flag(pid, PID)
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process_id(PID) :-
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current_prolog_flag(pid, PID).
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%% process_id(+Process, -PID) is det.
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%
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% PID is the process id of Process. Given that they are united in
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% SWI-Prolog, this is a simple unify.
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process_id(PID, PID).
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%% is_process(+PID) is semidet.
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%
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% True if PID might be a process. Succeeds for any positive
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% integer.
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is_process(PID) :-
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integer(PID),
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PID > 0.
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%% process_release(+PID)
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%
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% Release process handle. In this implementation this is the same
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% as process_wait(PID, _).
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process_release(PID) :-
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process_wait(PID, _).
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%% process_wait(+PID, -Status) is det.
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%% process_wait(+PID, -Status, +Options) is det.
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%
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% True if PID completed with Status. This call normally blocks
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% until the process is finished. Options:
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%
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% * timeout(+Timeout)
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% Default: =infinite=. If this option is a number, the
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% waits for a maximum of Timeout seconds and unifies Status
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% with =timeout= if the process does not terminate within
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% Timeout. In this case PID is _not_ invalidated. On Unix
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% systems only timeout 0 and =infinite= are supported. A
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% 0-value can be used to poll the status of the process.
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%
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% * release(+Bool)
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% Do/do not release the process. We do not support this flag
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% and a domain_error is raised if release(false) is provided.
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process_wait(PID, Status) :-
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process_wait(PID, Status, []).
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%% process_kill(+PID) is det.
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%% process_kill(+PID, +Signal) is det.
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%
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% Send signal to process PID. Default is =term=. Signal is an
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% integer, Unix signal name (e.g. =SIGSTOP=) or the more Prolog
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% friendly variation one gets after removing =SIG= and downcase
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% the result: =stop=. On Windows systems, Signal is ignored and
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% the process is terminated using the TerminateProcess() API. On
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% Windows systems PID must be obtained from process_create/3,
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% while any PID is allowed on Unix systems.
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%
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% @compat SICStus does not accept the prolog friendly version. We
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% choose to do so for compatibility with on_signal/3.
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process_kill(PID) :-
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process_kill(PID, term).
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/*******************************
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* MESSAGES *
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*******************************/
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:- multifile
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prolog:error_message/3.
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prolog:error_message(process_error(File, exit(Status))) -->
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[ 'Process "~w": exit status: ~w'-[File, Status] ].
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prolog:error_message(process_error(File, killed(Signal))) -->
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[ 'Process "~w": killed by signal ~w'-[File, Signal] ].
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