Running External Programs

Julia borrows backtick notation for commands from the shell, Perl, and Ruby. However, in Julia, writing

  1. julia> `echo hello`
  2. `echo hello`

differs in several aspects from the behavior in various shells, Perl, or Ruby:

  • Instead of immediately running the command, backticks create a Cmd object to represent the command. You can use this object to connect the command to others via pipes, run it, and read or write to it.
  • When the command is run, Julia does not capture its output unless you specifically arrange for it to. Instead, the output of the command by default goes to stdout as it would using libc‘s system call.
  • The command is never run with a shell. Instead, Julia parses the command syntax directly, appropriately interpolating variables and splitting on words as the shell would, respecting shell quoting syntax. The command is run as julia‘s immediate child process, using fork and exec calls.

Note

The following assumes a Posix environment as on Linux or MacOS. On Windows, many similar commands, such as echo and dir, are not external programs and instead are built into the shell cmd.exe itself. One option to run these commands is to invoke cmd.exe, for example cmd /C echo hello. Alternatively Julia can be run inside a Posix environment such as Cygwin.

Here’s a simple example of running an external program:

  1. julia> mycommand = `echo hello`
  2. `echo hello`
  3. julia> typeof(mycommand)
  4. Cmd
  5. julia> run(mycommand);
  6. hello

The hello is the output of the echo command, sent to stdout. The run method itself returns nothing, and throws an ErrorException if the external command fails to run successfully.

If you want to read the output of the external command, read or readchomp can be used instead:

  1. julia> read(`echo hello`, String)
  2. "hello\n"
  3. julia> readchomp(`echo hello`)
  4. "hello"

More generally, you can use open to read from or write to an external command.

  1. julia> open(`less`, "w", stdout) do io
  2. for i = 1:3
  3. println(io, i)
  4. end
  5. end
  6. 1
  7. 2
  8. 3

The program name and the individual arguments in a command can be accessed and iterated over as if the command were an array of strings:

  1. julia> collect(`echo "foo bar"`)
  2. 2-element Vector{String}:
  3. "echo"
  4. "foo bar"
  5. julia> `echo "foo bar"`[2]
  6. "foo bar"

Interpolation

Suppose you want to do something a bit more complicated and use the name of a file in the variable file as an argument to a command. You can use $ for interpolation much as you would in a string literal (see Strings):

  1. julia> file = "/etc/passwd"
  2. "/etc/passwd"
  3. julia> `sort $file`
  4. `sort /etc/passwd`

A common pitfall when running external programs via a shell is that if a file name contains characters that are special to the shell, they may cause undesirable behavior. Suppose, for example, rather than /etc/passwd, we wanted to sort the contents of the file /Volumes/External HD/data.csv. Let’s try it:

  1. julia> file = "/Volumes/External HD/data.csv"
  2. "/Volumes/External HD/data.csv"
  3. julia> `sort $file`
  4. `sort '/Volumes/External HD/data.csv'`

How did the file name get quoted? Julia knows that file is meant to be interpolated as a single argument, so it quotes the word for you. Actually, that is not quite accurate: the value of file is never interpreted by a shell, so there’s no need for actual quoting; the quotes are inserted only for presentation to the user. This will even work if you interpolate a value as part of a shell word:

  1. julia> path = "/Volumes/External HD"
  2. "/Volumes/External HD"
  3. julia> name = "data"
  4. "data"
  5. julia> ext = "csv"
  6. "csv"
  7. julia> `sort $path/$name.$ext`
  8. `sort '/Volumes/External HD/data.csv'`

As you can see, the space in the path variable is appropriately escaped. But what if you want to interpolate multiple words? In that case, just use an array (or any other iterable container):

  1. julia> files = ["/etc/passwd","/Volumes/External HD/data.csv"]
  2. 2-element Vector{String}:
  3. "/etc/passwd"
  4. "/Volumes/External HD/data.csv"
  5. julia> `grep foo $files`
  6. `grep foo /etc/passwd '/Volumes/External HD/data.csv'`

If you interpolate an array as part of a shell word, Julia emulates the shell’s {a,b,c} argument generation:

  1. julia> names = ["foo","bar","baz"]
  2. 3-element Vector{String}:
  3. "foo"
  4. "bar"
  5. "baz"
  6. julia> `grep xylophone $names.txt`
  7. `grep xylophone foo.txt bar.txt baz.txt`

Moreover, if you interpolate multiple arrays into the same word, the shell’s Cartesian product generation behavior is emulated:

  1. julia> names = ["foo","bar","baz"]
  2. 3-element Vector{String}:
  3. "foo"
  4. "bar"
  5. "baz"
  6. julia> exts = ["aux","log"]
  7. 2-element Vector{String}:
  8. "aux"
  9. "log"
  10. julia> `rm -f $names.$exts`
  11. `rm -f foo.aux foo.log bar.aux bar.log baz.aux baz.log`

Since you can interpolate literal arrays, you can use this generative functionality without needing to create temporary array objects first:

  1. julia> `rm -rf $["foo","bar","baz","qux"].$["aux","log","pdf"]`
  2. `rm -rf foo.aux foo.log foo.pdf bar.aux bar.log bar.pdf baz.aux baz.log baz.pdf qux.aux qux.log qux.pdf`

Quoting

Inevitably, one wants to write commands that aren’t quite so simple, and it becomes necessary to use quotes. Here’s a simple example of a Perl one-liner at a shell prompt:

  1. sh$ perl -le '$|=1; for (0..3) { print }'
  2. 0
  3. 1
  4. 2
  5. 3

The Perl expression needs to be in single quotes for two reasons: so that spaces don’t break the expression into multiple shell words, and so that uses of Perl variables like $| (yes, that’s the name of a variable in Perl), don’t cause interpolation. In other instances, you may want to use double quotes so that interpolation does occur:

  1. sh$ first="A"
  2. sh$ second="B"
  3. sh$ perl -le '$|=1; print for @ARGV' "1: $first" "2: $second"
  4. 1: A
  5. 2: B

In general, the Julia backtick syntax is carefully designed so that you can just cut-and-paste shell commands as is into backticks and they will work: the escaping, quoting, and interpolation behaviors are the same as the shell’s. The only difference is that the interpolation is integrated and aware of Julia’s notion of what is a single string value, and what is a container for multiple values. Let’s try the above two examples in Julia:

  1. julia> A = `perl -le '$|=1; for (0..3) { print }'`
  2. `perl -le '$|=1; for (0..3) { print }'`
  3. julia> run(A);
  4. 0
  5. 1
  6. 2
  7. 3
  8. julia> first = "A"; second = "B";
  9. julia> B = `perl -le 'print for @ARGV' "1: $first" "2: $second"`
  10. `perl -le 'print for @ARGV' '1: A' '2: B'`
  11. julia> run(B);
  12. 1: A
  13. 2: B

The results are identical, and Julia’s interpolation behavior mimics the shell’s with some improvements due to the fact that Julia supports first-class iterable objects while most shells use strings split on spaces for this, which introduces ambiguities. When trying to port shell commands to Julia, try cut and pasting first. Since Julia shows commands to you before running them, you can easily and safely just examine its interpretation without doing any damage.

Pipelines

Shell metacharacters, such as |, &, and >, need to be quoted (or escaped) inside of Julia’s backticks:

  1. julia> run(`echo hello '|' sort`);
  2. hello | sort
  3. julia> run(`echo hello \| sort`);
  4. hello | sort

This expression invokes the echo command with three words as arguments: hello, |, and sort. The result is that a single line is printed: hello | sort. How, then, does one construct a pipeline? Instead of using '|' inside of backticks, one uses pipeline:

  1. julia> run(pipeline(`echo hello`, `sort`));
  2. hello

This pipes the output of the echo command to the sort command. Of course, this isn’t terribly interesting since there’s only one line to sort, but we can certainly do much more interesting things:

  1. julia> run(pipeline(`cut -d: -f3 /etc/passwd`, `sort -n`, `tail -n5`))
  2. 210
  3. 211
  4. 212
  5. 213
  6. 214

This prints the highest five user IDs on a UNIX system. The cut, sort and tail commands are all spawned as immediate children of the current julia process, with no intervening shell process. Julia itself does the work to setup pipes and connect file descriptors that is normally done by the shell. Since Julia does this itself, it retains better control and can do some things that shells cannot.

Julia can run multiple commands in parallel:

  1. julia> run(`echo hello` & `echo world`);
  2. world
  3. hello

The order of the output here is non-deterministic because the two echo processes are started nearly simultaneously, and race to make the first write to the stdout descriptor they share with each other and the julia parent process. Julia lets you pipe the output from both of these processes to another program:

  1. julia> run(pipeline(`echo world` & `echo hello`, `sort`));
  2. hello
  3. world

In terms of UNIX plumbing, what’s happening here is that a single UNIX pipe object is created and written to by both echo processes, and the other end of the pipe is read from by the sort command.

IO redirection can be accomplished by passing keyword arguments stdin, stdout, and stderr to the pipeline function:

  1. pipeline(`do_work`, stdout=pipeline(`sort`, "out.txt"), stderr="errs.txt")

Avoiding Deadlock in Pipelines

When reading and writing to both ends of a pipeline from a single process, it is important to avoid forcing the kernel to buffer all of the data.

For example, when reading all of the output from a command, call read(out, String), not wait(process), since the former will actively consume all of the data written by the process, whereas the latter will attempt to store the data in the kernel’s buffers while waiting for a reader to be connected.

Another common solution is to separate the reader and writer of the pipeline into separate Tasks:

  1. writer = @async write(process, "data")
  2. reader = @async do_compute(read(process, String))
  3. wait(writer)
  4. fetch(reader)

Complex Example

The combination of a high-level programming language, a first-class command abstraction, and automatic setup of pipes between processes is a powerful one. To give some sense of the complex pipelines that can be created easily, here are some more sophisticated examples, with apologies for the excessive use of Perl one-liners:

  1. julia> prefixer(prefix, sleep) = `perl -nle '$|=1; print "'$prefix' ", $_; sleep '$sleep';'`;
  2. julia> run(pipeline(`perl -le '$|=1; for(0..5){ print; sleep 1 }'`, prefixer("A",2) & prefixer("B",2)));
  3. B 0
  4. A 1
  5. B 2
  6. A 3
  7. B 4
  8. A 5

This is a classic example of a single producer feeding two concurrent consumers: one perl process generates lines with the numbers 0 through 5 on them, while two parallel processes consume that output, one prefixing lines with the letter “A”, the other with the letter “B”. Which consumer gets the first line is non-deterministic, but once that race has been won, the lines are consumed alternately by one process and then the other. (Setting $|=1 in Perl causes each print statement to flush the stdout handle, which is necessary for this example to work. Otherwise all the output is buffered and printed to the pipe at once, to be read by just one consumer process.)

Here is an even more complex multi-stage producer-consumer example:

  1. julia> run(pipeline(`perl -le '$|=1; for(0..5){ print; sleep 1 }'`,
  2. prefixer("X",3) & prefixer("Y",3) & prefixer("Z",3),
  3. prefixer("A",2) & prefixer("B",2)));
  4. A X 0
  5. B Y 1
  6. A Z 2
  7. B X 3
  8. A Y 4
  9. B Z 5

This example is similar to the previous one, except there are two stages of consumers, and the stages have different latency so they use a different number of parallel workers, to maintain saturated throughput.

We strongly encourage you to try all these examples to see how they work.