SubSpawn is an advanced set of gems and packages to make natively spawning subprocesses from all Ruby implementations possible. It started out as a way to add PTY.spawn
support to JRuby, but is usable by CRuby (MRI) and TruffleRuby.
There are 3 levels of API's supported: basic/ffi, mid-level, and high-level. Basic/ffi support is simply the ffi wrapper and has no other Ruby support. The mid-level API is specific to the host (POSIX, Win32), but otherwise has a more Ruby-like interface and avoids raw pointers. The high-level API is as consistent as possible across all platforms, and hews closely to standard Rubyisms.
The primary feature of SubSpawn is the ability to control advanced attributes of launched subprocesses such as specifying the controlling TTY, changing file descriptors, and pgroup
and setsid
configuration.
Platform | Basic/FFI | Mid-level | High-level |
---|---|---|---|
Linux | ffi-bindings-libfixposix | subspawn-posix | subspawn |
Mac OS | |||
BSD | |||
Windows | subspawn-win32 | ||
JVM/Jar | subspawn-jar |
For now, subspawn uses hard dependencies, but this may change.
Using JRuby 9.4 or later? A compatible version of SubSpawn is already installed!
For POSIX systems (MacOS, Linux, etc...):
$ gem install subspawn subspawn-posix
For Windows systems:
$ gem install subspawn subspawn-win32
Then:
require 'subspawn'
# or, to replace the built in spawn methods:
# require 'subspawn/replace'
Folders:
- libfixposix (build only, subrepository, for ffi-generator)
- ffi-generator (build only)
- ffi-bindings-libfixposix (gem)
- ffi-binary-libfixposix (native gem)
- engine-hacks (native gem)
- subspawn-common (gem)
- subspawn-posix (gem)
- subspawn-win32 (gem)
- subspawn (gem)
- jruby-jar (gem/jar building utilities)
The underlying library used is libfixposix. Currently the most recent and most widely distributed version in distros is 0.4.3. However, it doesn't support features we need, so we bundle 0.5.0.
In order to use libfixposix, you must configure the build, or just remove the #if @VAR@
statements in the headers. See where ffi-generator complains to know what to remove.
ffi_gen takes the libfixposix include headers and generates ruby ffi bindings for ffi-bindings-libfixposix. It it tailored specifically to this project and not generally portable at this time, but patches are welcome
Raw bindings to libfixposix. binary not included, but attempts to load if present. No translation, pure pointers. Usable if you want to use libfixposix in unrelated Ruby code. Generated output is ffi.rb to map all C functions to Ruby.
A compiled binary gem of libfixposix in case you do not have or do not want to use a system-installed library. Use require 'libfixposix/binary'
to get the path.
Note that to support cross-compiling, rake tasks are nonstandard. See rake -T -a
for all options, but in essence, for local development, rake local
will build a gem file in pkg/ as usual, that you can gem install pkg/*.gem
. For building for publishing, try rake cross:$TARGET
or rake "target[x86_64-linux]" gem
(change target as appropriate). To just build the .so
files, rake binary
(local host) or rake "binary[$TARGET]"
should be called.
Ruby engine-specific hacks. Currently used to set $?
in a platform-independent manner, as well as to make IO.popen "fake duplex" IO objects. C extension for MRI and TruffleRuby, JI for JRuby. Entirely independent of SubSpawn, and can be used externally.
Utilities common to all subspawn platforms and API's.
The mid-level API for Unixy machines. Exposes all the capabilities of libfixposix with none of the hassle of C or FFI. Look at the included RBS file for all methods and types. Also includes minimal PTY opening helper.
The mid-level API for Windows machines. Win32 API's are exposed via FFI, then regularized via the mid-level API, like subspawn-posix. Also includes an early PTY <-> ConPTY translation layer. Yes, you heard that right, PTY.open/PTY.spawn on Windows! (Require ConPTY from Windows 10 1803 or later)
Note: PTY's currently work best on CRuby. JRuby support is being worked on, this gem will eventually ship with JRuby once this is fixed.
The unified high-level API for all Ruby platforms. Also includes post-launch utilities and a PTY
library implementation. The main interface is SubSpawn.spawn()
which is modeled after Process.spawn
, but with extended features. These extended features can be brought into Process.spawn
itself with subspawn/replace
. This lets Open3
and other utilities that pass args to spawn
also benefit from the extra features of SubSpawn.
- 0.1 - intial release (DONE)
- 0.2 - windows (WIP, everything except PTY's should work right now though)
- 0.3 - install-time builds
- 0.4 - better validation/errors
Please note that SubSpawn is still in its infancy and is being actively developed.
API guarantees:
- Rubyspec will continue to pass (Process.spawn & PTY.spawn are compatble with Subspawn.compat*)
- subspawn-
$PLATFORM
may change from 0.1 to 0.2, etc - subspawn (high-level) will otherwise use semantic versioning
After checking out the repo, run bundle install
to install dependencies. Then, run bundle exec rake dev
to set up a working environment.
To build the binary locally for development (highly recommended): cd ffi-binary-libfixposix && rake local
To install these gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake build
and install all the gems with gem install */pkg/*.gem
.
Test by integrating into JRuby. Notable tests:
- io/console. check out and run
TESTOPTS="--verbose" jruby -S rake test
- rspec tests. check out jruby and run
bin/jruby -S rake spec:ruby
, looking for spawn or PTY errors
For local JRuby integration testing, consider running rerun --no-notify --ignore 'java-jar/*' 'cd java-jar && rake'
after you export JRUBY_DIR
to the path to your jruby source checkout
For unit testing, subspawn
and subspawn-posix
have rspec tests that run on MacOS & Linux, while subspawn-win32
has rspec tests that run on Windows.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/byteit101/subspawn.
Because SubSpawn grew out of the JRuby project, we aim for parity with the JRuby FFI platforms. As such, CI builds all platforms.
jffi target | SubSpawn JRuby Support |
---|---|
jffi-Darwin.jar | {arm64,x86_64}-darwin |
jffi-aarch64-FreeBSD.jar | |
jffi-aarch64-Linux.jar | arm64-linux |
jffi-aarch64-Windows.jar | ✔️ (Uses FFI, no binary) |
jffi-arm-Linux.jar | armv{6,7}-linux |
jffi-i386-FreeBSD.jar | x86-freebsd |
jffi-i386-Linux.jar | x86-linux |
jffi-i386-OpenBSD.jar | |
jffi-i386-SunOS.jar | |
jffi-i386-Windows.jar | ✔️ (Uses FFI, no binary) |
jffi-loongarch64-Linux.jar | |
jffi-mips64el-Linux.jar | |
jffi-ppc-AIX.jar | |
jffi-ppc-Linux.jar | |
jffi-ppc64-AIX.jar | |
jffi-ppc64-Linux.jar | |
jffi-ppc64le-Linux.jar | |
jffi-s390x-Linux.jar | |
jffi-sparc-SunOS.jar | |
jffi-sparcv9-Linux.jar | |
jffi-sparcv9-SunOS.jar | |
jffi-x86_64-DragonFlyBSD.jar | |
jffi-x86_64-FreeBSD.jar | x86_64-freebsd |
jffi-x86_64-Linux.jar | x86_64-linux |
jffi-x86_64-OpenBSD.jar | |
jffi-x86_64-SunOS.jar | |
jffi-x86_64-Windows.jar | ✔️ (Uses FFI, no binary) |
SubSpawn is licensed under a tri EPL/LGPL/Ruby license. You can use it, redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the:
Eclipse Public License version 2.0 OR GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 (or later) OR Ruby License