forked from ghc/packages-process
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
Process.hs
727 lines (623 loc) · 25.2 KB
/
Process.hs
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
{-# LANGUAGE CPP, ForeignFunctionInterface #-}
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
{-# LANGUAGE Trustworthy #-}
{-# LANGUAGE InterruptibleFFI #-}
#endif
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- |
-- Module : System.Process
-- Copyright : (c) The University of Glasgow 2004-2008
-- License : BSD-style (see the file libraries/base/LICENSE)
--
-- Maintainer : libraries@haskell.org
-- Stability : experimental
-- Portability : non-portable (requires concurrency)
--
-- Operations for creating and interacting with sub-processes.
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- ToDo:
-- * Flag to control whether exiting the parent also kills the child.
{- NOTES on createPipe:
createPipe is no longer exported, because of the following problems:
- it wasn't used to implement runInteractiveProcess on Unix, because
the file descriptors for the unused ends of the pipe need to be closed
in the child process.
- on Windows, a special version of createPipe is needed that sets
the inheritance flags correctly on the ends of the pipe (see
mkAnonPipe below).
-}
module System.Process (
#ifndef __HUGS__
-- * Running sub-processes
createProcess,
shell, proc,
CreateProcess(..),
CmdSpec(..),
StdStream(..),
ProcessHandle,
-- ** Specific variants of createProcess
runCommand,
runProcess,
runInteractiveCommand,
runInteractiveProcess,
readProcess,
readProcessWithExitCode,
#endif
system,
rawSystem,
showCommandForUser,
#ifndef __HUGS__
-- * Process completion
waitForProcess,
getProcessExitCode,
terminateProcess,
killProcess,
interruptProcessGroupOf,
#endif
) where
import Prelude hiding (mapM)
#ifndef __HUGS__
import System.Process.Internals
import Control.Exception (SomeException, mask, try, onException, throwIO)
import Control.DeepSeq (rnf)
import System.IO.Error (mkIOError, ioeSetErrorString)
#if !defined(mingw32_HOST_OS)
import System.Posix.Types
#if MIN_VERSION_unix(2,5,0)
import System.Posix.Process (getProcessGroupIDOf)
#endif
#endif
import qualified Control.Exception as C
import Control.Concurrent
import Control.Monad
import Foreign
import Foreign.C
import System.IO
import Data.Maybe
#endif
import System.Exit ( ExitCode(..) )
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
import GHC.IO.Exception ( ioException, IOErrorType(..), IOException(..) )
#if defined(mingw32_HOST_OS)
import System.Win32.Process (getProcessId)
import System.Win32.Console (generateConsoleCtrlEvent, cTRL_BREAK_EVENT)
#else
import System.Posix.Signals
#endif
#endif
#ifdef __HUGS__
import Hugs.System
#endif
#ifndef __HUGS__
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- runCommand
{- | Runs a command using the shell.
-}
runCommand
:: String
-> IO ProcessHandle
runCommand string = do
(_,_,_,ph) <- runGenProcess_ "runCommand" (shell string) Nothing Nothing
return ph
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- runProcess
{- | Runs a raw command, optionally specifying 'Handle's from which to
take the @stdin@, @stdout@ and @stderr@ channels for the new
process (otherwise these handles are inherited from the current
process).
Any 'Handle's passed to 'runProcess' are placed immediately in the
closed state.
Note: consider using the more general 'createProcess' instead of
'runProcess'.
-}
runProcess
:: FilePath -- ^ Filename of the executable (see 'proc' for details)
-> [String] -- ^ Arguments to pass to the executable
-> Maybe FilePath -- ^ Optional path to the working directory
-> Maybe [(String,String)] -- ^ Optional environment (otherwise inherit)
-> Maybe Handle -- ^ Handle to use for @stdin@ (Nothing => use existing @stdin@)
-> Maybe Handle -- ^ Handle to use for @stdout@ (Nothing => use existing @stdout@)
-> Maybe Handle -- ^ Handle to use for @stderr@ (Nothing => use existing @stderr@)
-> IO ProcessHandle
runProcess cmd args mb_cwd mb_env mb_stdin mb_stdout mb_stderr = do
(_,_,_,ph) <-
runGenProcess_ "runProcess"
(proc cmd args){ cwd = mb_cwd,
env = mb_env,
std_in = mbToStd mb_stdin,
std_out = mbToStd mb_stdout,
std_err = mbToStd mb_stderr }
Nothing Nothing
maybeClose mb_stdin
maybeClose mb_stdout
maybeClose mb_stderr
return ph
where
maybeClose :: Maybe Handle -> IO ()
maybeClose (Just hdl)
| hdl /= stdin && hdl /= stdout && hdl /= stderr = hClose hdl
maybeClose _ = return ()
mbToStd :: Maybe Handle -> StdStream
mbToStd Nothing = Inherit
mbToStd (Just hdl) = UseHandle hdl
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- createProcess
-- | Construct a 'CreateProcess' record for passing to 'createProcess',
-- representing a raw command with arguments.
--
-- The @FilePath@ names the executable, and is interpreted according
-- to the platform's standard policy for searching for
-- executables. Specifically:
--
-- * on Unix systems the @execvp@ semantics is used, where if the
-- filename does not contain a slash (@/@) then the @PATH@
-- environment variable is searched for the executable.
--
-- * on Windows systems the Win32 @CreateProcess@ semantics is used.
-- Briefly: if the filename does not contain a path, then the
-- directory containing the parent executable is searched, followed
-- by the current directory, then some some standard locations, and
-- finally the current @PATH@. An @.exe@ extension is added if the
-- filename does not already have an extension. For full details
-- see the documentation for the Windows @SearchPath@ API.
proc :: FilePath -> [String] -> CreateProcess
proc cmd args = CreateProcess { cmdspec = RawCommand cmd args,
cwd = Nothing,
env = Nothing,
std_in = Inherit,
std_out = Inherit,
std_err = Inherit,
close_fds = False,
create_group = False}
-- | Construct a 'CreateProcess' record for passing to 'createProcess',
-- representing a command to be passed to the shell.
shell :: String -> CreateProcess
shell str = CreateProcess { cmdspec = ShellCommand str,
cwd = Nothing,
env = Nothing,
std_in = Inherit,
std_out = Inherit,
std_err = Inherit,
close_fds = False,
create_group = False}
{- |
This is the most general way to spawn an external process. The
process can be a command line to be executed by a shell or a raw command
with a list of arguments. The stdin, stdout, and stderr streams of
the new process may individually be attached to new pipes, to existing
'Handle's, or just inherited from the parent (the default.)
The details of how to create the process are passed in the
'CreateProcess' record. To make it easier to construct a
'CreateProcess', the functions 'proc' and 'shell' are supplied that
fill in the fields with default values which can be overriden as
needed.
'createProcess' returns @(mb_stdin_hdl, mb_stdout_hdl, mb_stderr_hdl, p)@,
where
* if @std_in == CreatePipe@, then @mb_stdin_hdl@ will be @Just h@,
where @h@ is the write end of the pipe connected to the child
process's @stdin@.
* otherwise, @mb_stdin_hdl == Nothing@
Similarly for @mb_stdout_hdl@ and @mb_stderr_hdl@.
For example, to execute a simple @ls@ command:
> r <- createProcess (proc "ls" [])
To create a pipe from which to read the output of @ls@:
> (_, Just hout, _, _) <-
> createProcess (proc "ls" []){ std_out = CreatePipe }
To also set the directory in which to run @ls@:
> (_, Just hout, _, _) <-
> createProcess (proc "ls" []){ cwd = Just "\home\bob",
> std_out = CreatePipe }
-}
createProcess
:: CreateProcess
-> IO (Maybe Handle, Maybe Handle, Maybe Handle, ProcessHandle)
createProcess cp = do
r <- runGenProcess_ "createProcess" cp Nothing Nothing
maybeCloseStd (std_in cp)
maybeCloseStd (std_out cp)
maybeCloseStd (std_err cp)
return r
where
maybeCloseStd :: StdStream -> IO ()
maybeCloseStd (UseHandle hdl)
| hdl /= stdin && hdl /= stdout && hdl /= stderr = hClose hdl
maybeCloseStd _ = return ()
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- runInteractiveCommand
{- | Runs a command using the shell, and returns 'Handle's that may
be used to communicate with the process via its @stdin@, @stdout@,
and @stderr@ respectively. The 'Handle's are initially in binary
mode; if you need them to be in text mode then use 'hSetBinaryMode'.
-}
runInteractiveCommand
:: String
-> IO (Handle,Handle,Handle,ProcessHandle)
runInteractiveCommand string =
runInteractiveProcess1 "runInteractiveCommand" (shell string)
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- runInteractiveProcess
{- | Runs a raw command, and returns 'Handle's that may be used to communicate
with the process via its @stdin@, @stdout@ and @stderr@ respectively.
For example, to start a process and feed a string to its stdin:
> (inp,out,err,pid) <- runInteractiveProcess "..."
> forkIO (hPutStr inp str)
The 'Handle's are initially in binary mode; if you need them to be
in text mode then use 'hSetBinaryMode'.
-}
runInteractiveProcess
:: FilePath -- ^ Filename of the executable (see 'proc' for details)
-> [String] -- ^ Arguments to pass to the executable
-> Maybe FilePath -- ^ Optional path to the working directory
-> Maybe [(String,String)] -- ^ Optional environment (otherwise inherit)
-> IO (Handle,Handle,Handle,ProcessHandle)
runInteractiveProcess cmd args mb_cwd mb_env = do
runInteractiveProcess1 "runInteractiveProcess"
(proc cmd args){ cwd = mb_cwd, env = mb_env }
runInteractiveProcess1
:: String
-> CreateProcess
-> IO (Handle,Handle,Handle,ProcessHandle)
runInteractiveProcess1 fun cmd = do
(mb_in, mb_out, mb_err, p) <-
runGenProcess_ fun
cmd{ std_in = CreatePipe,
std_out = CreatePipe,
std_err = CreatePipe }
Nothing Nothing
return (fromJust mb_in, fromJust mb_out, fromJust mb_err, p)
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- waitForProcess
{- | Waits for the specified process to terminate, and returns its exit code.
GHC Note: in order to call @waitForProcess@ without blocking all the
other threads in the system, you must compile the program with
@-threaded@.
On Unix systems, if the process died as the result of a signal,
then the exit code returned is @ExitFailure (128 + signal)@ where
@signal@ is the signal number. The signal numbers are
platform-specific, so to test for a specific signal use the
constants provided by @System.Posix.Signals@ in the @unix@
package.
-}
waitForProcess
:: ProcessHandle
-> IO ExitCode
waitForProcess ph = do
p_ <- withProcessHandle ph $ \p_ -> return (p_,p_)
case p_ of
ClosedHandle e -> return e
OpenHandle h -> do
-- don't hold the MVar while we call c_waitForProcess...
-- (XXX but there's a small race window here during which another
-- thread could close the handle or call waitForProcess)
alloca $ \pret -> do
throwErrnoIfMinus1Retry_ "waitForProcess" (c_waitForProcess h pret)
withProcessHandle ph $ \p_' ->
case p_' of
ClosedHandle e -> return (p_',e)
OpenHandle ph' -> do
closePHANDLE ph'
code <- peek pret
let e = if (code == 0)
then ExitSuccess
else (ExitFailure (fromIntegral code))
return (ClosedHandle e, e)
-- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
-- | @readProcess@ forks an external process, reads its standard output
-- strictly, blocking until the process terminates, and returns the output
-- string.
--
-- If an asynchronous exception is thrown to the thread executing
-- @readProcess@. The forked process will be terminated and @readProcess@ will
-- wait (block) until the process has been terminated.
--
-- Output is returned strictly, so this is not suitable for
-- interactive applications.
--
-- This function throws an 'IOError' if the process 'ExitCode' is
-- anything other than 'ExitSuccess'.
--
-- Users of this function should compile with @-threaded@ if they
-- want other Haskell threads to keep running while waiting on
-- the result of readProcess.
--
-- > > readProcess "date" [] []
-- > "Thu Feb 7 10:03:39 PST 2008\n"
--
-- The arguments are:
--
-- * The command to run, which must be in the $PATH, or an absolute path
--
-- * A list of separate command line arguments to the program
--
-- * A string to pass on the standard input to the program.
--
readProcess
:: FilePath -- ^ Filename of the executable (see 'proc' for details)
-> [String] -- ^ any arguments
-> String -- ^ standard input
-> IO String -- ^ stdout
readProcess cmd args input =
mask $ \restore -> do
(Just inh, Just outh, _, pid) <-
createProcess (proc cmd args){ std_in = CreatePipe,
std_out = CreatePipe,
std_err = Inherit }
flip onException
(do hClose inh; hClose outh;
terminateProcess pid; waitForProcess pid) $ restore $ do
-- fork off a thread to start consuming the output
output <- hGetContents outh
waitOut <- forkWait $ C.evaluate $ rnf output
-- now write and flush any input
when (not (null input)) $ do hPutStr inh input; hFlush inh
hClose inh -- done with stdin
-- wait on the output
waitOut
hClose outh
-- wait on the process
ex <- waitForProcess pid
case ex of
ExitSuccess -> return output
ExitFailure r ->
ioError (mkIOError OtherError ("readProcess: " ++ cmd ++
' ':unwords (map show args) ++
" (exit " ++ show r ++ ")")
Nothing Nothing)
{- |
@readProcessWithExitCode@ creates an external process, reads its
standard output and standard error strictly, waits until the process
terminates, and then returns the 'ExitCode' of the process,
the standard output, and the standard error.
If an asynchronous exception is thrown to the thread executing
@readProcessWithExitCode@. The forked process will be terminated and
@readProcessWithExitCode@ will wait (block) until the process has been
terminated.
'readProcess' and 'readProcessWithExitCode' are fairly simple wrappers
around 'createProcess'. Constructing variants of these functions is
quite easy: follow the link to the source code to see how
'readProcess' is implemented.
On Unix systems, see 'waitForProcess' for the meaning of exit codes
when the process died as the result of a signal.
-}
readProcessWithExitCode
:: FilePath -- ^ Filename of the executable (see 'proc' for details)
-> [String] -- ^ any arguments
-> String -- ^ standard input
-> IO (ExitCode,String,String) -- ^ exitcode, stdout, stderr
readProcessWithExitCode cmd args input =
mask $ \restore -> do
(Just inh, Just outh, Just errh, pid) <- createProcess (proc cmd args)
{ std_in = CreatePipe,
std_out = CreatePipe,
std_err = CreatePipe }
flip onException
(do hClose inh; hClose outh; hClose errh;
terminateProcess pid; waitForProcess pid) $ restore $ do
-- fork off a thread to start consuming stdout
out <- hGetContents outh
waitOut <- forkWait $ C.evaluate $ rnf out
-- fork off a thread to start consuming stderr
err <- hGetContents errh
waitErr <- forkWait $ C.evaluate $ rnf err
-- now write and flush any input
let writeInput = do
unless (null input) $ do
hPutStr inh input
hFlush inh
hClose inh
#if defined(__GLASGOW_HASKELL__)
C.catch writeInput $ \e -> case e of
IOError { ioe_type = ResourceVanished
, ioe_errno = Just ioe }
| Errno ioe == ePIPE -> return ()
_ -> throwIO e
#else
writeInput
#endif
-- wait on the output
waitOut
waitErr
hClose outh
hClose errh
-- wait on the process
ex <- waitForProcess pid
return (ex, out, err)
forkWait :: IO a -> IO (IO a)
forkWait a = do
res <- newEmptyMVar
_ <- mask $ \restore -> forkIO $ try (restore a) >>= putMVar res
return (takeMVar res >>= either (\ex -> throwIO (ex :: SomeException)) return)
#endif /* !__HUGS__ */
-- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- system
{-|
Computation @system cmd@ returns the exit code produced when the
operating system runs the shell command @cmd@.
This computation may fail with
* @PermissionDenied@: The process has insufficient privileges to
perform the operation.
* @ResourceExhausted@: Insufficient resources are available to
perform the operation.
* @UnsupportedOperation@: The implementation does not support
system calls.
On Windows, 'system' passes the command to the Windows command
interpreter (@CMD.EXE@ or @COMMAND.COM@), hence Unixy shell tricks
will not work.
On Unix systems, see 'waitForProcess' for the meaning of exit codes
when the process died as the result of a signal.
-}
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
system :: String -> IO ExitCode
system "" = ioException (ioeSetErrorString (mkIOError InvalidArgument "system" Nothing Nothing) "null command")
system str = syncProcess "system" (shell str)
syncProcess :: String -> CreateProcess -> IO ExitCode
#if mingw32_HOST_OS
syncProcess _fun c = do
(_,_,_,p) <- createProcess c
waitForProcess p
#else
syncProcess fun c = do
-- The POSIX version of system needs to do some manipulation of signal
-- handlers. Since we're going to be synchronously waiting for the child,
-- we want to ignore ^C in the parent, but handle it the default way
-- in the child (using SIG_DFL isn't really correct, it should be the
-- original signal handler, but the GHC RTS will have already set up
-- its own handler and we don't want to use that).
old_int <- installHandler sigINT Ignore Nothing
old_quit <- installHandler sigQUIT Ignore Nothing
(_,_,_,p) <- runGenProcess_ fun c
(Just defaultSignal) (Just defaultSignal)
r <- waitForProcess p
_ <- installHandler sigINT old_int Nothing
_ <- installHandler sigQUIT old_quit Nothing
return r
#endif /* mingw32_HOST_OS */
#endif /* __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ */
{-|
The computation @'rawSystem' cmd args@ runs the operating system command
@cmd@ in such a way that it receives as arguments the @args@ strings
exactly as given, with no funny escaping or shell meta-syntax expansion.
It will therefore behave more portably between operating systems than 'system'.
The return codes and possible failures are the same as for 'system'.
-}
rawSystem :: String -> [String] -> IO ExitCode
#ifdef __GLASGOW_HASKELL__
rawSystem cmd args = syncProcess "rawSystem" (proc cmd args)
#elif !mingw32_HOST_OS
-- crude fallback implementation: could do much better than this under Unix
rawSystem cmd args = system (showCommandForUser cmd args)
#else /* mingw32_HOST_OS && ! __GLASGOW_HASKELL__ */
# if __HUGS__
rawSystem cmd args = system (cmd ++ showCommandForUser "" args)
# else
rawSystem cmd args = system (showCommandForUser cmd args)
#endif
#endif
-- | Given a program @p@ and arguments @args@,
-- @showCommandForUser p args@ returns a string suitable for pasting
-- into sh (on POSIX OSs) or cmd.exe (on Windows).
showCommandForUser :: FilePath -> [String] -> String
showCommandForUser cmd args = unwords (map translate (cmd : args))
#ifndef __HUGS__
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- terminateProcess
-- | Attempts to terminate the specified process. This function should
-- not be used under normal circumstances - no guarantees are given regarding
-- how cleanly the process is terminated. To check whether the process
-- has indeed terminated, use 'getProcessExitCode'.
--
-- On Unix systems, 'terminateProcess' sends the process the SIGTERM signal.
-- On Windows systems, the Win32 @TerminateProcess@ function is called, passing
-- an exit code of 1.
--
-- Note: on Windows, if the process was a shell command created by
-- 'createProcess' with 'shell', or created by 'runCommand' or
-- 'runInteractiveCommand', then 'terminateProcess' will only
-- terminate the shell, not the command itself. On Unix systems, both
-- processes are in a process group and will be terminated together.
terminateProcess :: ProcessHandle -> IO ()
terminateProcess ph = do
withProcessHandle_ ph $ \p_ ->
case p_ of
ClosedHandle _ -> return p_
OpenHandle h -> do
throwErrnoIfMinus1Retry_ "terminateProcess" $ c_terminateProcess h
return p_
-- does not close the handle, we might want to try terminating it
-- again, or get its exit code.
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- killProcess
-- | Sends a kill signal on POSIX systems. Same as terminateProcess on Windows.
killProcess :: ProcessHandle -> IO ()
killProcess ph = do
withProcessHandle_ ph $ \p_ ->
case p_ of
ClosedHandle _ -> return p_
OpenHandle h -> do
throwErrnoIfMinus1Retry_ "killProcess" $ c_killProcess h
return p_
-- does not close the handle, we might want to try killing it
-- again, or get its exit code.
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- interruptProcessGroupOf
-- | Sends an interrupt signal to the process group of the given process.
--
-- On Unix systems, it sends the group the SIGINT signal.
--
-- On Windows systems, it generates a CTRL_BREAK_EVENT and will only work for
-- processes created using 'createProcess' and setting the 'create_group' flag
interruptProcessGroupOf
:: ProcessHandle -- ^ A process in the process group
-> IO ()
interruptProcessGroupOf ph = do
#if mingw32_HOST_OS
withProcessHandle_ ph $ \p_ -> do
case p_ of
ClosedHandle _ -> return p_
OpenHandle h -> do
pid <- getProcessId h
generateConsoleCtrlEvent cTRL_BREAK_EVENT pid
return p_
#else
withProcessHandle_ ph $ \p_ -> do
case p_ of
ClosedHandle _ -> return p_
OpenHandle h -> do
#if MIN_VERSION_unix(2,5,0)
-- getProcessGroupIDOf was added in unix-2.5.0.0
pgid <- getProcessGroupIDOf h
signalProcessGroup sigINT pgid
#else
signalProcessGroup sigINT h
#endif
return p_
#endif
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- getProcessExitCode
{- |
This is a non-blocking version of 'waitForProcess'. If the process is
still running, 'Nothing' is returned. If the process has exited, then
@'Just' e@ is returned where @e@ is the exit code of the process.
On Unix systems, see 'waitForProcess' for the meaning of exit codes
when the process died as the result of a signal.
-}
getProcessExitCode :: ProcessHandle -> IO (Maybe ExitCode)
getProcessExitCode ph = do
withProcessHandle ph $ \p_ ->
case p_ of
ClosedHandle e -> return (p_, Just e)
OpenHandle h ->
alloca $ \pExitCode -> do
res <- throwErrnoIfMinus1Retry "getProcessExitCode" $
c_getProcessExitCode h pExitCode
code <- peek pExitCode
if res == 0
then return (p_, Nothing)
else do
closePHANDLE h
let e | code == 0 = ExitSuccess
| otherwise = ExitFailure (fromIntegral code)
return (ClosedHandle e, Just e)
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-- Interface to C bits
foreign import ccall unsafe "terminateProcess"
c_terminateProcess
:: PHANDLE
-> IO CInt
foreign import ccall unsafe "killProcess"
c_killProcess
:: PHANDLE
-> IO CInt
foreign import ccall unsafe "getProcessExitCode"
c_getProcessExitCode
:: PHANDLE
-> Ptr CInt
-> IO CInt
foreign import ccall interruptible "waitForProcess" -- NB. safe - can block
c_waitForProcess
:: PHANDLE
-> Ptr CInt
-> IO CInt
#endif /* !__HUGS__ */