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@ -4,6 +4,7 @@ use std::io::{BufRead, BufReader, Read, Write};
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use std::path::PathBuf; |
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use std::process::Command; |
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/// Special script that looks for some file in $PATH.
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fn search_in_path(name: &str) -> Option<PathBuf> { |
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let path = std::env::var_os("PATH").unwrap_or_else(OsString::new); |
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std::env::split_paths(&path).find_map(|dir| { |
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@ -29,9 +30,12 @@ fn main() {
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.spawn() |
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.unwrap(); |
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// capture both the stdout and stderr as File structs (actually FDs, but basically the same
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// thing)
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let stdout = cmd.stdout.take().unwrap(); |
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let mut stderr = cmd.stderr.take().unwrap(); |
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// spawn a thread to keep capturing and processing the stdout.
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let writer_pid = std::thread::spawn(move || { |
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let reader = BufReader::new(stdout); |
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let lines = reader.lines(); |
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@ -56,15 +60,27 @@ fn main() {
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result |
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}); |
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// run the command till it finishes
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cmd.wait().unwrap(); |
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// ... and wait till the thread finishes processing the whole output.
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let warnings = writer_pid.join().unwrap(); |
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// this is somewhat a hack: Instead of spawning a thread for stderr and trying to fight with
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// stdout for the lock to be able to write in the log file, we do this after the thread ends
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// (which closes the file) and then open it again and write the stderr in the end. We do this
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// 'cause we expect that the stderr is way smaller than stdout and can fit in memory without
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// any issues.
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let mut buffer = String::new(); |
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stderr.read_to_string(&mut buffer).unwrap(); |
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let mut file = OpenOptions::new().append(true).open("script.log").unwrap(); |
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file.write(buffer.as_bytes()).unwrap(); |
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// This is purely for diagnostic purposes. We could put the warnings in another file, or pass
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// it along to something else to process it. Here, we just display them.
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// Same for stderr: Since we already put them in the file, this is used just to make sure we
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// are capturing the errors without looking at the file.
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println!("Warnings:\n{:?}", warnings); |
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println!("ERR:\n{:?}", buffer) |
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} |
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