public abstract class Process extends Object
Process
provides control of native processes started by
ProcessBuilder.start and Runtime.exec.
The class provides methods for performing input from the process, performing
output to the process, waiting for the process to complete,
checking the exit status of the process, and destroying (killing)
the process.
The ProcessBuilder.start()
and
Runtime.exec
methods create a native process and return an instance of a
subclass of Process
that can be used to control the process
and obtain information about it.
The methods that create processes may not work well for special processes on certain native platforms, such as native windowing processes, daemon processes, Win16/DOS processes on Microsoft Windows, or shell scripts.
By default, the created process does not have its own terminal
or console. All its standard I/O (i.e. stdin, stdout, stderr)
operations will be redirected to the parent process, where they can
be accessed via the streams obtained using the methods
getOutputStream()
,
getInputStream()
, and
getErrorStream()
.
The parent process uses these streams to feed input to and get output
from the process. Because some native platforms only provide
limited buffer size for standard input and output streams, failure
to promptly write the input stream or read the output stream of
the process may cause the process to block, or even deadlock.
Where desired,
process I/O can also be redirected
using methods of the ProcessBuilder
class.
The process is not killed when there are no more references to
the Process
object, but rather the process
continues executing asynchronously.
There is no requirement that the process represented by a Process
object execute asynchronously or concurrently with respect
to the Java process that owns the Process
object.
As of 1.5, ProcessBuilder.start()
is the preferred way
to create a Process
.
Subclasses of Process should override the onExit()
and
toHandle()
methods to provide a fully functional Process including the
process id
,
information about the process
,
direct children
, and
direct children plus descendants of those children
of the process.
Delegating to the underlying Process or ProcessHandle is typically
easiest and most efficient.
Constructor and Description |
---|
Process()
Default constructor for Process.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Stream<ProcessHandle> |
children()
Returns a snapshot of the direct children of the process.
|
Stream<ProcessHandle> |
descendants()
Returns a snapshot of the descendants of the process.
|
abstract void |
destroy()
Kills the process.
|
Process |
destroyForcibly()
Kills the process forcibly.
|
abstract int |
exitValue()
Returns the exit value for the process.
|
abstract InputStream |
getErrorStream()
Returns the input stream connected to the error output of the
process.
|
abstract InputStream |
getInputStream()
Returns the input stream connected to the normal output of the
process.
|
abstract OutputStream |
getOutputStream()
Returns the output stream connected to the normal input of the
process.
|
long |
getPid()
Returns the native process ID of the process.
|
ProcessHandle.Info |
info()
Returns a snapshot of information about the process.
|
boolean |
isAlive()
Tests whether the process represented by this
Process is
alive. |
CompletableFuture<Process> |
onExit()
Returns a
CompletableFuture<Process> for the termination of the Process. |
boolean |
supportsNormalTermination()
Returns
true if the implementation of destroy() is to
normally terminate the process,
Returns false if the implementation of destroy
forcibly and immediately terminates the process. |
ProcessHandle |
toHandle()
Returns a ProcessHandle for the Process.
|
abstract int |
waitFor()
Causes the current thread to wait, if necessary, until the
process represented by this
Process object has
terminated. |
boolean |
waitFor(long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
Causes the current thread to wait, if necessary, until the
process represented by this
Process object has
terminated, or the specified waiting time elapses. |
public abstract OutputStream getOutputStream()
Process
object.
If the standard input of the process has been redirected using
ProcessBuilder.redirectInput
then this method will return a
null output stream.
Implementation note: It is a good idea for the returned output stream to be buffered.
public abstract InputStream getInputStream()
Process
object.
If the standard output of the process has been redirected using
ProcessBuilder.redirectOutput
then this method will return a
null input stream.
Otherwise, if the standard error of the process has been
redirected using
ProcessBuilder.redirectErrorStream
then the input stream returned by this method will receive the
merged standard output and the standard error of the process.
Implementation note: It is a good idea for the returned input stream to be buffered.
public abstract InputStream getErrorStream()
Process
object.
If the standard error of the process has been redirected using
ProcessBuilder.redirectError
or
ProcessBuilder.redirectErrorStream
then this method will return a
null input stream.
Implementation note: It is a good idea for the returned input stream to be buffered.
public abstract int waitFor() throws InterruptedException
Process
object has
terminated. This method returns immediately if the process
has already terminated. If the process has not yet
terminated, the calling thread will be blocked until the
process exits.Process
object. By convention, the value
0
indicates normal termination.InterruptedException
- if the current thread is
interrupted by another
thread while it is waiting, then the wait is ended and
an InterruptedException
is thrown.public boolean waitFor(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException
Process
object has
terminated, or the specified waiting time elapses.
If the process has already terminated then this method returns
immediately with the value true
. If the process has not
terminated and the timeout value is less than, or equal to, zero, then
this method returns immediately with the value false
.
The default implementation of this methods polls the exitValue
to check if the process has terminated. Concrete implementations of this
class are strongly encouraged to override this method with a more
efficient implementation.
timeout
- the maximum time to waitunit
- the time unit of the timeout
argumenttrue
if the process has exited and false
if
the waiting time elapsed before the process has exited.InterruptedException
- if the current thread is interrupted
while waiting.NullPointerException
- if unit is nullpublic abstract int exitValue()
Process
object. By convention, the value
0
indicates normal termination.IllegalThreadStateException
- if the process represented
by this Process
object has not yet terminatedpublic abstract void destroy()
Process
object is
normally terminated
or not is
implementation dependent.
Forcible process destruction is defined as the immediate termination of a
process, whereas normal termination allows the process to shut down cleanly.
If the process is not alive, no action is taken.
The CompletableFuture
from onExit()
is
completed
when the process has terminated.
public Process destroyForcibly()
Process
object is forcibly terminated.
Forcible process destruction is defined as the immediate termination of a
process, whereas normal termination allows the process to shut down cleanly.
If the process is not alive, no action is taken.
The CompletableFuture
from onExit()
is
completed
when the process has terminated.
Invoking this method on Process
objects returned by
ProcessBuilder.start()
and Runtime.exec(java.lang.String)
forcibly terminate
the process.
isAlive()
may return true for a brief period
after destroyForcibly()
is called. This method
may be chained to waitFor()
if needed.destroy()
and so may not forcibly terminate the process.Process
object representing the
process forcibly destroyedpublic boolean supportsNormalTermination()
true
if the implementation of destroy()
is to
normally terminate the process,
Returns false
if the implementation of destroy
forcibly and immediately terminates the process.
Invoking this method on Process
objects returned by
ProcessBuilder.start()
and Runtime.exec(java.lang.String)
return
true
or false
depending on the platform implementation.
UnsupportedOperationException
and performs no other action.true
if the implementation of destroy()
is to
normally terminate the process;
otherwise, destroy()
forcibly terminates the processUnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationpublic boolean isAlive()
Process
is
alive.true
if the process represented by this
Process
object has not yet terminated.public long getPid()
toHandle().getPid()
.UnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationpublic CompletableFuture<Process> onExit()
CompletableFuture<Process>
for the termination of the Process.
The CompletableFuture
provides the ability
to trigger dependent functions or actions that may be run synchronously
or asynchronously upon process termination.
When the process has terminated the CompletableFuture is
completed
regardless
of the exit status of the process.
Calling onExit().get()
waits for the process to terminate and returns
the Process. The future can be used to check if the process is
done
or to
wait
for it to terminate.
Cancelling
the CompletableFuture does not affect the Process.
Processes returned from ProcessBuilder.start()
override the
default implementation to provide an efficient mechanism to wait
for process exit.
onExit
is an alternative to
waitFor
that enables both additional concurrency
and convenient access to the result of the Process.
Lambda expressions can be used to evaluate the result of the Process
execution.
If there is other processing to be done before the value is used
then onExit is a convenient mechanism to
free the current thread and block only if and when the value is needed.
Process p = new ProcessBuilder("cmp", "f1", "f2").start();
Future<Boolean> identical = p.onExit().thenApply(p1 -> p1.exitValue() == 0);
...
if (identical.get()) { ... }
, The process may be observed to have terminated with isAlive()
before the ComputableFuture is completed and dependent actions are invoked.waitFor()
in a separate thread
repeatedly until it returns successfully. If the execution of
waitFor
is interrupted, the thread's interrupt status is preserved.
When waitFor()
returns successfully the CompletableFuture is
completed
regardless
of the exit status of the process.
This implementation may consume a lot of memory for thread stacks if a
large number of processes are waited for concurrently.
External implementations should override this method and provide a more efficient implementation. For example, to delegate to the underlying process, it can do the following:
public CompletableFuture<Process> onExit() {
return delegate.onExit().thenApply(p -> this);
}
CompletableFuture<Process>
for the Processpublic ProcessHandle toHandle()
Process
objects returned by ProcessBuilder.start()
and
Runtime.exec(java.lang.String)
implement toHandle
as the equivalent of
ProcessHandle.of(pid)
including the
check for a SecurityManager and RuntimePermission("manageProcess")
.UnsupportedOperationException
and performs no other action.
Subclasses should override this method to provide a ProcessHandle for the
process. The methods getPid()
, info()
, children()
,
and descendants()
, unless overridden, operate on the ProcessHandle.UnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationSecurityException
- if a security manager has been installed and
it denies RuntimePermission("manageProcess")public ProcessHandle.Info info()
A ProcessHandle.Info
instance has accessor methods
that return information about the process if it is available.
toHandle().info()
.UnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationpublic Stream<ProcessHandle> children()
not alive
has no children.
Note that processes are created and terminate asynchronously.
There is no guarantee that a process is alive
.
toHandle().children()
.UnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationSecurityException
- if a security manager has been installed and
it denies RuntimePermission("manageProcess")public Stream<ProcessHandle> descendants()
not alive
has no children.
Note that processes are created and terminate asynchronously.
There is no guarantee that a process is alive
.
toHandle().descendants()
.UnsupportedOperationException
- if the Process implementation
does not support this operationSecurityException
- if a security manager has been installed and
it denies RuntimePermission("manageProcess") Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2016, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
DRAFT 9-internal+0-2016-01-26-133437.ivan.openjdk9onspinwait