On this page:
subprocess
subprocess-wait
subprocess-status
subprocess-kill
subprocess-pid
subprocess?
current-subprocess-custodian-mode
subprocess-group-enabled
shell-execute
14.4.1 Simple Subprocesses
system
system*
system/ exit-code
system*/ exit-code
process
process*
process/ ports
process*/ ports

14.4 Processes

(subprocess stdout 
  stdin 
  stderr 
  command 
  arg ...) 
  
subprocess?
(or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
(or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
(or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stdout : (or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stdin : (or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stderr : (or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  command : path-string?
  arg : string?
(subprocess stdout 
  stdin 
  stderr 
  command 
  exact 
  arg) 
  
subprocess?
(or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
(or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
(or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stdout : (or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stdin : (or/c (and/c input-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  stderr : (or/c (and/c output-port? file-stream-port?) #f)
  command : path-string?
  exact : 'exact
  arg : string?
Creates a new process in the underlying operating system to execute command asynchronously. See also system and process from racket/system.

The command argument is a path to a program executable, and the args are command-line arguments for the program. Under Unix and Mac OS X, command-line arguments are passed as byte strings using the current locale’s encoding (see Encodings and Locales).

Under Windows, the first arg can be replaced with 'exact, which triggers a Windows-specific behavior: the sole arg is used exactly as the command-line for the subprocess. Otherwise, under Windows, a command-line string is constructed from command and arg so that a typical Windows console application can parse it back to an array of arguments. If 'exact is provided on a non-Windows platform, the exn:fail:contract exception is raised.

For information on the Windows command-line conventions, search for “command line parsing” at http://msdn.microsoft.com/.

Unless it is #f, stdout is used for the launched process’s standard output, stdin is used for the process’s standard input, and stderr is used for the process’s standard error. All provided ports must be file-stream ports. Any of the ports can be #f, in which case a system pipe is created and returned by subprocess. For each port that is provided, no pipe is created and the corresponding returned value is #f.

The subprocess procedure returns four values:

Important: All ports returned from subprocess must be explicitly closed, usually with close-input-port or close-output-port.

The returned ports are file-stream ports (see File Ports), and they are placed into the management of the current custodian (see Custodians). The exn:fail exception is raised when a low-level error prevents the spawning of a process or the creation of operating system pipes for process communication.

If the subprocess-group-enabled parameter’s value is true, then the new process is created as a new OS-level process group. In that case, subprocess-kill attempts to terminate all processes within the group, which may include additional processes created by the subprocess. See subprocess-kill for details, and see subprocess-group-enabled for additional caveats.

The current-subprocess-custodian-mode parameter determines whether the subprocess itself is registered with the current custodian so that a custodian shutdown calls subprocess-kill for the subprocess.

(subprocess-wait subproc)  void?
  subproc : subprocess?
Blocks until the process represented by subproc terminates. The subproc value also can be used with sync and sync/timeout.

(subprocess-status subproc)  
(or/c 'running
      exact-nonnegative-integer?)
  subproc : subprocess?
Returns 'running if the process represented by subproc is still running, or its exit code otherwise. The exit code is an exact integer, and 0 typically indicates success. If the process terminated due to a fault or signal, the exit code is non-zero.

(subprocess-kill subproc force?)  void?
  subproc : subprocess?
  force? : any/c
Terminates the subprocess represented by subproc. The precise action depends on whether force? is true, whether the process was created in its own group by setting the subprocess-group-enabled parameter to a true value, and the current platform:

If an error occurs during termination, the exn:fail exception is raised.

(subprocess-pid subproc)  exact-nonnegative-integer?
  subproc : subprocess?
Returns the operating system’s numerical ID (if any) for the process represented by subproc. The result is valid only as long as the process is running.

(subprocess? v)  boolean?
  v : any/c
Returns #t if v is a subprocess value, #f otherwise.

(current-subprocess-custodian-mode)
  (or/c #f 'kill 'interrupt)
(current-subprocess-custodian-mode mode)  void?
  mode : (or/c #f 'kill 'interrupt)
A parameter that determines whether a subprocess (as created by subprocess or wrappers like process) is registered with the current custodian. If the parameter value is #f, then the subprocess is not registered with the custodian—although any created ports are registered. If the parameter value is 'kill or 'interrupt, then the subprocess is shut down through subprocess-kill, where 'kill supplies a #t value for the force? argument and 'interrupt supplies a #f value. The shutdown may occur either before or after ports created for the subprocess are closed.

Custodian-triggered shutdown is limited by details of process handling in the host system. For example, process and system may create an intermediate shell process to run a program, in which case custodian-based termination shuts down the shell process and probably not the process started by the shell. See also subprocess-kill. Process groups (see subprocess-group-enabled) can address some limitations, but not all of them.

A parameter that determines whether a subprocess is created as a new process group. See subprocess-kill for more information.

Beware that creating a group may interfere with the job control in an interactive shell, since job control is based on process groups.

(shell-execute verb    
  target    
  parameters    
  dir    
  show-mode)  #f
  verb : (or/c string? #f)
  target : string?
  parameters : string?
  dir : path-string?
  show-mode : symbol?
Performs the action specified by verb on target in Windows. For platforms other than Windows, the exn:fail:unsupported exception is raised.

For example,

  (shell-execute #f "http://racket-lang.org" ""
                 (current-directory) 'sw_shownormal)

Opens the Racket home page in a browser window.

The verb can be #f, in which case the operating system will use a default verb. Common verbs include "open", "edit", "find", "explore", and "print".

The target is the target for the action, usually a filename path. The file could be executable, or it could be a file with a recognized extension that can be handled by an installed application.

The parameters argument is passed on to the system to perform the action. For example, in the case of opening an executable, the parameters is used as the command line (after the executable name).

The dir is used as the current directory when performing the action.

The show-mode sets the display mode for a Window affected by the action. It must be one of the following symbols; the description of each symbol’s meaning is taken from the Windows API documentation.

If the action fails, the exn:fail exception is raised. If the action succeeds, the result is #f.

In future versions of Racket, the result may be a subprocess value if the operating system did returns a process handle (but if a subprocess value is returned, its process ID will be 0 instead of the real process ID).

14.4.1 Simple Subprocesses

The bindings documented in this section are provided by the racket/system and racket libraries, but not racket/base.

(system command)  boolean?
  command : string?
Executes a Unix, Mac OS X, or Windows shell command synchronously (i.e., the call to system does not return until the subprocess has ended). The command argument is a string containing no nul characters. If the command succeeds, the return value is #t, #f otherwise.

See also current-subprocess-custodian-mode and subprocess-group-enabled, which affect the subprocess used to implement system.

(system* command arg ...)  boolean?
  command : path-string?
  arg : string?
(system* command exact arg)  boolean?
  command : path-string?
  exact : 'exact
  arg : string?
Like system, except that command is a filename that is executed directly (instead of through a shell command), and the args are the arguments. The executed file is passed the specified string arguments (which must contain no nul characters).

Under Windows, the first argument after command can be 'exact, and the final arg is a complete command line. See subprocess for details.

(system/exit-code command)  (integer-in 0 255)
  command : string?
Like system, except that the result is the exit code returned by the subprocess. A 0 result normally indicates success.

(system*/exit-code command arg ...)  (integer-in 0 255)
  command : path-string?
  arg : string?
(system*/exit-code command exact arg)  (integer-in 0 255)
  command : path-string?
  exact : 'exact
  arg : string?
Like system*, but returns the exit code like system/exit-code.

(process command)
  
(list input-port?
      output-port?
      exact-nonnegative-integer?
      input-port?
      ((or/c 'status 'wait 'interrupt 'kill) . -> . any))
  command : string?
Executes a shell command asynchronously (using sh under Unix and Mac OS X, cmd under Windows). The result is a list of five values:

Important: All three ports returned from process must be explicitly closed with close-input-port or close-output-port.

See also current-subprocess-custodian-mode and subprocess-group-enabled, which affect the subprocess used to implement process. In particular, the 'interrupt and 'kill process-control messages are implemented via subprocess-kill, so they can affect a process group instead of a single process.

(process* command arg ...)  list?
  command : path-string?
  arg : string?
(process* command exact arg)  list?
  command : path-string?
  exact : 'exact
  arg : string?
Like process, except that command is a filename that is executed directly, and the args are the arguments. Under Windows, as for system*, the first arg can be replaced with 'exact.

(process/ports out in error-out command)  list?
  out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  in : (or/c #f input-port?)
  error-out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  command : string?
Like process, except that out is used for the process’s standard output, in is used for the process’s standard input, and error-out is used for the process’s standard error. Any of the ports can be #f, in which case a system pipe is created and returned, as in process. For each port that is provided, no pipe is created, and the corresponding value in the returned list is #f.

(process*/ports out    
  in    
  error-out    
  command    
  arg ...)  list?
  out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  in : (or/c #f input-port?)
  error-out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  command : path-string?
  arg : string?
(process*/ports out    
  in    
  error-out    
  command    
  exact    
  arg)  list?
  out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  in : (or/c #f input-port?)
  error-out : (or/c #f output-port?)
  command : path-string?
  exact : 'exact
  arg : string?
Like process*, but with the port handling of process/ports.