pub struct Child {
pub stdin: Option<ChildStdin>,
pub stdout: Option<ChildStdout>,
pub stderr: Option<ChildStderr>,
/* private fields */
}
process
only.Expand description
Representation of a child process spawned onto an event loop.
This type is also a future which will yield the ExitStatus
of the
underlying child process. A Child
here also provides access to information
like the OS-assigned identifier and the stdio streams.
§Caveats
Similar to the behavior to the standard library, and unlike the futures
paradigm of dropping-implies-cancellation, a spawned process will, by
default, continue to execute even after the Child
handle has been dropped.
The Command::kill_on_drop
method can be used to modify this behavior
and kill the child process if the Child
wrapper is dropped before it
has exited.
Fields§
§stdin: Option<ChildStdin>
The handle for writing to the child’s standard input (stdin), if it has been captured.
stdout: Option<ChildStdout>
The handle for reading from the child’s standard output (stdout), if it has been captured.
stderr: Option<ChildStderr>
The handle for reading from the child’s standard error (stderr), if it has been captured.
Implementations§
Source§impl Child
impl Child
Sourcepub fn kill(&mut self) -> Result<()>
pub fn kill(&mut self) -> Result<()>
Forces the child to exit.
This is equivalent to sending a SIGKILL on unix platforms.
Sourcepub async fn wait_with_output(self) -> Result<Output>
pub async fn wait_with_output(self) -> Result<Output>
Returns a future that will resolve to an Output
, containing the exit
status, stdout, and stderr of the child process.
The returned future will simultaneously waits for the child to exit and
collect all remaining output on the stdout/stderr handles, returning an
Output
instance.
The stdin handle to the child process, if any, will be closed before waiting. This helps avoid deadlock: it ensures that the child does not block waiting for input from the parent, while the parent waits for the child to exit.
By default, stdin, stdout and stderr are inherited from the parent. In
order to capture the output into this Output
it is necessary to create
new pipes between parent and child. Use stdout(Stdio::piped())
or
stderr(Stdio::piped())
, respectively, when creating a Command
.