I have an exe file which takes a file name as input.
When I execute it as a command like:
xyz.exe c:\input.txt c:\ouput.txt
It all works as expected.
But how to execute this is java?
This is the one i used and am not getting the ouput in the files:
String[] str = {"c:/input.txt","c:/output.txt"};
Process p = rt.exec("c:/xyz.exe",str);
You're using the method:
public Process exec(String command,
String[] envp)
where envp is a (quote) "array of strings, each element of which has environment variable settings in the format name=value, or null if the subprocess should inherit the environment of the current process."
Try this instead:
String[] command = {"c:/xyz.exe", "c:/input.txt", "c:/output.txt"};
Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command);
// ...
Also read this article that explains the pitfalls of Runtime.exec(...): http://www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-12-2000/jw-1229-traps.html
Use Runtime.exec or Processbuilder API
I believe this should answer your question http://www.daniweb.com/software-development/java/threads/133710
Related
I want to execute a batch file code from java button click. Also I don't want any command prompt window to be shown all from java code.
I have a code :-
C:\xyz-3.1.1\bin>dita --input=C:/Users/india/Desktop/mobile-phone/m
obilePhone.xyz --format=pdf --output=C:/Users/india/Desktop --logfile=C:/Use
rs/india/Desktop/dofhdif.txt
So I want above code to be run from batch command with C:\xyz-3.1.1\bin> as the parent directory.
Also I want to update --input file path whenever I will choose new file from JFileChooser.
I did this from the java code on button click transform:-
ProcessBuilder pb=new ProcessBuilder("dita --input=C:/Users/india/Desktop/mobile-phone/mobilePhone.xyz --format=pdf --output=C:/Users/india/Desktop --logfile=C:/Users/india/Desktop/dofhdif.txt");
pb.redirectErrorStream(true);
Process process=pb.start();
and getting IOException error.
I get stuck over here for long time , where am I going wrong.
EDIT :- error
java.io.IOException: Cannot run program "dita --input=C:/Users/india/Desktop/mobile-phone/m
obilePhone.xyz --format=pdf --output=C:/Users/india/Desktop --logfile=C:/Use
rs/india/Desktop/dofhdif.txt": CreateProcess error=2, The system cannot find the file specified
at java.lang.ProcessBuilder.start(Unknown Source)
As the Error mentioned, it cannot locate the command because the whole string will be treated as the command by ProcessBuilder.
Try to use Runtime.getRuntime().exec directly, but you have to ensure the command dita can be found.
Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("C:\xyz-3.1.1\bin>dita --input=C:/Users/india/Desktop/mobile-phone/mobilePhone.xyz --format=pdf --output=C:/Users/india/Desktop --logfile=C:/Users/india/Desktop/dofhdif.txt");
process.waitFor();
int exitCode = process.exitValue();
System.out.println(IoHelper.output(process.getInputStream())); // handle the output;
Before JDK 5.0, the only way to start a process and execute it, was to use the exec() method of the java.lang.Runtime class after which ProcessBuilder can be used to help create operating system processes.
The major improvement being that, it also acts as a holder for all those attributes that influence the process. And this is how it should be used:
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("myCommand", "myArg1", "myArg2");
P.S. Actually Runtime.getRuntime().exec can also be used with String... as:
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[]{"curl", "-v", "--cookie", tokenString, urlString});
My personal preference:
If you have to configure the environment for the command: to control the working directory or environment variables and also you want to execute the commands several times, you'd better use it since the ProcessBuilder will hold the settings and what you need to do is just processBuilder.start() to create another process with the same settings;
If you want to execute a whole long string command as you mentioned, you'd better just use Runtime.getRuntime().exec since you can just execute it right there without any bothering of the parameter format.
Try this:
String inputFile = ...;
String outputFile = ...;
String logFile = ...;
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder(
"dita",
"--input=" + inputFile,
"--format=pdf",
"--output=" + outputFile,
"--logfile=" + logFile)
.directory(new File("C:\\xyz-3.1.1\\bin"))
//.inheritIO();
.redirectErrorStream(true);
Process process = pb.start();
This shows the following points:
The command is separated from the arguments
The argument values can be determined at runtime
The command's default directory (C:\xyz-3.1.1\bin) is set before starting the process
Consider using inheritIO() instead of redirectErrorStream() if you want the process's output to appear as part of your Java application's output.
case "BVT Tool":
System.out.println("Inside BVT Tool");
try {
String[] command1 = new String[] {"mv $FileName /bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/"};
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command1);
} catch(IOException e) {
System.out.println("execption is :"+ e);
e.printStackTrace();
}
break;
I'm unable to execute the Unix command. It's showing the following exception:
java.io.IOException: Cannot run program mv $FileName /bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/":
CreateProcess error=2, The system cannot find the file specified.
I agree with #Reimeus on most points, but I want to point out that there reason you're getting this particular error message is a crosscontamination between 2 of the overloaded versions of exec:
String command1 = "mv $FileName /bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/";
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command1);
Would work - it's allowed to specify the command and its parameters in one String if you use the overloaded version that expects a String
String[] command1 = new String[] {"mv", "$FileName", "/bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/"};
Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command1);
would work too, because it uses the the exec version expecting a String array. That version expects the command and its parameters in separate Strings
Please note that I here assume that $Filename is actually the name of the file, so no shell-based substitution will take place.
EDIT: if FileName is a variable name as you seem to suggest elsewhere in the comments, try
String[] command1 = new String[] {"mv", FileName, "/bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/"};
But : with Commons IO you could just do
FileUtils.moveFileToDirectory(new File(FileName), new File("/bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/") , true);
JavaDoc
which is
totally portable between Mac, Windows and Linux (your version won't work on Windows)
is faster because it doesn't need to spawn an external process
gives you more information when something goes wrong.
First, you should probably be using ProcessBuilder. The command you have is "mv" the rest should be arguments,
// I'm not sure about $FileName, that's probably meant to be a shell replace
// and here there is no shell.
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("mv",
System.getenv("FileName"), "/bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/");
Apart from the fact that Runtime.exec is a very antiquated approach for running a command,
The complete String is being interpreted as the executable command. You need to use individual tokens in the String array. In addition you need to
use a shell to interpret the $FileName variable
String[] command1 = {"bash", "-c", "mv", "$FileName", "/bgw/feeds/ibs/incoming/"};
I am using the below code to open the "sample.html' file.
String filename = "C:/sample.html";
String browser = "C:/Program Files (x86)/Google/Chrome/Application/chrome.exe";
Runtime rTime = Runtime.getRuntime();
Process pc = rTime.exec(browser + filename);
pc.waitFor();
However, I am getting the below error.
java.io.IOException: Cannot run program "C:/Program": CreateProcess error=2, The system cannot find the file specified
Could someone please help me figure this. Thanks in advance.
Runtime.exec(String) automatically splits the string at spaces, assuming the first token is the command name and the rest are command line parameters. Also you do not have a space between browser and file, although that is not the root cause of the problem.
It thinks you want to run "C:/Program" with two command line arguments:
"Files"
"(x86)/google/Chrome/Application/chrome.exeC:/sample.html"
Use Runtime.exec(String[]) instead, that way you have full control over what is what:
String[] command = new String[]{browser, filename};
Runtime.exec(command);
Try this.
String filename = "C:\\sample.html";
String browser = "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Google\\Chrome\\Application\\chrome.exe";
Runtime runtime = Runtime.getRuntime();
try {
runtime.exec(new String[] {browser, filename});
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
Stop using Runtime.exec(String) - the problem is in how it processes the single string input.
The error message indicates how/where it is failing: note that it stops after "C:/Program" (or, the first space). This indicates that exec parsed the string "incorrectly" and thus isn't even looking for the correct executable.
Cannot run program "C:/Program"
Instead, consider the use of ProcessBuilder. While the usage is still system-dependent, ProcessBuilder allows separation of the executable file-name (and need to deal with it specially) and the arguments and does it's darnedest to invoke the target correctly.
String filename = "C:\\sample.html";
String browser = "C:\\Program Files (x86)\\Google\\Chrome\\Application\\chrome.exe";
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder(browser, filename);
// setup other options ..
// .. and run
Process p = pb.start();
p.waitFor();
From what I can tell, in Windows, ProcessBuilder will wraps the individual components in quotes; this can create a different problem when arguments contain quotes..
Parameters must be passed separately:
Process pc = rTime.exec(new String[]{browser, filename});
Using exec() is not like using the command line - you can not use spaces to delimit the command from its parameters. Your attempt would try to execute a command whose path was the concatenation of the exec and the filename as one giant string.
I need to run executable progam (.exe) in java. This program have two different operating modes: GUI and Command line. The syntax to launch the program from the command line is as follows :
C:\Users\Ermanno\Desktop\ "programFolder"\"program.exe" /stext output.txt
in this way the program store the outoput in the file "output.txt".
I tired it:
Process p = new ProcessBuilder("C:\\Users\\Ermanno\\Desktop\\programFolder\\program.exe" ,"/stext a.txt").start();
does not create the output file.
I also tired to use a file batch that contains the command and run it to java but the result is the same.
You need to pass each argument in a single string:
... program.exe", "/stext", "a.txt")...
Also make sure that you start a background thread which reads the output of the child process. If there is a problem, then the child will print an error message to it's standard output and if you don't actively read it, then this output will be lost.
For this, loop over the streams p.getInputStream() and p.getErrorStream().
The latter is especially important since you say "I also tired to use a file batch". Java doesn't do anything different than a batch script. If you can't run the command from batch, it won't work from Java, either.
My experience was horrible with using the JDK ProcessBuilder and Runtime.getRuntime().exec. I then moved to Apache commons-exec. Here is an example:
String line = "AcroRd32.exe /p /h " + file.getAbsolutePath();
CommandLine cmdLine = CommandLine.parse(line);
DefaultExecutor executor = new DefaultExecutor();
int exitValue = executor.execute(cmdLine);
I solved using file bath. This file contains the command.
String [] _s = {"cmd.exe", "/c", "start", "file.bat"};
Process pr = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(_s);
Am trying to execute the a bat file with some arguments through a JAVA programmes . the arguments are file name with full path, And this path had some folder name with space, which are creating issue and giving me the following error
Error: 'D:\Documents' is not recognized as an internal or external
command
the code is as below
String command = "D:\Documents and Settings\ A.bat" + " " D:\Documents and Settings\B.xml
1. process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(new String[] {"cmd.exe","/c",command});
2. process.waitFor();
3. exitValue = process.exitValue();
You need to escape the \ in your string (i.e. doubling them: D:\\Documents), but that is not the problem. You can try to escape the spaces Documents\\ and\\ Settings or you use the exec method that does this for you. Just dont build the command line by yourself. Better use ProcessBuilder for starting processes.
String command = "\"D:\Documents and Settings\\" A.bat" + " \"D:\Documents and Settings\B.xml\""
Escape double quotes, so you can include double quotes in the literal, to give:
cmd.exe /x "D:\Documents and Settings\" A.bat "D:\Documents and Settings\B.xml"
I was trying to do the same thing. I googled whole day but didn't make it work. At Last I handled it in this way, I am sharing it if it comes to any use of anybody :
String command = "A.bat D:\\Documents and Settings\\B.xml";
File commandDir = new File ( "D:\\Documents and Settings ");
String[] cmdArray = { "cmd.exe", "/c", command };
1. Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec( cmdArray, null, cmdArray );
2. process.waitFor();
3. exitValue = process.exitValue();
I've spent a while searching on SO and the wider Internet and was about to post this as a new question when I came across this, which does seem identical to my issue...
I am trying to call a Windows batch file from Java. The batch file takes several arguments but just the first, which is a path to a data file, is of relevance to this problem. The cut-down command line that I have been experimenting with is essentially:
cmd /c c:\path\to\my\batchfile.bat c:\path\to\my\datafile.mdl
I'm using Apache Commons Exec which ultimately delegates to Runtime.getRuntime().exec(String[] cmdarray, String[] envp, File dir), the 'correct' version as opposed to the overloaded versions taking a single String command. Quoting of the arguments when they contain spaces is therefore taken care of.
Now, both the path to the batch file and/or the path to the data file can have spaces in them. If either the path to the batch file or the path to the data file have spaces in, then the batch file is executed. But if both have spaces in them then the path to the batch file is truncated at the first space.
This has to be a (Java or Windows?) bug, right? I've debugged right down to the native call to create() in java.lang.ProcessImpl and all seems ok. I'm on JDK1.6.