问题
I'm writing some code which takes a file, passes that file to one of several binaries for processing, and monitors the conversion process for errors. I've written and tested the following routine on OSX but linux fails for reasons about which I'm not clear.
#run the command, capture the output so it doesn't display
PTY.spawn(command) {|r,w,pid|
until r.eof? do
##mark
puts r.readline
end
}
The command that runs varies quite a lot and the code at the ##mark has been simplified into a local echo in an attempt to debug the problem. The command executes and the script prints the expected output in the terminal and then throws an exception.
The error it produces on Debian systems is: Errno::EIO (Input/output error - /dev/pts/0):
All of the command strings I can come up with produce that error, and when I run the code without the local echo block it runs just fine:
PTY.spawn(command) {|r,w,pid|}
In either case the command itself executes fine, but it seems like debian linux isn't sending eof up the pty. The doc pages for PTY, and IO on ruby-doc don't seem to lend any aid here.
Any suggestions? Thanks.
-vox-
回答1:
So I had to go as far as reading the C source for the PTY library to get really satisfied with what is going on here.
The Ruby PTY doc doesn't really say what the comments in the source code say.
My solution was to put together a wrapper method and to call that from my script where needed. I've also boxed into the method waiting on the process to for sure exit and the accessing of the exit status from $?
:
# file: lib/safe_pty.rb
require 'pty'
module SafePty
def self.spawn command, &block
PTY.spawn(command) do |r,w,p|
begin
yield r,w,p
rescue Errno::EIO
ensure
Process.wait p
end
end
$?.exitstatus
end
end
This is used basically the same as PTY.spawn:
require 'safe_pty'
exit_status = SafePty.spawn(command) do |r,w,pid|
until r.eof? do
logger.debug r.readline
end
end
#test exit_status for zeroness
I was more than a little frustrated to find out that this is a valid response, as it was completely undocumented on ruby-doc.
回答2:
It seems valid for Errno::EIO to be raised here (it simply means the child process has finished and closed the stream), so you should expect that and catch it.
For example, see the selected answer in Continuously read from STDOUT of external process in Ruby and http://www.shanison.com/2010/09/11/ptychildexited-exception-and-ptys-exit-status/
BTW, I did some testing. On Ruby 1.8.7 on Ubuntu 10.04, I don't get a error. With Ruby 1.9.3, I do. With JRuby 1.6.4 on Ubuntu in both 1.8 and 1.9 modes, I don't get an error. On OS X, with 1.8.7, 1.9.2 and 1.9.3, I don't get an error. The behavior is obviously dependent on your Ruby version and platform.
回答3:
ruby-doc.org says this since ruby 1.9:
# The result of read operation when pty slave is closed is platform
# dependent.
ret = begin
m.gets # FreeBSD returns nil.
rescue Errno::EIO # GNU/Linux raises EIO.
nil
end
Ok, so now I get this behavior is "normal" on Linux, but that means it's a little tricky to get the output of a PTY. If you do m.read
it reads everything and then throws it away and raises Errno::EIO. You really need to read the content chunk by chunk with m.readline
. And even then you risk losing the last line if it doesn't end with "\n" for whatever reason. To be extra safe you need to read the content byte by byte with m.read(1)
Additional note about the effect of tty and pty on buffering: it's not the same as STDOUT.sync = true
(unbuffered output) in the child process, but rather it triggers line buffering, where output is flushed on "\n"
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10238298/ruby-on-linux-pty-goes-away-without-eof-raises-errnoeio