Provided by: libproc-simple-perl_1.32-1_all bug

NAME

       Proc::Simple -- launch and control background processes

SYNOPSIS

          use Proc::Simple;

          $myproc = Proc::Simple->new();        # Create a new process object

          $myproc->start("shell-command-line"); # Launch an external program
          $myproc->start("command",             # Launch an external program
                         "param", ...);         # with parameters

          $myproc->start(sub { ... });          # Launch a perl subroutine
          $myproc->start(\&subroutine);         # Launch a perl subroutine
          $myproc->start(\&subroutine,          # Launch a perl subroutine
                         $param, ...);          # with parameters

          $running = $myproc->poll();           # Poll Running Process

          $exit_status = $myproc->wait();       # Wait until process is done

          $proc->kill_on_destroy(1);            # Set kill on destroy
          $proc->signal_on_destroy("KILL");     # Specify signal to be sent
                                                # on destroy

          $myproc->kill();                      # Kill Process (SIGTERM)

          $myproc->kill("SIGUSR1");             # Send specified signal

          $myproc->exit_status();               # Return exit status of process

          Proc::Simple::debug($level);          # Turn debug on

DESCRIPTION

       The Proc::Simple package provides objects mimicing real-life processes from a user's point
       of view. A new process object is created by

          $myproc = Proc::Simple->new();

       Either external programs or perl subroutines can be launched and controlled as processes
       in the background.

       A 10-second sleep process, for example, can be launched as an external program as in

          $myproc->start("/bin/sleep 10");    # or
          $myproc->start("/bin/sleep", "10");

       or as a perl subroutine, as in

          sub mysleep { sleep(shift); }    # Define mysleep()
          $myproc->start(\&mysleep, 10);   # Launch it.

       or even as

          $myproc->start(sub { sleep(10); });

       The start Method returns immediately after starting the specified process in background,
       i.e. there's no blocking.  It returns 1 if the process has been launched successfully and
       0 if not.

       The poll method checks if the process is still running

          $running = $myproc->poll();

       and returns 1 if it is, 0 if it's not. Finally,

          $myproc->kill();

       terminates the process by sending it the SIGTERM signal. As an option, another signal can
       be specified.

          $myproc->kill("SIGUSR1");

       sends the SIGUSR1 signal to the running process. kill returns 1 if it succeeds in sending
       the signal, 0 if it doesn't.

       The methods are discussed in more detail in the next section.

       A destructor is provided so that a signal can be sent to the forked processes
       automatically should the process object be destroyed or if the process exits. By default
       this behaviour is turned off (see the kill_on_destroy and signal_on_destroy methods).

METHODS

       The following methods are available:

       new (Constructor)
           Create a new instance of this class by writing

             $proc = new Proc::Simple;

           or

             $proc = Proc::Simple->new();

           It takes no arguments.

       start
           Launches a new process.  The "start()" method can be used to launch both external
           programs (like "/bin/echo") or one of your self-defined subroutines (like "foo()") in
           a new process.

           For an external program to be started, call

            $status = $proc->start("program-name");

           If you want to pass a couple of parameters to the launched program, there's two
           options: You can either pass them in one argument like in

            $status = $proc->start("/bin/echo hello world");

           or in several arguments like in

            $status = $proc->start("/bin/echo", "hello", "world");

           Just as in Perl's function "system()", there's a big difference between the two
           methods: If you provide one argument containing a blank-separated command line, your
           shell is going to process any meta-characters (if you choose to use some) before the
           process is actually launched:

            $status = $proc->start("/bin/ls -l /etc/initt*");

           will expand "/etc/initt*" to "/etc/inittab" before running the "ls" command. If, on
           the other hand, you say

            $status = $proc->start("/bin/ls", "-l", "*");

           the "*" will stay unexpanded, meaning you'll look for a file with the literal name "*"
           (which is unlikely to exist on your system unless you deliberately create confusingly
           named files :). For more info on this, look up "perldoc -f exec".

           If, on the other hand, you want to start a Perl subroutine in the background, simply
           provide the function reference like

            $status = $proc->start(\&your_function);

           or supply an unnamed subroutine:

            $status = $proc->start( sub { sleep(1) } );

           You can also provide additional parameters to be passed to the function:

            $status = $proc->start(\&printme, "hello", "world");

           The start Method returns immediately after starting the specified process in
           background, i.e. non-blocking mode.  It returns 1 if the process has been launched
           successfully and 0 if not.

       poll
           The poll method checks if the process is still running

              $running = $myproc->poll();

           and returns 1 if it is, 0 if it's not.

       kill
           The kill() method:

              $myproc->kill();

           terminates the process by sending it the SIGTERM signal. As an option, another signal
           can be specified.

              $myproc->kill("SIGUSR1");

           sends the SIGUSR1 signal to the running process. kill returns 1 if it succeeds in
           sending the signal, 0 if it doesn't.

       kill_on_destroy
           Set a flag to determine whether the process attached to this object should be killed
           when the object is destroyed. By default, this flag is set to false.  The current
           value is returned.

             $current = $proc->kill_on_destroy;
             $proc->kill_on_destroy(1); # Set flag to true
             $proc->kill_on_destroy(0); # Set flag to false

       signal_on_destroy
           Method to set the signal that will be sent to the process when the object is destroyed
           (Assuming kill_on_destroy is true). Returns the current setting.

             $current = $proc->signal_on_destroy;
             $proc->signal_on_destroy("KILL");

       redirect_output
           Redirects stdout and/or stderr output to a file.  Specify undef to leave the
           stderr/stdout handles of the process alone.

             # stdout to a file, left stderr unchanged
             $proc->redirect_output ("/tmp/someapp.stdout", undef);

             # stderr to a file, left stdout unchanged
             $proc->redirect_output (undef, "/tmp/someapp.stderr");

             # stdout and stderr to a separate file
             $proc->redirect_output ("/tmp/someapp.stdout", "/tmp/someapp.stderr");

           Call this method before running the start method.

       pid Returns the pid of the forked process associated with this object

             $pid = $proc->pid;

       t0  Returns the start time() of the forked process associated with this object

             $t0 = $proc->t0();

       t1  Returns the stop time() of the forked process associated with this object

             $t1 = $proc->t1();

       DESTROY (Destructor)
           Object destructor. This method is called when the object is destroyed (eg with "undef"
           or on exiting perl). If kill_on_destroy is true the process associated with the object
           is sent the signal_on_destroy signal (SIGTERM if undefined).

       exit_status
           Returns the exit status of the process as the $! variable indicates.  If the process
           is still running, "undef" is returned.

       wait
           The wait method:

              $exit_status = $myproc->wait();

           waits until the process is done and returns its exit status.

       debug
           Switches debug messages on and off -- Proc::Simple::debug(1) switches them on,
           Proc::Simple::debug(0) keeps Proc::Simple quiet.

       cleanup
           Proc::Simple keeps around data of terminated processes, e.g. you can check via "t0()"
           and "t1()" how long a process ran, even if it's long gone. Over time, this data keeps
           occupying more and more memory and if you have a long-running program, you might want
           to run "Proc::Simple->cleanup()" every once in a while to get rid of data pertaining
           to processes no longer in use.

NOTE

       Please keep in mind that there is no guarantee that the SIGTERM signal really terminates a
       process. Processes can have signal handlers defined that avoid the shutdown.  If in doubt,
       whether a process still exists, check it repeatedly with the poll routine after sending
       the signal.

Shell Processes

       If you pass a shell program to Proc::Simple, it'll use "exec()" to launch it. As noted in
       Perl's "exec()" manpage, simple commands for the one-argument version of "exec()" will be
       passed to "execvp()" directly, while commands containing characters like ";" or "*" will
       be passed to a shell to make sure those get the shell expansion treatment.

       This has the interesting side effect that if you launch something like

           $p->start("./womper *");

       then you'll see two processes in your process list:

           $ ps auxww | grep womper
           mschilli  9126 11:21 0:00 sh -c ./womper *
           mschilli  9127 11:21 0:00 /usr/local/bin/perl -w ./womper ...

       A regular "kill()" on the process PID would only kill the first process, but
       Proc::Simple's "kill()" will use a negative signal and send it to the first process
       (9126). Since it has marked the process as a process group leader when it created it
       previously (via setsid()), this will cause both processes above to receive the signal sent
       by "kill()".

Contributors

       Tim Jenness  <t.jenness@jach.hawaii.edu>
          did kill_on_destroy/signal_on_destroy/pid

       Mark R. Southern <mark_southern@merck.com>
          worked on EXIT_STATUS tracking

       Tobias Jahn <tjahn@users.sourceforge.net>
          added redirection to stdout/stderr

       Clauss Strauch <Clauss_Strauch@aquila.fac.cs.cmu.edu> suggested the multi-arg
       start()-methods.

       Chip Capelik contributed a patch with the wait() method.

       Jeff Holt provided a patch for time tracking with t0() and t1().

       Brad Cavanagh fixed RT33440 (unreliable $?)

AUTHOR

           1996, Mike Schilli <cpan@perlmeister.com>

LICENSE

       Copyright 1996-2011 by Mike Schilli, all rights reserved.  This program is free software,
       you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.