shelly-0.12: shell-like (systems) programming in Haskell

Safe HaskellSafe-Infered

Shelly

Contents

Description

A module for shell-like / perl-like programming in Haskell. Shelly's focus is entirely on ease of use for those coming from shell scripting. However, it also tries to use modern libraries and techniques to keep things efficient.

The functionality provided by this module is (unlike standard Haskell filesystem functionality) thread-safe: each ShIO maintains its own environment and its own working directory.

I highly recommend putting the following at the top of your program, otherwise you will likely need either type annotations or type conversions

 {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
 {-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
 {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-type-defaults #-}
 import Data.Text.Lazy as LT
 default (LT.Text)

Synopsis

Entering ShIO.

type ShIO a = ReaderT (IORef State) IO aSource

shelly :: MonadIO m => ShIO a -> m aSource

Enter a ShIO from (Monad)IO. The environment and working directories are inherited from the current process-wide values. Any subsequent changes in processwide working directory or environment are not reflected in the running ShIO.

sub :: ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Enter a sub-ShIO that inherits the environment The original state will be restored when the sub-ShIO completes. Exceptions are propagated normally.

silently :: ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Create a sub-ShIO in which external command outputs are not echoed. Also commands are not printed. See sub.

verbosely :: ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Create a sub-ShIO in which external command outputs are echoed. Executed commands are printed See sub.

escaping :: Bool -> ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Create a sub-ShIO with shell character escaping on or off

print_stdout :: Bool -> ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Create a sub-ShIO with stdout printing on or off

print_commands :: Bool -> ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

Create a sub-ShIO with command echoing on or off

Running external commands.

run :: FilePath -> [Text] -> ShIO TextSource

Execute an external command. Takes the command name (no shell allowed, just a name of something that can be found via PATH; FIXME: setenv'd PATH is not taken into account when finding the exe name)

stdout and stderr are collected. The stdout is returned as a result of run, and complete stderr output is available after the fact using lastStderr

All of the stdout output will be loaded into memory You can avoid this but still consume the result by using run_, If you want to avoid the memory and need to process the output then use runFoldLines.

cmd :: ShellCommand result => FilePath -> resultSource

variadic argument version of run. The syntax is more convenient, but more importantly it also allows the use of a FilePath as a command argument. So an argument can be a Text or a FilePath. a FilePath is converted to Text with toTextIgnore. You will need to add the following to your module:

 {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
 {-# LANGUAGE ExtendedDefaultRules #-}
 {-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-type-defaults #-}
 import Shelly
 import Data.Text.Lazy as LT
 default (LT.Text)

(-|-) :: ShIO Text -> ShIO b -> ShIO bSource

Pipe operator. set the stdout the first command as the stdin of the second.

lastStderr :: ShIO TextSource

The output of last external command. See run.

setStdin :: Text -> ShIO ()Source

set the stdin to be used and cleared by the next run.

command :: FilePath -> [Text] -> [Text] -> ShIO TextSource

bind some arguments to run for re-use Example: monit = command monit [-c, monitrc]

command_ :: FilePath -> [Text] -> [Text] -> ShIO ()Source

bind some arguments to run_ for re-use Example: monit_ = command_ monit [-c, monitrc]

command1 :: FilePath -> [Text] -> Text -> [Text] -> ShIO TextSource

bind some arguments to run for re-use, and expect 1 argument Example: git = command1 git []; git pull [origin, master]

command1_ :: FilePath -> [Text] -> Text -> [Text] -> ShIO ()Source

bind some arguments to run for re-use, and expect 1 argument Example: git_ = command1_ git []; git+ pull [origin, master]

sshPairs :: Text -> [(FilePath, [Text])] -> ShIO TextSource

run commands over SSH. An ssh executable is expected in your path. Commands are in the same form as run, but given as pairs

 sshPairs "server-name" [("cd", "dir"), ("rm",["-r","dir2"])]

This interface is crude, but it works for now.

Please note this sets escaping to False: the commands will not be shell escaped. Internally the list of commands are combined with the string && before given to ssh.

sshPairs_ :: Text -> [(FilePath, [Text])] -> ShIO ()Source

same as sshPairs, but returns ()

Modifying and querying environment.

setenv :: Text -> Text -> ShIO ()Source

Set an environment variable. The environment is maintained in ShIO internally, and is passed to any external commands to be executed.

getenv :: Text -> ShIO TextSource

Fetch the current value of an environment variable. Both empty and non-existent variables give empty string as a result.

getenv_def :: Text -> Text -> ShIO TextSource

Fetch the current value of an environment variable. Both empty and non-existent variables give the default value as a result

appendToPath :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

add the filepath onto the PATH env variable FIXME: only effects the PATH once the process is ran, as per comments in which

Environment directory

cd :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Change current working directory of ShIO. This does *not* change the working directory of the process we are running it. Instead, ShIO keeps track of its own working directory and builds absolute paths internally instead of passing down relative paths. This may have performance repercussions if you are doing hundreds of thousands of filesystem operations. You will want to handle these issues differently in those cases.

chdir :: FilePath -> ShIO a -> ShIO aSource

cd, execute a ShIO action in the new directory and then pop back to the original directory

pwd :: ShIO FilePathSource

Obtain the current (ShIO) working directory.

Printing

echo, echo_n_err, echo_err, echo_n :: Text -> ShIO ()Source

Echo text to standard (error, when using _err variants) output. The _n variants do not print a final newline.

inspect :: Show s => s -> ShIO ()Source

a print lifted into ShIO

inspect_err :: Show s => s -> ShIO ()Source

a print lifted into ShIO using stderr

tag :: ShIO a -> Text -> ShIO aSource

same as trace, but use it combinator style

trace :: Text -> ShIO ()Source

internally log what occured. Log will be re-played on failure.

Querying filesystem.

ls :: FilePath -> ShIO [FilePath]Source

List directory contents. Does *not* include "." and "..", but it does include (other) hidden files.

lsT :: FilePath -> ShIO [Text]Source

Get back [Text] instead of [FilePath]

test_e :: FilePath -> ShIO BoolSource

Does a path point to an existing filesystem object?

test_f :: FilePath -> ShIO BoolSource

Does a path point to an existing file?

test_d :: FilePath -> ShIO BoolSource

Does a path point to an existing directory?

test_s :: FilePath -> ShIO BoolSource

Does a path point to a symlink?

which :: FilePath -> ShIO (Maybe FilePath)Source

Get a full path to an executable on PATH, if exists. FIXME does not respect setenv'd environment and uses findExecutable which uses the PATH inherited from the process environment. FIXME: findExecutable does not maintain a hash of existing commands and does a ton of file stats

Filename helpers

absPath :: FilePath -> ShIO FilePathSource

Make a relative path absolute by combining with the working directory. An absolute path is returned as is. To create a relative path, use path.

(</>) :: (ToFilePath filepath1, ToFilePath filepath2) => filepath1 -> filepath2 -> FilePathSource

uses System.FilePath.CurrentOS, but can automatically convert a Text

(<.>) :: ToFilePath filepath => filepath -> Text -> FilePathSource

uses System.FilePath.CurrentOS, but can automatically convert a Text

canonic :: FilePath -> ShIO FilePathSource

makes an absolute path. Like canonicalize, but on an exception returns path

canonicalize :: FilePath -> ShIO FilePathSource

Obtain a (reasonably) canonic file path to a filesystem object. Based on canonicalizePath in system-fileio.

relPath :: FilePath -> ShIO FilePathSource

Makes a relative path relative to the current ShIO working directory. An absolute path is returned as is. To create an absolute path, use absPath

relativeToSource

Arguments

:: FilePath

anchor path, the prefix

-> FilePath

make this relative to anchor path

-> ShIO FilePath 

make the second path relative to the first Uses stripPrefix, but will canonicalize the paths if necessary

Manipulating filesystem.

mv :: FilePath -> FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Currently a renameFile wrapper. TODO: Support cross-filesystem move. TODO: Support directory paths in the second parameter, like in cp.

rm :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Remove a file. Does fail if the file does not exist (use rm_f instead) or is not a file.

rm_f :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Remove a file. Does not fail if the file does not exist. Does fail if the file is not a file.

rm_rf :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

A swiss army cannon for removing things. Actually this goes farther than a normal rm -rf, as it will circumvent permission problems for the files we own. Use carefully. Uses removeTree

cp :: FilePath -> FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Copy a file. The second path could be a directory, in which case the original file name is used, in that directory.

cp_r :: FilePath -> FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Copy a file, or a directory recursively.

mkdir :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Create a new directory (fails if the directory exists).

mkdir_p :: FilePath -> ShIO ()Source

Create a new directory, including parents (succeeds if the directory already exists).

readfile :: FilePath -> ShIO TextSource

(Strictly) read file into a Text. All other functions use Lazy Text. So Internally this reads a file as strict text and then converts it to lazy text, which is inefficient

writefile :: FilePath -> Text -> ShIO ()Source

Write a Lazy Text to a file.

appendfile :: FilePath -> Text -> ShIO ()Source

Append a Lazy Text to a file.

withTmpDir :: (FilePath -> ShIO a) -> ShIO aSource

Create a temporary directory and pass it as a parameter to a ShIO computation. The directory is nuked afterwards.

exiting the program

terror :: Text -> ShIO aSource

fail that takes a Text

Utilities.

(<$>) :: Functor f => (a -> b) -> f a -> f b

An infix synonym for fmap.

(<$$>) :: Functor m => (b -> c) -> (a -> m b) -> a -> m cSource

A functor-lifting function composition.

whenM :: Monad m => m Bool -> m () -> m ()Source

A monadic-conditional version of the when guard.

unlessM :: Monad m => m Bool -> m () -> m ()Source

A monadic-conditional version of the unless guard.

catchany :: IO a -> (SomeException -> IO a) -> IO aSource

A helper to catch any exception (same as ... catch (e :: SomeException) -> ...).

catch_sh :: Exception e => ShIO a -> (e -> ShIO a) -> ShIO aSource

Catch an exception in the ShIO monad.

finally_sh :: ShIO a -> ShIO b -> ShIO aSource

Catch an exception in the ShIO monad.

data ShellyHandler a Source

You need this when using catches_sh.

Constructors

forall e . Exception e => ShellyHandler (e -> ShIO a) 

catches_sh :: ShIO a -> [ShellyHandler a] -> ShIO aSource

Catch multiple exceptions in the ShIO monad.

catchany_sh :: ShIO a -> (SomeException -> ShIO a) -> ShIO aSource

Catch an exception in the ShIO monad.

time :: ShIO a -> ShIO (Double, a)Source

Run a ShIO computation and collect timing information.

convert between Text and FilePath

toTextIgnore :: FilePath -> TextSource

silently uses the Right or Left value of Filesystem.Path.CurrentOS.toText

Re-exported for your convenience

liftIO :: MonadIO m => forall a. IO a -> m a

Lift a computation from the IO monad.

when :: Monad m => Bool -> m () -> m ()

Conditional execution of monadic expressions. For example,

       when debug (putStr "Debugging\n")

will output the string Debugging\n if the Boolean value debug is True, and otherwise do nothing.

unless :: Monad m => Bool -> m () -> m ()

The reverse of when.

internal functions for writing extension

get :: ShIO StateSource

put :: State -> ShIO ()Source