#!/usr/bin/perl -w ## Demonstration of chatting with a bash shell. use strict; use IPC::Run qw( start pump finish timeout ); my ( $in, $out, $err ); my $h = start( [qw(sh -login -i )], \$in, \$out, \$err, debug => 0, timeout(5), ); ## The first thing we do is to convert the user's prompt. Normally, we would ## do a '' as the first command in the for () loop so we could detect errors ## that bash might emit on startup. In this case, we need to do this ## initialization first so that we have a prompt to look for so we know that ## it's ready to accept input. This is all because the startup scripts ## that bash runs set PS1, and we can't have that. $in = "PS1='<PROMPT> '\n"; ## bash prompts on stderr. Consume everything before the first ## <PROMPT> (which is the second prompt bash issues). pump $h until $err =~ s/.*(?=^<PROMPT> (?!\n)\Z)//ms; for (qw( ls ps fOoBaR pwd )) { $in = $_ . "\n"; $out = ''; pump $h until $err =~ s/\A(<PROMPT> .*)(?=^<PROMPT> (?!\n)\Z)//ms; print map { "sh err: $_\n" } split( /\n/m, $1 ); print map { "sh: $_\n" } split( /\n/m, $out ); } finish $h ;
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