In October of last year, I published a new library – typed-process. It builds on top of the veritable process package, and provides an alternative API (which I’ll explain in a bit). It’s not the first time I’ve written such a wrapper library; I first did so when creating Data.Conduit.Process, which is just a thin wraper around Data.Streaming.Process.
With this proliferation of APIs, why did I go for another one? With Data.(Conduit/Streaming).Process, I tried to stay as close as possible to the underlying process API. And the underlying process API is rigid for (at least) two reasons:
After I got sufficiently fed up with limitations in the existing APIs, I decided to take a crack at doing it all from scratch. I made a small announcement on Twitter, and have been using this library regularly since its release. In addition, a few people have raised questions on the process issue tracker whose simplest answer is IMO “use typed-process.” Therefore, I think now’s a good time to discuss the library more publicly and get some feedback as to what to do with it.
There is both a typed-process tutorial and Haddock documentation available. If you want details, you should read those. This section is intended to give a little taste of typed-process to set the stage for the rest of the post.
Everything starts with the ProcessConfig
datatype,
which specified all the rules for how we’re going to run an
external process. This includes all of the common settings from the
CreateProcess
type in the process package, like
changing the working directory or environment variables.
Importantly (and the source of the “typed” in the library name),
ProcessConfig
takes three type parameters,
representing the type of the three standard streams (input, output,
and error). For example, ProcessConfig Handle Handle
Handle
indicates that all three streams will have
Handle
s, whereas ProcessConfig () (STM
ByteString) ()
indicates that input and error will be unit,
but output can be access as an STM
action which
returns a ByteString
. (Much more on this later.)
There are multiple helper functions – like
withProcess
or readProcess
– to take a
ProcessConfig
and turn it into a live, running
process. These running processes are represented by the
Process
type, which like ProcessConfig
takes three type parameters. There are underscore variants of these
launch functions (like withProcess_
and
readProcess_
) to automatically check the exit code of
a process and, if unsuccessful, throw a runtime exception.
You can access the exit code of a process with
waitExitCode
and getExitCode
, which are
blocking and non-blocking, respectively. These functions also come
in STM
variants to more easily work with processes
from atomic sections of code.
Alright, enough overview, let’s start talking about motivation.
The typed-process tutorial identifies five limitations in the process library that I wanted to overcome. (There’s also a sixth issue I’m aware of, a race condition, which I’ve added as a bonus section.) Let’s dive into these more deeply, and see how typed-process addresses them.
I’ve made a big deal about type variables so far. I believe this is the biggest driving force behind the more usable API in typed-process. Let’s consider some idiomatic process-based code.
#!/usr/bin/env stack -- stack --install-ghc --resolver lts-8.0 runghc import Control.Exception import System.Process import System.IO import System.Exit main :: IO () main = do (Just inh, Just outh, Nothing, ph) <- createProcess (proc "cat" ["-", "/usr/share/dict/words"]) { std_in = CreatePipe , std_out = CreatePipe } hPutStrLn inh "This is the list of all words:" hClose inh out <- hGetContents outh evaluate $ length out -- lazy I/O :( mapM_ putStrLn $ take 100 $ lines out ec <- waitForProcess ph if (ec == ExitSuccess) then return () else error $ "cat process failed: " ++ show ec
The fact that std_in
and std_out
specify the creation of a Handle
is not reflected in
the types at all. If we left those changes out, our program would
still compile, but our pattern match of (Just inh, Just
outh
would fail. By moving this information into the type
system, we can catch bugs at compile time. Here’s the equivalent
code as above:
#!/usr/bin/env stack -- stack --install-ghc --resolver lts-8.0 runghc --package typed-process import Control.Exception import System.Process.Typed import System.IO main :: IO () main = do let procConf = setStdin createPipe $ setStdout createPipe $ proc "cat" ["-", "/usr/share/dict/words"] withProcess_ procConf $ p -> do hPutStrLn (getStdin p) "This is the list of all words:" hClose $ getStdin p out <- hGetContents $ getStdout p evaluate $ length out -- lazy I/O :( mapM_ putStrLn $ take 100 $ lines out
If you leave off the setStdin
or
setStdout
calls, the program will not compile. But
this is only the beginning. Instead of being limited to either
generating a Handle
or not, we now have huge amounts
of flexibility in how we configure our streams. For example, here’s
an alternative approach to providing standard input to the
process:
#!/usr/bin/env stack -- stack --install-ghc --resolver lts-8.0 runghc --package typed-process {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} import Control.Exception import System.Process.Typed import System.IO main :: IO () main = do let procConf = setStdin (byteStringInput "This is the list of all words:n") $ setStdout createPipe $ proc "cat" ["-", "/usr/share/dict/words"] withProcess_ procConf $ p -> do out <- hGetContents $ getStdout p evaluate $ length out -- lazy I/O :( mapM_ putStrLn $ take 100 $ lines out
There are functions in the process package that allow specifying standard input this easily, but they are not as composable as this approach (as we’ll discuss below).
There’s much more to be said about these type parameters, but hopefully this taste, plus the further examples in this post, will demonstrate their usefulness.
Functions like readProcessWithExitCode
use some
pretty hairy (IMO) lazy I/O tricks internally to read the output
and error streams from a process. For the most part, you can simply
use these functions without worrying about the crazy innards.
However, consider if you want to do something off the beaten track,
like capture the error stream while allowing the output stream to
go to the parent process’s stdout. There’s no built-in function in
process to handle that, so you’ll be stuck implementing that
behavior. And this functionality is far from trivial to get
right.
By contrast, typed-process does not use any lazy I/O. And while
it provides a readProcess
function, there’s nothing
magical about it; it’s built on top of the
byteStringOutput
stream config, which uses proper
threading under the surface and provides its output via
STM
for even nicer concurrent coding.
#!/usr/bin/env stack -- stack --install-ghc --resolver lts-8.0 runghc --package typed-process {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} import Control.Concurrent.STM (atomically) import System.Process.Typed import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy.Char8 as L8 main :: IO () main = do let procConf = setStdin closed $ setStderr byteStringOutput $ proc "stack" ["path", "--verbose"] err <- withProcess_ procConf $ atomically . getStderr putStrLn "nnnCaptured the following stderr:nn" L8.putStrLn err
I won’t dwell much on this one, since the benefits are less
commonly useful. Since many functions in typed-process provide both
IO
and STM
alternatives, it can
significantly simplify some concurrent algorithms by letting you
keep more logic within an atomic block. This is similar to (and
inspired by) the design choices in the async library, which is my
favorite library of all time.
All input and output in typed-process works on binary data as
ByteString
s, instead of textual String
data. This is:
A major goal of this library has been to be as composable as possible. I’ve been frustrated by two issues in the process package:
child_group
setting
or NoStream
constructor)CreateProcess
values (like
readCreateProcess
) and those that work on raw
command/argument pairs (like readProcess
). The
situation has improved in recent releases, but in older process
releases, the lack of CreateProcess
variants of many
functions made it very difficult to both modify the
environment/working directory for a process and capture its
output or error.For (1), I’ve gone the route of smart constructors throughout
the API. You cannot access the ProcessConfig
data
constructor, but instead must use proc
,
shell
, or OverloadedStrings
. Instead of
record accessors, there are setter and getter functions. And
instead of a hard-coded list of stream types via a set of data
constructors, you can create arbitrary StreamSpec
s via
the mkStreamSpec
function. I hope this turns out to be
an API that is resilient to breaking changes.
For (2), the solution is easy: all launch functions in
typed-process work exclusively on ProcessConfig
.
Problem solved. We now have a very clear breakdown in the API:
first you configure everything you want about your process, and
then you choose whichever launch function makes the most sense to
you.
There’s a long standing race
condition in process – which will hopefully be resolved soon –
that introduces a race condition on waiting for child processes. In
typed-process, we’ve avoided this entirely with a different
approach to child process exit codes. Namely: we fork a separate
thread to wait for the process and fill an STM TMVar
,
which both ensures no race condition and makes it possible to
observe the process exiting from within an atomic block.
As a side benefit, this also avoids the possibility of
accidentally creating zombie processes by not getting the process’s
exit code when it finishes. Similarly, by encouraging the bracket
pattern (via withProcess
) when interacting with a
process, killing off child processes in the case of exceptions
happens far more reliably.
For the most part, I have not run into significant limitations
with typed-process so far. The biggest annoyances I have with it
are those inherited from process, specifically that command line
arguments and environment variables are specified as
String
s, leading to some character encoding
issues.
I’m certain there are limitations of typed-process versus process. And for others, there may be a higher learning curve with typed-process versus process. I haven’t received enough feedback on that yet to assess, however.
The other downside is dependencies, for those who worry about such things. In addition to depending on process itself (and therefore inheriting its dependencies), typed-process depends on async, bytestring, conduit, conduit-extra, exceptions, stm, and transformers. The conduit deps can easily be moved out, it’s just for providing a convenience function that could be provided elsewhere. Regarding the others:
MonadIO
. Now that
MonadIO
has moved into base, I could make that
dependency conditional.withProcess
more
general, and would be a shame to lose.The only reason for considering these changes would be the next section…
I’m left with the question of what to do with this package, especially as more people ask questions that can be answered with “just use typed-process.”
System.Process
module (we should keep it as-is for backwards compatibility), but
adding a new module with this API is certainly doable (sans the
dependency issues mentioned aboved).At the very least, this library has scratched a personal itch. If it helps others, that’s a great perk :).
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