EXECUTE_COMMAND_LINE
— Execute a shell commandEXECUTE_COMMAND_LINE
runs a shell command, synchronously or
asynchronously.
The COMMAND
argument is passed to the shell and executed, using
the C library's system
call. (The shell is sh
on Unix
systems, and cmd.exe
on Windows.) If WAIT
is present
and has the value false, the execution of the command is asynchronous
if the system supports it; otherwise, the command is executed
synchronously.
The three last arguments allow the user to get status information. After
synchronous execution, EXITSTAT
contains the integer exit code of
the command, as returned by system
. CMDSTAT
is set to zero
if the command line was executed (whatever its exit status was).
CMDMSG
is assigned an error message if an error has occurred.
Note that the system
function need not be thread-safe. It is
the responsibility of the user to ensure that system
is not
called concurrently.
CALL EXECUTE_COMMAND_LINE(COMMAND [, WAIT, EXITSTAT, CMDSTAT, CMDMSG ])
COMMAND | Shall be a default CHARACTER scalar.
|
WAIT | (Optional) Shall be a default LOGICAL scalar.
|
EXITSTAT | (Optional) Shall be an INTEGER of the
default kind.
|
CMDSTAT | (Optional) Shall be an INTEGER of the
default kind.
|
CMDMSG | (Optional) Shall be an CHARACTER scalar of the
default kind.
|
program test_exec integer :: i call execute_command_line ("external_prog.exe", exitstat=i) print *, "Exit status of external_prog.exe was ", i call execute_command_line ("reindex_files.exe", wait=.false.) print *, "Now reindexing files in the background" end program test_exec
system
function call, its behavior with respect to signaling is processor
dependent. In particular, on POSIX-compliant systems, the SIGINT and
SIGQUIT signals will be ignored, and the SIGCHLD will be blocked. As
such, if the parent process is terminated, the child process might not be
terminated alongside.