Class::Usul::IPC - List/Create/Delete processes
use Class::Usul; use Class::Usul::IPC; my $ipc = Class::Usul::IPC->new( builder => Class::Usul->new ); $result_object = $ipc->run_cmd( [ qw( ls -l ) ] );
Displays the process table and allows signals to be sent to selected processes
Defines these attributes;
cache_ttys
Boolean that defaults to true. Passed to Proc::ProcessTable
@pids = $self->child_list( $pid );
Called with a process id for an argument this method returns a list of child process ids
@pids = $self->list_pids_by_file_system( $file_system );
Returns the list of process ids produced by the fuser command
fuser
$response = $self->popen( $cmd, @opts );
Uses IPC::Open3 to fork a command and pipe the lines of input into it. Returns a Class::Usul::Response::IPC object. The response object's out method returns the STDOUT from the command. Throws in the event of an error. See "run_cmd" for a full list of options and response attributes
Class::Usul::Response::IPC
out
$bool = $self->process_exists( file => $path, pid => $pid );
Tests for the existence of the specified process. Either specify a path to a file containing the process id or specify the id directly
Generates the process table data used by the HTML::FormWidget table subclass. Called by "proc_table" in Class::Usul::Model::Process
$response = $self->run_cmd( $cmd, $opts );
Runs the given command. If $cmd is a string then an implementation based on the IPC::Open3 function is used. If $cmd is an array reference then an implementation using fork and exec in Class::Usul::IPC::Cmd is used to execute the command. If the command contains pipes then an implementation based on IPC::Run is used if it is installed. If IPC::Run is not installed then the arrayref is joined with spaces and the system implementation is used. The $opts hash reference and the $response object are described in Class::Usul::IPC::Cmd
$cmd
fork
exec
system
$opts
$response
On MSWin32 the "popen" method is used instead. That method does not support the async option
MSWin32
async
Send a signal the the selected processes. Invokes the suid root wrapper
suid
$self->signal_process( [{] param => value, ... [}] );
This is called by processes running as root to send signals to selected processes. The passed parameters can be either a list of key value pairs or a hash ref. Either a single pid, or an array ref pids, or file must be passwd. The file parameter should be a path to a file containing process ids one per line. The sig defaults to TERM. If the flag parameter is set to one then the given signal will be sent once to each selected process. Otherwise each process and all of it's children will be sent the signal. If the force parameter is set to true the after a grace period each process and it's children are sent signal KILL
pid
pids
file
sig
TERM
flag
one
force
KILL
None
There are no known incompatibilities in this module
There are no known bugs in this module. Please report problems to the address below. Patches are welcome
Peter Flanigan, <pjfl@cpan.org>
<pjfl@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2015 Peter Flanigan. All rights reserved
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
To install Class::Usul, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Class::Usul
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Class::Usul
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.