Not currently available for Linux, because NSTask and NSFileHandle have not been ported yet.
SwiftShell
An OS X Framework for command line scripting in Swift.
Example
Print line numbers
import SwiftShell
do {
let input = try main.arguments.first.map {try open($0)} ?? main.stdin
input.lines()
.enumerate().forEach { (linenr,line) in print(linenr+1, ":", line) }
// add a newline at the end
print("")
} catch {
exit(error)
}
Launched with e.g. cat long.txt | print_linenumbers.swift or print_linenumbers.swift long.txt this will print the line number at the beginning of each line.
Run commands
Print output
try runAndPrint(bash: "cmd1 arg | cmd2 arg")
Runs a shell command just like you would in the terminal. If the command returns with a non-zero exit code it will throw a ShellError.
The name may seem a bit cumbersome, but it explains exactly what it does. SwiftShell never prints anything without explicitly being told to.
In-line
let date: String = run("date", "-u")
print("Today's date in UTC is " + date)
Similar to $(cmd) in bash, this just returns the output from the command as a string, ignoring any errors.
Asynchronous
let command = runAsync("cmd", "-n", 245)
// do something with command.stderror or command.stdout
do {
try command.finish()
} catch {
// deal with errors. or not.
}
Launch a command and continue before it's finished. You can process standard output and standard error, and optionally wait until it's finished and handle any errors.
If you read all of command.stderror or command.stdout it will automatically wait for the command to finish running. You can still call finish() to check for errors.
Parameters
The 3 run functions above take 2 different types of parameters:
(executable: String, _ args: Any ...)
If the path to the executable is without any /, SwiftShell will try to find the full path using the which shell command.
The array of arguments can contain any type, since everything is convertible to strings in Swift. If it contains any arrays it will be flattened so only the elements will be used, not the arrays themselves.
run("echo", "We are", 4, "arguments")
// echo "We are" 4 arguments
let array = ["But", "we", "are"]
run("echo", array, array.count + 2, "arguments")
// echo But we are 5 arguments
(bash bashcommand: String)
These are the commands you normally use in the Terminal. You can use pipes and redirection and all that good stuff. Support for other shell interpreters can easily be added.
Output
main.stdout is for normal output and main.stderror for errors:
main.stdout.writeln("everything is fine")
main.stderror.write("something went wrong ...")
Input
Use main.stdin to read from standard input:
let input: String = main.stdin.read()
Main
So what else can main do? It is the only global value in SwiftShell and contains all the contextual information about the outside world:
var encoding: UInt
lazy var env: [String : String]
lazy var stdin: ReadableStream
lazy var stdout: WriteableStream
lazy var stderror: WriteableStream
var currentdirectory: String
lazy var tempdirectory: String
lazy var arguments: [String]
lazy var name: String
Everything is mutable, so you can set e.g. the text encoding or reroute standard error to a file.
Setup
Installation depends on where you want to use SwiftShell from:
Shell script
-
In the Terminal, go to where you want to download SwiftShell.
-
Run
git clone https://github.com/kareman/SwiftShell.git cd SwiftShell -
Copy/link
Misc/swiftshellto your bin folder or anywhere in your PATH. -
To install the framework itself, either:
- run
xcodebuild installfrom the project's root folder. This will install the SwiftShell framework in ~/Library/Frameworks. - or run
xcodebuildand copy the resulting framework from the build folder to your library folder of choice. If that is not "~/Library/Frameworks" or "/Library/Frameworks" then make sure the folder is listed in $SWIFTSHELL_FRAMEWORK_PATH.
- run
Then include this in the beginning of each script:
#!/usr/bin/env swiftshell
import SwiftShell
OS X application
Using Carthage
Add this to your Cartfile:
github "kareman/SwiftShell"
Then run carthage update and add the resulting framework to the "Embedded Binaries" section of the application. See Carthage's README for instructions.
Xcode Commandline application
Sadly it is not possible to include a framework in an Xcode commandline application. But you can import one. Set the build settings FRAMEWORK_SEARCH_PATHS and LD_RUNPATH_SEARCH_PATHS to include a folder containing the SwiftShell framework. Or if you want the command line application to be self-contained you can include all the source files from SwiftShell in the command line target itself, and add "#import "NSTask+NSTask_Errors.h" to the bridging header.
License
Released under the MIT License (MIT), http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
Some files are covered by other licences, see included works.
Kåre Morstøl, NotTooBad Software