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@vltpkg/promise-spawn

v0.0.0-0.1730724342581

Published

Spawn a process and return a promise that resolves when it finishes

Downloads

7

Readme

promise-spawn

@vltpkg/promise-spawn

Spawn a process and return a promise that resolves when the process closes. Fork of @npmcli/promise-spawn.

Usage · API · Caveats

Differences from @npmcli/promise-spawn

  • A SpawnPromise(cmd, args, options) class is added that handles most of the functionality.
  • promiseSpawn.open() is removed
  • When run as root, it just runs the command as root, it doesn't try to infer the uid/gid based on the owner of the cwd..
  • No special handling for shell: true processes, and thus, no escaping of arguments in that case. (It's just passed through to Node's spawn() method.)
  • Fully type-aware, even down to inferring the presence and type of stdout and stderr properties, as well as the properties added via the optional extra argument.

Usage

import { promiseSpawn, SpawnPromise } from '@vltpkg/promise-spawn'

promiseSpawn(
  'ls',
  ['-laF', 'some/dir/*.js'],
  {
    cwd: '/tmp/some/path', // defaults to process.cwd()
    stdioString: true, // stdout/stderr as strings rather than buffers
    stdio: 'pipe', // any node spawn stdio arg is valid here
    // any other arguments to node child_process.spawn can go here as well,
  },
  {
    extra: 'things',
    to: 'decorate',
    the: 'result',
  },
)
  .then(result => {
    // {status === 0, signal === null, stdout, stderr, and all the extras}
    console.log('ok!', result)
  })
  .catch(er => {
    // er has all the same properties as the result, set appropriately
    console.error('failed!', er)
  })

API

promiseSpawn(cmd, args, opts, extra) -> Promise

Run the command, return a Promise that resolves/rejects based on the process result.

Result or error will be decorated with the properties in the extra object. You can use this to attach some helpful info about why the command is being run, if it makes sense for your use case.

If stdio is set to anything other than 'inherit', then the result/error will be decorated with stdout and stderr values. If stdioString is set to true, these will be strings. Otherwise they will be Buffer objects.

Returned promise is decorated with the stdin stream if the process is set to pipe from stdin. Writing to this stream writes to the stdin of the spawned process.

Options

  • stdioString Boolean, default true. Return stdout/stderr output as trimmed strings rather than buffers.
  • acceptFail Boolean, default false. If true, then a process that closes with status other than 0, or signal other than null, will reject the promise. If true, then failure exits resolve the promise normally. This is useful when you need to run a process where an exit status of >0 is informative, to avoid creating an Error object for it.
  • Any other options for child_process.spawn can be passed as well.

TypeScript Inference Caveats

Workaround:

If you provide a complex stdio option like ['pipe', 'inherit'], then this will of course mean that stdin is set to a writable stream, stderr is set to a readable stream (because that's the default), but stdout is set to null.

The types will accurately infer this from the type of the argument. However, observe this incorrect result:

const result = await promiseSpawn(cmd, args, {
  stdio: ['pipe', 'inherit'],
})
result.stdout
//     ^? string <-- WRONG
result.stderr
//     ^? string

TS will infer the options.stdio property to be ('pipe' | 'inherit')[]. Since the second item of such an array might be set to 'pipe' at some point, TS will infer the return value to include { stdout: string }.

To get around this, typecast the field to its literal value. This is a bit noisy, but works fine:

const result = await promiseSpawn(cmd, args, {
  stdio: ['pipe', 'inherit'] as ['pipe', 'inherit'],
})
result.stdout
//     ^? null <-- CORRECT!
result.stderr
//     ^? string

When given a single argument to apply to all stdio fields, this inference happens correctly by default.