Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

executive

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
86
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

executive

Elegant command execution with built-in control flow

  • 1.6.3
  • latest
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
1.3K
decreased by-2.76%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

executive

npm build dependencies downloads license chat

An elegant child_process.spawn

Executive is simple and intuitive interface to child_process.spawn with zero depdencies. Built-in support for async and sync process creation, built-in flow control and automatic shell make working with external processes in Node easy.

Features

  • Async callback, promise and sync APIs
  • Automatically pipes stderr and stdout by default
  • Automatically uses shell when commands use builtins, globs or operators
  • Built-in control flow with support for parallel and serial execution
  • Mix simple string commands with functions and promises returning commands
  • Multi-line strings parsed as multiple commands and executed sequentially
  • Streams stderr and stdout rather than blocking on command completion
  • Included TypeScript type definition
  • Improved Windows support
  • No external dependencies

Install

$ npm install executive --save-dev

Usage

No need to echo as stderr and stdout are piped by default.

import exec from 'executive'

exec('uglifyjs foo.js --compress --mangle > foo.min.js')

It's easy to be quiet too.

exec.quiet('uglifyjs foo.js --compress --mangle > foo.min.js')

Callbacks and promises are both supported.

exec('ls', (err, stdout, stderr) => console.log(stdout))
exec('ls').then(res => console.log(res.stdout))

Automatically serializes commands.

exec(['ls', 'ls', 'ls']) // All three ls commands will be executed in order

exec(`ls -l
      ls -lh
      ls -lha`) // Also executed in order

Want to execute your commands in parallel? No problem.

exec.parallel(['ls', 'ls', 'ls'])

Want to collect individual results? Easy.

{a, b, c} = await exec.parallel({
  a: 'echo a',
  b: 'echo b',
  c: 'echo c'
})

Want to blend in Promises or pure functions? You got it.

exec.parallel([
  'ls',

  // Promises can be blended directly in
  exec('ls'),

  // Promises returned by functions are automatically consumed
  () => exec('ls'),

  // Functions which return a string are assumed to be commands
  () => 'ls',

  // Functions and promises can return objects with stdout, stderr or status
  () => ({ stdout: 'huzzah', stderr: '', status: 0 }),

  'ls'
])

Options

Options are passed as the second argument to exec. Helper methods for quiet, interactive, parallel and sync do what you expect.

exec('ls', { options: 'quiet' })

and

exec.quiet('ls')

are equivalent.

options.interactive | exec.interactive
default false

If you need to interact with a program (your favorite text editor for instance) or watch the output of a long running process (tail -f), or just don't care about checking stderr and stdout, set interactive to true:

exec.interactive('vim', err => {
  // Edit your commit message
})
options.quiet | exec.quiet
default false

If you'd prefer not to pipe stdout and stderr set quiet to true:

exec.quiet(['ls', 'ls'], (err, stdout, stderr) => {
  // You can still inspect stdout, stderr of course
})
options.sync | exec.sync
default false

Blocking version of exec. Returns {stdout, stderr} or throws an error.

options.parallel | exec.parallel
default false

Uses parallel rather than serial execution of commands.

options.shell
default null

Force a shell to be used for command execution.

options.strict
default false

Any non-zero exit status is treated as an error. Promises will be rejected and an error will be thrown with exec.sync if syncThrows is enabled.

options.syncThrows
default false

Will cause exec.sync to throw errors rather than returning them.

Extra

Great with sake, grunt, gulp and other task runners. Even nicer with async and await.

Fancy example using sake:

task('package', 'Package project', => {
  // Create dist folder
  await exec(`
    mkdir -p dist/
    rm   -rf dist/*
  `)

  // Copy assets to dist in parallel
  await exec.parallel(`
    cp manifest.json dist/
    cp -rf assets/   dist/
    cp -rf lib/      dist/
    cp -rf views/    dist/
  `)

  // Get current git commit hash
  let {stdout} = await exec('git rev-parse HEAD')
  let hash     = stdout.substring(0, 8)

  # Zip up dist
  exec(`zip -r package-${hash}.zip dist/`)
})

You can find more usage examples in the tests.

License

MIT

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 17 Jun 2018

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc