tinytinyrss/vendor/thecodingmachine/safe/generated/exec.php

155 lines
4.7 KiB
PHP

<?php
namespace Safe;
use Safe\Exceptions\ExecException;
/**
* exec executes the given
* command.
*
* @param string $command The command that will be executed.
* @param array|null $output If the output argument is present, then the
* specified array will be filled with every line of output from the
* command. Trailing whitespace, such as \n, is not
* included in this array. Note that if the array already contains some
* elements, exec will append to the end of the array.
* If you do not want the function to append elements, call
* unset on the array before passing it to
* exec.
* @param int|null $result_code If the result_code argument is present
* along with the output argument, then the
* return status of the executed command will be written to this
* variable.
* @return string The last line from the result of the command. If you need to execute a
* command and have all the data from the command passed directly back without
* any interference, use the passthru function.
*
* Returns FALSE on failure.
*
* To get the output of the executed command, be sure to set and use the
* output parameter.
* @throws ExecException
*
*/
function exec(string $command, ?array &$output = null, ?int &$result_code = null): string
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \exec($command, $output, $result_code);
if ($result === false) {
throw ExecException::createFromPhpError();
}
return $result;
}
/**
* The passthru function is similar to the
* exec function in that it executes a
* command. This function
* should be used in place of exec or
* system when the output from the Unix command
* is binary data which needs to be passed directly back to the
* browser. A common use for this is to execute something like the
* pbmplus utilities that can output an image stream directly. By
* setting the Content-type to image/gif and
* then calling a pbmplus program to output a gif, you can create
* PHP scripts that output images directly.
*
* @param string $command The command that will be executed.
* @param int|null $result_code If the result_code argument is present, the
* return status of the Unix command will be placed here.
* @throws ExecException
*
*/
function passthru(string $command, ?int &$result_code = null): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \passthru($command, $result_code);
if ($result === false) {
throw ExecException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* proc_nice changes the priority of the current
* process by the amount specified in priority. A
* positive priority will lower the priority of the
* current process, whereas a negative priority
* will raise the priority.
*
* proc_nice is not related to
* proc_open and its associated functions in any way.
*
* @param int $priority The new priority value, the value of this may differ on platforms.
*
* On Unix, a low value, such as -20 means high priority
* whereas positive values have a lower priority.
*
* For Windows the priority parameter has the
* following meaning:
* @throws ExecException
*
*/
function proc_nice(int $priority): void
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \proc_nice($priority);
if ($result === false) {
throw ExecException::createFromPhpError();
}
}
/**
* This function is identical to the backtick operator.
*
* @param string $command The command that will be executed.
* @return string A string containing the output from the executed command, FALSE if the pipe
* cannot be established or NULL if an error occurs or the command produces no output.
* @throws ExecException
*
*/
function shell_exec(string $command): string
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \shell_exec($command);
if ($result === null) {
throw ExecException::createFromPhpError();
}
return $result;
}
/**
* system is just like the C version of the
* function in that it executes the given
* command and outputs the result.
*
* The system call also tries to automatically
* flush the web server's output buffer after each line of output if
* PHP is running as a server module.
*
* If you need to execute a command and have all the data from the
* command passed directly back without any interference, use the
* passthru function.
*
* @param string $command The command that will be executed.
* @param int|null $result_code If the result_code argument is present, then the
* return status of the executed command will be written to this
* variable.
* @return string Returns the last line of the command output on success.
* @throws ExecException
*
*/
function system(string $command, ?int &$result_code = null): string
{
error_clear_last();
$result = \system($command, $result_code);
if ($result === false) {
throw ExecException::createFromPhpError();
}
return $result;
}