I have a Shell Scripts that read the Input
#!/bin/bash
echo "Type the year that you want to check (4 digits), followed by [ENTER]:"
read year
echo $year
I'm executing this shell scripts using JAVA APi
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("/bin/bash", "/junk/leaptest.sh");
final Process process = pb.start();
InputStream is = process.getInputStream();
InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
String line;
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
System.out.println(line);
}
System.out.println("Program terminated!");
In the Java Console I can see the Output
Type the year that you want to check (4 digits), followed by [ENTER]:
Now the Actual Problem in How to pass the values to the Shell Scripts in my scripts how the varialble "year" can be read
I have edited the code as per the suggestion but doesn't work where we correct it
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("/bin/bash", "-c", "/junk/leaptest.sh");
final Process process = pb.start();
InputStream is = process.getInputStream();
InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(isr);
String line;
/*
* OutputStream os = process.getOutputStream(); PrintWriter pw = new
* PrintWriter(os);
*/
BufferedWriter bw = new BufferedWriter(new OutputStreamWriter(process.getOutputStream()));
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
System.out.println(line);
// pw.println("8999");
bw.write("2012");
}
System.out.println("Program terminated!");
You can use the OutputStream of the Process class:
OutputStream os = process.getOutputStream();
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(os);
pw.println("1997");
What you write to this output stream will become the input stream of the shell script. So read year will read 1987 to the year variable.
EDIT:
I also tried it out and I've managed to find the problem. The 1997 string hasn't reached the script, beacuse PrintWriter buffers the data that was written to it. You either have to flush the PrintWriter stream after the println() with pw.flush() or you have to set the auto-flush property to true upon creation:
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(os, true);
Here is the complete code that was working fine for me:
leaptest.sh:
#!/bin/bash
echo "Type the year that you want to check (4 digits), followed by [ENTER]:"
read year
echo $year
Test.java:
import java.io.*;
class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("/bin/bash", "leaptest.sh");
final Process process = pb.start();
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getInputStream()));
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(process.getOutputStream());
String line;
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
System.out.println(line);
pw.println("1997");
pw.flush();
}
System.out.println("Program terminated!");
} catch(Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Output:
$ java Test
Type the year that you want to check (4 digits), followed by [ENTER]:
1997
Program terminated!
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