Node.js v0.7.8 Manual & Documentation


Child Process#

Stability: 3 - Stable

Node provides a tri-directional popen(3) facility through the child_process module.

It is possible to stream data through a child's stdin, stdout, and stderr in a fully non-blocking way.

To create a child process use require('child_process').spawn() or require('child_process').fork(). The semantics of each are slightly different, and explained below.

Class: ChildProcess#

ChildProcess is an EventEmitter.

Child processes always have three streams associated with them. child.stdin, child.stdout, and child.stderr. These may be shared with the stdio streams of the parent process, or they may be separate stream objects which can be piped to and from.

The ChildProcess class is not intended to be used directly. Use the spawn() or fork() methods to create a Child Process instance.

Event: 'exit'#

  • code Number the exit code, if it exited normally.
  • signal String the signal passed to kill the child process, if it was killed by the parent.

This event is emitted after the child process ends. If the process terminated normally, code is the final exit code of the process, otherwise null. If the process terminated due to receipt of a signal, signal is the string name of the signal, otherwise null.

Note that the child process stdio streams might still be open.

See waitpid(2).

Event: 'close'#

This event is emitted when the stdio streams of a child process have all terminated. This is distinct from 'exit', since multiple processes might share the same stdio streams.

Event: 'disconnect'#

This event is emitted after using the .disconnect() method in the parent or in the child. After disconnecting it is no longer possible to send messages. An alternative way to check if you can send messages is to see if the child.connected property is true.

child.stdin#

  • Stream object

A Writable Stream that represents the child process's stdin. Closing this stream via end() often causes the child process to terminate.

If the child stdio streams are shared with the parent, then this will not be set.

child.stdout#

  • Stream object

A Readable Stream that represents the child process's stdout.

If the child stdio streams are shared with the parent, then this will not be set.

child.stderr#

  • Stream object

A Readable Stream that represents the child process's stderr.

If the child stdio streams are shared with the parent, then this will not be set.

child.pid#

  • Integer

The PID of the child process.

Example:

var spawn = require('child_process').spawn,
    grep  = spawn('grep', ['ssh']);

console.log('Spawned child pid: ' + grep.pid);
grep.stdin.end();

child.kill([signal])#

  • signal String

Send a signal to the child process. If no argument is given, the process will be sent 'SIGTERM'. See signal(7) for a list of available signals.

var spawn = require('child_process').spawn,
    grep  = spawn('grep', ['ssh']);

grep.on('exit', function (code, signal) {
  console.log('child process terminated due to receipt of signal '+signal);
});

// send SIGHUP to process
grep.kill('SIGHUP');

Note that while the function is called kill, the signal delivered to the child process may not actually kill it. kill really just sends a signal to a process.

See kill(2)

child.send(message, [sendHandle])#

  • message Object
  • sendHandle Handle object

Send a message (and, optionally, a handle object) to a child process.

See child_process.fork() for details.

child_process.spawn(command, [args], [options])#

  • command String The command to run
  • args Array List of string arguments
  • options Object
    • cwd String Current working directory of the child process
    • customFds Array Deprecated File descriptors for the child to use for stdio. (See below)
    • env Object Environment key-value pairs
    • setsid Boolean
  • return: ChildProcess object

Launches a new process with the given command, with command line arguments in args. If omitted, args defaults to an empty Array.

The third argument is used to specify additional options, which defaults to:

{ cwd: undefined,
  env: process.env
}

cwd allows you to specify the working directory from which the process is spawned. Use env to specify environment variables that will be visible to the new process.

Example of running ls -lh /usr, capturing stdout, stderr, and the exit code:

var util  = require('util'),
    spawn = require('child_process').spawn,
    ls    = spawn('ls', ['-lh', '/usr']);

ls.stdout.on('data', function (data) {
  console.log('stdout: ' + data);
});

ls.stderr.on('data', function (data) {
  console.log('stderr: ' + data);
});

ls.on('exit', function (code) {
  console.log('child process exited with code ' + code);
});

Example: A very elaborate way to run 'ps ax | grep ssh'

var util  = require('util'),
    spawn = require('child_process').spawn,
    ps    = spawn('ps', ['ax']),
    grep  = spawn('grep', ['ssh']);

ps.stdout.on('data', function (data) {
  grep.stdin.write(data);
});

ps.stderr.on('data', function (data) {
  console.log('ps stderr: ' + data);
});

ps.on('exit', function (code) {
  if (code !== 0) {
    console.log('ps process exited with code ' + code);
  }
  grep.stdin.end();
});

grep.stdout.on('data', function (data) {
  console.log(data);
});

grep.stderr.on('data', function (data) {
  console.log('grep stderr: ' + data);
});

grep.on('exit', function (code) {
  if (code !== 0) {
    console.log('grep process exited with code ' + code);
  }
});

Example of checking for failed exec:

var spawn = require('child_process').spawn,
    child = spawn('bad_command');

child.stderr.setEncoding('utf8');
child.stderr.on('data', function (data) {
  if (/^execvp\(\)/.test(data)) {
    console.log('Failed to start child process.');
  }
});

Note that if spawn receives an empty options object, it will result in spawning the process with an empty environment rather than using process.env. This due to backwards compatibility issues with a deprecated API.

There is a deprecated option called customFds which allows one to specify specific file descriptors for the stdio of the child process. This API was not portable to all platforms and therefore removed. With customFds it was possible to hook up the new process' [stdin, stdout, stderr] to existing streams; -1 meant that a new stream should be created. Use at your own risk.

There are several internal options. In particular stdinStream, stdoutStream, stderrStream. They are for INTERNAL USE ONLY. As with all undocumented APIs in Node, they should not be used.

See also: child_process.exec() and child_process.fork()

child_process.exec(command, [options], callback)#

  • command String The command to run, with space-separated arguments
  • options Object
    • cwd String Current working directory of the child process
    • customFds Array Deprecated File descriptors for the child to use for stdio. (See below)
    • env Object Environment key-value pairs
    • setsid Boolean
    • encoding String (Default: 'utf8')
    • timeout Number (Default: 0)
    • maxBuffer Number (Default: 200*1024)
    • killSignal String (Default: 'SIGTERM')
  • callback Function called with the output when process terminates
    • code Integer Exit code
    • stdout Buffer
    • stderr Buffer
  • Return: ChildProcess object

Runs a command in a shell and buffers the output.

var util = require('util'),
    exec = require('child_process').exec,
    child;

child = exec('cat *.js bad_file | wc -l',
  function (error, stdout, stderr) {
    console.log('stdout: ' + stdout);
    console.log('stderr: ' + stderr);
    if (error !== null) {
      console.log('exec error: ' + error);
    }
});

The callback gets the arguments (error, stdout, stderr). On success, error will be null. On error, error will be an instance of Error and err.code will be the exit code of the child process, and err.signal will be set to the signal that terminated the process.

There is a second optional argument to specify several options. The default options are

{ encoding: 'utf8',
  timeout: 0,
  maxBuffer: 200*1024,
  killSignal: 'SIGTERM',
  cwd: null,
  env: null }

If timeout is greater than 0, then it will kill the child process if it runs longer than timeout milliseconds. The child process is killed with killSignal (default: 'SIGTERM'). maxBuffer specifies the largest amount of data allowed on stdout or stderr - if this value is exceeded then the child process is killed.

child_process.execFile(file, args, options, callback)#

  • file String The filename of the program to run
  • args Array List of string arguments
  • options Object
    • cwd String Current working directory of the child process
    • customFds Array Deprecated File descriptors for the child to use for stdio. (See below)
    • env Object Environment key-value pairs
    • setsid Boolean
    • encoding String (Default: 'utf8')
    • timeout Number (Default: 0)
    • maxBuffer Number (Default: 200*1024)
    • killSignal String (Default: 'SIGTERM')
  • callback Function called with the output when process terminates
    • code Integer Exit code
    • stdout Buffer
    • stderr Buffer
  • Return: ChildProcess object

This is similar to child_process.exec() except it does not execute a subshell but rather the specified file directly. This makes it slightly leaner than child_process.exec. It has the same options.

child_process.fork(modulePath, [args], [options])#

  • modulePath String The module to run in the child
  • args Array List of string arguments
  • options Object
    • cwd String Current working directory of the child process
    • customFds Array Deprecated File descriptors for the child to use for stdio. (See below)
    • env Object Environment key-value pairs
    • setsid Boolean
    • encoding String (Default: 'utf8')
    • timeout Number (Default: 0)
  • callback Function called with the output when process terminates
    • code Integer Exit code
    • stdout Buffer
    • stderr Buffer
  • Return: ChildProcess object

This is a special case of the spawn() functionality for spawning Node processes. In addition to having all the methods in a normal ChildProcess instance, the returned object has a communication channel built-in. The channel is written to with child.send(message, [sendHandle]) and messages are received by a 'message' event on the child.

For example:

var cp = require('child_process');

var n = cp.fork(__dirname + '/sub.js');

n.on('message', function(m) {
  console.log('PARENT got message:', m);
});

n.send({ hello: 'world' });

And then the child script, 'sub.js' might look like this:

process.on('message', function(m) {
  console.log('CHILD got message:', m);
});

process.send({ foo: 'bar' });

In the child the process object will have a send() method, and process will emit objects each time it receives a message on its channel.

There is a special case when sending a {cmd: 'NODE_foo'} message. All messages containing a NODE_ prefix in its cmd property will not be emitted in the message event, since they are internal messages used by node core. Messages containing the prefix are emitted in the internalMessage event, you should by all means avoid using this feature, it may change without warranty.

By default the spawned Node process will have the stdout, stderr associated with the parent's. To change this behavior set the silent property in the options object to true.

These child Nodes are still whole new instances of V8. Assume at least 30ms startup and 10mb memory for each new Node. That is, you cannot create many thousands of them.

The sendHandle option to child.send() is for sending a handle object to another process. Child will receive the handle as as second argument to the message event. Here is an example of sending a handle:

var server = require('net').createServer();
var child = require('child_process').fork(__dirname + '/child.js');
// Open up the server object and send the handle.
server.listen(1337, function() {
  child.send({ server: true }, server._handle);
});

Here is an example of receiving the server handle and sharing it between processes:

process.on('message', function(m, serverHandle) {
  if (serverHandle) {
    var server = require('net').createServer();
    server.listen(serverHandle);
  }
});

To close the IPC connection between parent and child use the child.disconnect() method. This allows the child to exit gracefully since there is no IPC channel keeping it alive. When calling this method the disconnect event will be emitted in both parent and child, and the connected flag will be set to false. Please note that you can also call process.disconnect() in the child process.