View Source shell (stdlib v6.1.2)
The Erlang shell.
The shell is a user interface program for entering expression sequences. The expressions are evaluated and a value is returned. The shell provides an Emacs like set of shortcuts for editing the text of the current line. See tty - A Command-Line Interface in the ERTS User's Guide for a list of all available shortcuts. You may also change the shortcuts to suit your preferences more, see edlin - line editor in the shell.
A history mechanism saves previous commands and their values, which can then be
incorporated in later commands. How many commands and results to save can be
determined by the user, either interactively, by calling history/1
and
results/1
, or by setting the application configuration parameters
shell_history_length
and
shell_saved_results
for the STDLIB
application. The shell history can be saved to disk by setting the application
configuration parameter
shell_history
for the Kernel
application.
The shell uses a helper process for evaluating commands to protect the history
mechanism from exceptions. By default the evaluator process is killed when an
exception occurs, but by calling catch_exception/1
or by setting the
application configuration parameter shell_catch_exception
for the STDLIB
application this behavior can be changed. See also the example below.
Variable bindings, and local process dictionary changes that are generated in user expressions are preserved, and the variables can be used in later commands to access their values. The bindings can also be forgotten so the variables can be reused.
The special shell commands all have the syntax of (local) function calls. They are evaluated as normal function calls and many commands can be used in one expression sequence.
If a command (local function call) is not recognized by the shell, an attempt is
first made to find the function in module user_default
, where customized local
commands can be placed. If found, the function is evaluated, otherwise an
attempt is made to evaluate the function in module shell_default
. Module
user_default
must be explicitly loaded.
The shell also permits the user to start multiple concurrent jobs. A job can be regarded as a set of processes that can communicate with the shell.
There is some support for reading and printing records in the shell. During compilation record expressions are translated to tuple expressions. In runtime it is not known whether a tuple represents a record, and the record definitions used by the compiler are unavailable at runtime. So, to read the record syntax and print tuples as records when possible, record definitions must be maintained by the shell itself.
The shell commands for reading, defining, forgetting, listing, and printing
records are described below. Notice that each job has its own set of record
definitions. To facilitate matters, record definitions in modules
shell_default
and user_default
(if loaded) are read each time a new job is
started. For example, adding the following line to user_default
makes the
definition of file_info
readily available in the shell:
-include_lib("kernel/include/file.hrl").
The shell runs in two modes:
Normal (possibly restricted)
mode, in which commands can be edited and expressions evaluated- Job Control Mode,
JCL
, in which jobs can be started, killed, detached, and connected
Only the currently connected job can 'talk' to the shell.
Shell Commands
The commands below are the built-in shell commands that are always available. In
most system the commands listed in the c
module are also available in the
shell.
b()
- Prints the current variable bindings.f()
- Removes all variable bindings.f(X)
- Removes the binding of variableX
.Note
If a huge value is stored in a variable binding, you have to both call
f(X)
and callhistory(0)
orresults(0)
to free up that memory.h()
- Prints the history list.history(N)
- Sets the number of previous commands to keep in the history list toN
. The previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.results(N)
- Sets the number of results from previous commands to keep in the history list toN
. The previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.e(N)
- Repeats commandN
, ifN
is positive. If it is negative, theN
th previous command is repeated (that is,e(-1)
repeats the previous command).v(N)
- Uses the return value of commandN
in the current command, ifN
is positive. If it is negative, the return value of theN
th previous command is used (that is,v(-1)
uses the value of the previous command).help()
- Evaluatesshell_default:help()
.h(Module, Function)
- Print the documentation forModule:Function
in the shell if available.ht(Module, Type)
- Print the documentation forModule:Type
in the shell if available.hcb(Module, Callback)
- Print the documentation forModule:Callback
in the shell if available.c(Mod)
- Evaluatesshell_default:c(Mod)
. This compiles and loads the moduleMod
and purges old versions of the code, if necessary.Mod
can be either a module name or a a source file path, with or without.erl
extension.catch_exception(Bool)
- Sets the exception handling of the evaluator process. The previous exception handling is returned. The default (false
) is to kill the evaluator process when an exception occurs, which causes the shell to create a new evaluator process. When the exception handling is set totrue
, the evaluator process lives on. This means, for example, that ports and ETS tables as well as processes linked to the evaluator process survive the exception.rd(RecordName, RecordDefinition)
- Defines a record in the shell.RecordName
is an atom andRecordDefinition
lists the field names and the default values. Usually record definitions are made known to the shell by use of therr/1,2,3
commands described below, but sometimes it is handy to define records on the fly.rf()
- Removes all record definitions, then reads record definitions from the modulesshell_default
anduser_default
(if loaded). Returns the names of the records defined.rf(RecordNames)
- Removes selected record definitions.RecordNames
is a record name or a list of record names. To remove all record definitions, use'_'
.rl()
- Prints all record definitions.rl(RecordNames)
- Prints selected record definitions.RecordNames
is a record name or a list of record names.rp(Term)
- Prints a term using the record definitions known to the shell. All ofTerm
is printed; the depth is not limited as is the case when a return value is printed.rr(Module)
- Reads record definitions from a module's BEAM file. If there are no record definitions in the BEAM file, the source file is located and read instead. Returns the names of the record definitions read.Module
is an atom.rr(Wildcard)
- Reads record definitions from files. Existing definitions of any of the record names read are replaced.Wildcard
is a wildcard string as defined infilelib
, but not an atom.rr(WildcardOrModule, RecordNames)
- Reads record definitions from files but discards record names not mentioned inRecordNames
(a record name or a list of record names).rr(WildcardOrModule, RecordNames, Options)
- Reads record definitions from files. The compiler options{i, Dir}
,{d, Macro}
, and{d, Macro, Value}
are recognized and used for setting up the include path and macro definitions. To read all record definitions, use'_'
as value ofRecordNames
.lf()
- Outputs locally defined function with function specs if they exist.lt()
- Outputs locally defined types.lr()
- Outputs locally defined records.ff()
- Forget locally defined functions (including function specs if they exist).ff({FunName,Arity})
- Forget a locally defined function (including function spec if it exist). WhereFunName
is the name of the function as an atom andArity
is an integer.tf()
- Forget locally defined types.tf(Type)
- Forget locally defined type whereType
is the name of the type represented as an atom.fl()
- Forget locally defined functions, types and records.save_module(FilePath)
- Saves all locally defined functions, types and records to a module file, whereFilePath
should include both the path to the file and the name of the module with.erl
suffix.Example:
src/my_module.erl
Example
The following example is a long dialog with the shell. Commands starting with
>
are inputs to the shell. All other lines are output from the shell.
strider 1> erl
Erlang (BEAM) emulator version 5.3 [hipe] [threads:0]
Eshell V5.3 (abort with ^G)
1> Str = "abcd".
"abcd"
Command 1 sets variable Str
to string "abcd"
.
2> L = length(Str).
4
Command 2 sets L
to the length of string Str
.
3> Descriptor = {L, list_to_atom(Str)}.
{4,abcd}
Command 3 builds the tuple Descriptor
, evaluating the BIF
list_to_atom/1
.
4> L.
4
Command 4 prints the value of variable L
.
5> b().
Descriptor = {4,abcd}
L = 4
Str = "abcd"
ok
Command 5 evaluates the internal shell command b()
, which is an abbreviation
of "bindings". This prints the current shell variables and their bindings. ok
at the end is the return value of function b()
.
6> f(L).
ok
Command 6 evaluates the internal shell command f(L)
(abbreviation of
"forget"). The value of variable L
is removed.
7> b().
Descriptor = {4,abcd}
Str = "abcd"
ok
Command 7 prints the new bindings.
8> f(L).
ok
Command 8 has no effect, as L
has no value.
9> {L, _} = Descriptor.
{4,abcd}
Command 9 performs a pattern matching operation on Descriptor
, binding a new
value to L
.
10> L.
4
Command 10 prints the current value of L
.
11> {P, Q, R} = Descriptor.
** exception error: no match of right hand side value {4,abcd}
Command 11 tries to match {P, Q, R}
against Descriptor
, which is {4, abc}
.
The match fails and none of the new variables become bound. The printout
starting with "** exception error:
" is not the value of the expression (the
expression had no value because its evaluation failed), but a warning printed by
the system to inform the user that an error has occurred. The values of the
other variables (L
, Str
, and so on) are unchanged.
12> P.
* 1:1: variable 'P' is unbound
13> Descriptor.
{4,abcd}
Commands 12 and 13 show that P
is unbound because the previous command failed,
and that Descriptor
has not changed.
14>{P, Q} = Descriptor.
{4,abcd}
15> P.
4
Commands 14 and 15 show a correct match where P
and Q
are bound.
16> f().
ok
Command 16 clears all bindings.
The next few commands assume that test1:demo(X)
is defined as follows:
demo(X) ->
put(aa, worked),
X = 1,
X + 10.
17> put(aa, hello).
undefined
18> get(aa).
hello
Commands 17 and 18 set and inspect the value of item aa
in the process
dictionary.
19> Y = test1:demo(1).
11
Command 19 evaluates test1:demo(1)
. The evaluation succeeds and the changes
made in the process dictionary become visible to the shell. The new value of
dictionary item aa
can be seen in command 20.
20> get().
[{aa,worked}]
21> put(aa, hello).
worked
22> Z = test1:demo(2).
** exception error: no match of right hand side value 1
in function test1:demo/1
Commands 21 and 22 change the value of dictionary item aa
to hello
and call
test1:demo(2)
. Evaluation fails and the changes made to the dictionary in
test1:demo(2)
, before the error occurred, are discarded.
23> Z.
* 1:1: variable 'Z' is unbound
24> get(aa).
hello
Commands 23 and 24 show that Z
was not bound and that dictionary item aa
has
retained its original value.
25> erase(), put(aa, hello).
undefined
26> spawn(test1, demo, [1]).
<0.57.0>
27> get(aa).
hello
Commands 25, 26, and 27 show the effect of evaluating test1:demo(1)
in the
background. In this case, the expression is evaluated in a newly spawned
process. Any changes made in the process dictionary are local to the newly
spawned process and therefore not visible to the shell.
28> io:format("hello hello\n").
hello hello
ok
29> e(28).
hello hello
ok
30> v(28).
ok
Commands 28, 29 and 30 use the history facilities of the shell. Command 29 re-evaluates command 28. Command 30 uses the value (result) of command 28. In the cases of a pure function (a function with no side effects), the result is the same. For a function with side effects, the result can be different.
The next few commands show some record manipulation. It is assumed that ex.erl
defines a record as follows:
-record(rec, {a, b = val()}).
val() ->
3.
31> c(ex).
{ok,ex}
32> rr(ex).
[rec]
Commands 31 and 32 compile file ex.erl
and read the record definitions in
ex.beam
. If the compiler did not output any record definitions on the BEAM
file, rr(ex)
tries to read record definitions from the source file instead.
33> rl(rec).
-record(rec,{a,b = val()}).
ok
Command 33 prints the definition of the record named rec
.
34> #rec{}.
** exception error: undefined shell command val/0
Command 34 tries to create a rec
record, but fails as function val/0
is
undefined.
35> #rec{b = 3}.
#rec{a = undefined,b = 3}
Command 35 shows the workaround: explicitly assign values to record fields that cannot otherwise be initialized.
36> rp(v(-1)).
#rec{a = undefined,b = 3}
ok
Command 36 prints the newly created record using record definitions maintained by the shell.
37> rd(rec, {f = orddict:new()}).
rec
Command 37 defines a record directly in the shell. The definition replaces the
one read from file ex.beam
.
38> #rec{}.
#rec{f = []}
ok
Command 38 creates a record using the new definition, and prints the result.
39> rd(rec, {c}), A.
* 1:15: variable 'A' is unbound
40> #rec{}.
#rec{c = undefined}
ok
Command 39 and 40 show that record definitions are updated as side effects. The
evaluation of the command fails, but the definition of rec
has been carried
out.
For the next command, it is assumed that test1:loop(N)
is defined as follows:
loop(N) ->
io:format("Hello Number: ~w~n", [N]),
loop(N+1).
41> test1:loop(0).
Hello Number: 0
Hello Number: 1
Hello Number: 2
Hello Number: 3
User switch command
--> i
--> c
.
.
.
Hello Number: 3374
Hello Number: 3375
Hello Number: 3376
Hello Number: 3377
Hello Number: 3378
** exception exit: killed
Command 41 evaluates test1:loop(0)
, which puts the system into an infinite
loop. At this point the user types ^G
(Control G), which suspends output from
the current process, which is stuck in a loop, and activates JCL
mode. In
JCL
mode the user can start and stop jobs.
In this particular case, command i
("interrupt") terminates the looping
program, and command c
connects to the shell again. As the process was running
in the background before we killed it, more printouts occur before message
"** exception exit: killed
" is shown.
42> E = ets:new(t, []).
#Ref<0.1662103692.2407923716.214192>
Command 42 creates an ETS table.
43> ets:insert({d,1,2}).
** exception error: undefined function ets:insert/1
Command 43 tries to insert a tuple into the ETS table, but the first argument (the table) is missing. The exception kills the evaluator process.
44> ets:insert(E, {d,1,2}).
** exception error: argument is of wrong type
in function ets:insert/2
called as ets:insert(16,{d,1,2})
Command 44 corrects the mistake, but the ETS table has been destroyed as it was owned by the killed evaluator process.
45> f(E).
ok
46> catch_exception(true).
false
Command 46 sets the exception handling of the evaluator process to true
. The
exception handling can also be set when starting Erlang by
erl -stdlib shell_catch_exception true
.
47> E = ets:new(t, []).
#Ref<0.1662103692.2407923716.214197>
48> ets:insert({d,1,2}).
* exception error: undefined function ets:insert/1
Command 48 makes the same mistake as in command 43, but this time the evaluator process lives on. The single star at the beginning of the printout signals that the exception has been caught.
49> ets:insert(E, {d,1,2}).
true
Command 49 successfully inserts the tuple into the ETS table.
50> ets:insert(#Ref<0.1662103692.2407923716.214197>, {e,3,4}).
true
Command 50 inserts another tuple into the ETS table. This time the first
argument is the table identifier itself. The shell can parse commands with pids
(<0.60.0>
), ports (#Port<0.536>
), references
(#Ref<0.1662103692.2407792644.214210>
), and external functions
(#Fun<a.b.1>
), but the command fails unless the corresponding pid, port,
reference, or function can be created in the running system.
51> halt().
strider 2>
Command 51 exits the Erlang runtime system.
JCL Mode
When the shell starts, it starts a single evaluator process. This process,
together with any local processes that it spawns, is referred to as a job
.
Only the current job, which is said to be connected
, can perform operations
with standard I/O. All other jobs, which are said to be detached
, are
blocked
if they attempt to use standard I/O.
All jobs that do not use standard I/O run in the normal way.
The shell escape key ^G
(Control G) detaches the current job and activates
JCL
mode. The JCL
mode prompt is "-->"
. If "?"
is entered at the prompt,
the following help message is displayed:
--> ?
c [nn] - connect to job
i [nn] - interrupt job
k [nn] - kill job
j - list all jobs
s [shell] - start local shell
r [node [shell]] - start remote shell
q - quit erlang
? | h - this message
The JCL
commands have the following meaning:
c [nn]
- Connects to job number<nn>
or the current job. The standard shell is resumed. Operations that use standard I/O by the current job are interleaved with user inputs to the shell.i [nn]
- Stops the current evaluator process for job numbernn
or the current job, but does not kill the shell process. So, any variable bindings and the process dictionary are preserved and the job can be connected again. This command can be used to interrupt an endless loop.k [nn]
- Kills job numbernn
or the current job. All spawned processes in the job are killed, provided they have not evaluated thegroup_leader/1
BIF and are located on the local machine. Processes spawned on remote nodes are not killed.j
- Lists all jobs. A list of all known jobs is printed. The current job name is prefixed with '*'.s
- Starts a new job. This is assigned the new index[nn]
, which can be used in references.s [shell]
- Starts a new job. This is assigned the new index[nn]
, which can be used in references. If optional argumentshell
is specified, it is assumed to be a module that implements an alternative shell.r [node]
- Starts a remote job onnode
. This is used in distributed Erlang to allow a shell running on one node to control a number of applications running on a network of nodes. If optional argumentshell
is specified, it is assumed to be a module that implements an alternative shell.q
- Quits Erlang. Notice that this option is disabled if Erlang is started with the ignore break,+Bi
, system flag (which can be useful, for example when running a restricted shell, see the next section).?
- Displays the help message above.
The behavior of shell escape can be changed by the STDLIB application variable
shell_esc
. The value of the variable can be either jcl
(erl -stdlib shell_esc jcl
) or abort
(erl -stdlib shell_esc abort
). The
first option sets ^G
to activate JCL
mode (which is also default behavior).
The latter sets ^G
to terminate the current shell and start a new one. JCL
mode cannot be invoked when shell_esc
is set to abort
.
If you want an Erlang node to have a remote job active from the start (rather
than the default local job), start Erlang with flag
-remsh
, for example,
erl -remsh other_node@other_host
Restricted Shell
The shell can be started in a restricted mode. In this mode, the shell evaluates
a function call only if allowed. This feature makes it possible to, for example,
prevent a user from accidentally calling a function from the prompt that could
harm a running system (useful in combination with system flag +Bi
).
When the restricted shell evaluates an expression and encounters a function call
or an operator application, it calls a callback function (with information about
the function call in question). This callback function returns true
to let the
shell go ahead with the evaluation, or false
to abort it. There are two
possible callback functions for the user to implement:
local_allowed(Func, ArgList, State) -> {boolean(),NewState}
This is used to determine if the call to the local function
Func
with argumentsArgList
is to be allowed.non_local_allowed(FuncSpec, ArgList, State) -> {boolean(),NewState} | {{redirect,NewFuncSpec,NewArgList},NewState}
This is used to determine if the call to non-local function
FuncSpec
({Module,Func}
or a fun) with argumentsArgList
is to be allowed. The return value{redirect,NewFuncSpec,NewArgList}
can be used to let the shell evaluate some other function than the one specified byFuncSpec
andArgList
.
These callback functions are called from local and non-local evaluation function
handlers, described in the erl_eval
manual page. (Arguments in ArgList
are
evaluated before the callback functions are called.)
From OTP 25.0, if there are errors evaluating Erlang constructs, such as
badmatch
during pattern matching or bad_generator
in a comprehension, the
evaluator will dispatch to erlang:raise(error, Reason, Stacktrace)
. This call
will be checked against the non_local_allowed/3
callback function. You can
either forbid it, allow it, or redirect to another call of your choice.
Argument State
is a tuple {ShellState,ExprState}
. The return value
NewState
has the same form. This can be used to carry a state between calls to
the callback functions. Data saved in ShellState
lives through an entire shell
session. Data saved in ExprState
lives only through the evaluation of the
current expression.
There are two ways to start a restricted shell session:
- Use STDLIB application variable
restricted_shell
and specify, as its value, the name of the callback module. Example (with callback functions implemented incallback_mod.erl
):$ erl -stdlib restricted_shell callback_mod
. - From a normal shell session, call function
start_restricted/1
. This exits the current evaluator and starts a new one in restricted mode.
Notes:
- When restricted shell mode is activated or deactivated, new jobs started on the node run in restricted or normal mode, respectively.
- If restricted mode has been enabled on a particular node, remote shells connecting to this node also run in restricted mode.
- The callback functions cannot be used to allow or disallow execution of functions called from compiled code (only functions called from expressions entered at the shell prompt).
Errors when loading the callback module is handled in different ways depending on how the restricted shell is activated:
- If the restricted shell is activated by setting the STDLIB variable during
emulator startup, and the callback module cannot be loaded, a default
restricted shell allowing only the commands
q()
andinit:stop()
is used as fallback. - If the restricted shell is activated using
start_restricted/1
and the callback module cannot be loaded, an error report is sent to the error logger and the call returns{error,Reason}
.
Prompting
The default shell prompt function displays the name of the node (if the node can
be part of a distributed system) and the current command number. The user can
customize the prompt function by calling prompt_func/1
or by setting
application configuration parameter shell_prompt_func
for the STDLIB
application. Similarly the multiline prompt can be configured as well, by
calling multiline_prompt_func/1
or by setting the application parameter
shell_multiline_prompt
for the STDLIB application.
A customized prompt function is stated as a tuple {Mod, Func}
. The function is
called as Mod:Func(L)
, where L
is a list of key-value pairs created by the
shell. Currently there is only one pair: {history, N}
, where N
is the
current command number. The function is to return a list of characters or an
atom. This constraint is because of the Erlang I/O protocol. Unicode characters
beyond code point 255 are allowed in the list and the atom. Notice that in
restricted mode the call Mod:Func(L)
must be allowed or the default shell
prompt function is called.
Summary
Functions
catch_exception(Bool) -> boolean()
Configures the multiline prompt as two trailing dots. This is the default
function but it may also be set explicitly as
-stdlib shell_multiline_prompt {shell, default_multiline_prompt}
.
A formatting function that can be set with format_shell_func/1
that will make
expressions submitted to the shell prettier.
Can be used to set the formatting of the Erlang shell output.
Sets the number of previous commands to keep in the history list to N
. The
previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.
Configures the multiline prompt as inverted space. It may be set explicitly as
-stdlib shell_multiline_prompt {shell, inverted_space_prompt}
or calling
multiline_prompt_func({shell, inverted_space_prompt}).
Sets the shell multiline prompt function to PromptFunc
. The previous prompt
function is returned.
Sets the shell prompt function to PromptFunc
. The previous prompt function is
returned.
Equivalent to prompt_width/2
with Encoding
set to the encoding used by
io:user/0
.
It receives a prompt and computes its width, considering its Unicode characters and ANSI escapes.
Sets the number of results from previous commands to keep in the history list to
N
. The previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.
Starts the interactive shell if it has not already been started. It can be used to programatically start the shell from an escript or when erl is started with the -noinput or -noshell flags.
Exits a normal shell and starts a restricted shell. Module
specifies the
callback module for the functions local_allowed/3
and non_local_allowed/3
.
The function is meant to be called from the shell.
Exits a restricted shell and starts a normal shell. The function is meant to be called from the shell.
Sets pretty printing of lists to Strings
. The previous value of the flag is
returned.
Returns the current shell process on the node where the calling process' group_leader is located. If that node has no shell this function will return undefined.
Functions
catch_exception(Bool) -> boolean()
Sets the exception handling of the evaluator process. The previous exception
handling is returned. The default (false
) is to kill the evaluator process
when an exception occurs, which causes the shell to create a new evaluator
process. When the exception handling is set to true
, the evaluator process
lives on, which means that, for example, ports and ETS tables as well as
processes linked to the evaluator process survive the exception.
-spec default_multiline_prompt(unicode:chardata()) -> unicode:chardata().
Configures the multiline prompt as two trailing dots. This is the default
function but it may also be set explicitly as
-stdlib shell_multiline_prompt {shell, default_multiline_prompt}
.
A formatting function that can be set with format_shell_func/1
that will make
expressions submitted to the shell prettier.
Note
This formatting function filter comments away from the expressions.
-spec format_shell_func(ShellFormatFunc) -> ShellFormatFunc2 when ShellFormatFunc :: default | {module(), function()} | string(), ShellFormatFunc2 :: default | {module(), function()} | string().
Can be used to set the formatting of the Erlang shell output.
This has an effect on commands that have been submitted, and how it is saved in history.
Or if the formatting hotkey is pressed while editing an expression (Alt-r by default). You
can specify a Mod:Func/1
that expects the whole expression as a string and
returns a formatted expressions as a string. See
stdlib app config
for how to set it before
shell started.
If instead a string is provided, it will be used as a shell command. Your
command must include ${file}
somewhere in the string, for the shell to know
where the file goes in the command.
shell:format_shell_func("\"emacs -batch \${file} -l ~/erlang-format/emacs-format-file -f emacs-format-function\"").
shell:format_shell_func({shell, erl_pp_format_func}).
-spec history(N) -> non_neg_integer() when N :: non_neg_integer().
Sets the number of previous commands to keep in the history list to N
. The
previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.
-spec inverted_space_prompt(unicode:chardata()) -> unicode:chardata().
Configures the multiline prompt as inverted space. It may be set explicitly as
-stdlib shell_multiline_prompt {shell, inverted_space_prompt}
or calling
multiline_prompt_func({shell, inverted_space_prompt}).
-spec multiline_prompt_func(PromptFunc) -> PromptFunc2 when PromptFunc :: default | {module(), function()} | string(), PromptFunc2 :: default | {module(), function()} | string().
Sets the shell multiline prompt function to PromptFunc
. The previous prompt
function is returned.
-spec prompt_func(PromptFunc) -> PromptFunc2 when PromptFunc :: default | {module(), atom()}, PromptFunc2 :: default | {module(), atom()}.
Sets the shell prompt function to PromptFunc
. The previous prompt function is
returned.
-spec prompt_width(unicode:chardata()) -> non_neg_integer().
Equivalent to prompt_width/2
with Encoding
set to the encoding used by
io:user/0
.
-spec prompt_width(unicode:chardata(), unicode | latin1) -> non_neg_integer().
It receives a prompt and computes its width, considering its Unicode characters and ANSI escapes.
Useful for creating custom multiline prompts.
Example:
1> shell:prompt_width("olá> ", unicode).
5
%% "olá> " is printed as "ol\341> " on a latin1 systems
2> shell:prompt_width("olá> ", latin1).
8
%% Ansi escapes are ignored
3> shell:prompt_width("\e[32molá\e[0m> ", unicode).
5
%% Double width characters count as 2
4> shell:prompt_width("😀> ", unicode).
4
%% "😀> " is printed as "\x{1F600}> " on latin1 systems
5> shell:prompt_width("😀> ", latin1).
11
-spec results(N) -> non_neg_integer() when N :: non_neg_integer().
Sets the number of results from previous commands to keep in the history list to
N
. The previous number is returned. Defaults to 20.
-spec start_interactive() -> ok | {error, already_started}.
Starts the interactive shell if it has not already been started. It can be used to programatically start the shell from an escript or when erl is started with the -noinput or -noshell flags.
-spec start_interactive(noshell | {module(), atom(), [term()]}) -> ok | {error, already_started}; ({remote, string()}) -> ok | {error, already_started | noconnection}; ({node(), {module(), atom(), [term()]}} | {remote, string(), {module(), atom(), [term()]}}) -> ok | {error, already_started | noconnection | badfile | nofile | on_load_failure}.
Starts the interactive shell if it has not already been started. It can be used
to programatically start the shell from an escript
or when erl
is started with the
-noinput
or
-noshell
flags. The following options are
allowed:
noshell - Starts the interactive shell as if
-noshell
was given toerl
. This is only useful when erl is started with-noinput
and the system want to read input data.mfa() - Starts the interactive shell using
mfa()
as the default shell.{node(), mfa()} - Starts the interactive shell using
mfa()
onnode()
as the default shell.{remote,
string()
} - Starts the interactive shell using as if-remsh
was given toerl
.{remote,
string()
,mfa()
} - Starts the interactive shell using as if-remsh
was given toerl
but with an alternative shell implementation.
On error this function will return:
already_started - if an interactive shell is already started.
noconnection - if a remote shell was requested but it could not be connected to.
badfile | nofile | on_load_failure - if a remote shell was requested with a custom mfa(), but the module could not be loaded. See Error Reasons for Code-Loading Functions for a description of the error reasons.
-spec start_restricted(Module) -> {error, Reason} when Module :: module(), Reason :: code:load_error_rsn().
Exits a normal shell and starts a restricted shell. Module
specifies the
callback module for the functions local_allowed/3
and non_local_allowed/3
.
The function is meant to be called from the shell.
If the callback module cannot be loaded, an error tuple is returned. The
Reason
in the error tuple is the one returned by the code loader when trying
to load the code of the callback module.
-spec stop_restricted() -> no_return().
Exits a restricted shell and starts a normal shell. The function is meant to be called from the shell.
Sets pretty printing of lists to Strings
. The previous value of the flag is
returned.
The flag can also be set by the STDLIB application variable shell_strings
.
Defaults to true
, which means that lists of integers are printed using the
string syntax, when possible. Value false
means that no lists are printed
using the string syntax.
-spec whereis() -> pid() | undefined.
Returns the current shell process on the node where the calling process' group_leader is located. If that node has no shell this function will return undefined.