65

I found several code snippets for running cmd commands through a Java class, but I wasn't able to understand it.

This is code for opening the cmd

public void excCommand(String new_dir){
    Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
    try {
        rt.exec(new String[]{"cmd.exe","/c","start"});

    } catch (IOException e) {
        // TODO Auto-generated catch block
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}

And I found some other links for adding other commands such as cd http://www.coderanch.com/t/109753/Linux-UNIX/exec-command-cd-command-java

How to open the command prompt and insert commands using Java?

Can anyone help me to understand how to cd a directory such as:

 cd C:\Program Files\Flowella

then run other commands on that directory?

Yassin Hajaj
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Reham
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  • There is some code here - http://viralpatel.net/blogs/how-to-execute-command-prompt-command-view-output-java/ – Steam Nov 03 '14 at 06:52

14 Answers14

143

One way to run a process from a different directory to the working directory of your Java program is to change directory and then run the process in the same command line. You can do this by getting cmd.exe to run a command line such as cd some_directory && some_program.

The following example changes to a different directory and runs dir from there. Admittedly, I could just dir that directory without needing to cd to it, but this is only an example:

import java.io.*;

public class CmdTest {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder(
            "cmd.exe", "/c", "cd \"C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft SQL Server\" && dir");
        builder.redirectErrorStream(true);
        Process p = builder.start();
        BufferedReader r = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
        String line;
        while (true) {
            line = r.readLine();
            if (line == null) { break; }
            System.out.println(line);
        }
    }
}

Note also that I'm using a ProcessBuilder to run the command. Amongst other things, this allows me to redirect the process's standard error into its standard output, by calling redirectErrorStream(true). Doing so gives me only one stream to read from.

This gives me the following output on my machine:

C:\Users\Luke\StackOverflow>java CmdTest
 Volume in drive C is Windows7
 Volume Serial Number is D8F0-C934

 Directory of C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server

29/07/2011  11:03    <DIR>          .
29/07/2011  11:03    <DIR>          ..
21/01/2011  20:37    <DIR>          100
21/01/2011  20:35    <DIR>          80
21/01/2011  20:35    <DIR>          90
21/01/2011  20:39    <DIR>          MSSQL10_50.SQLEXPRESS
               0 File(s)              0 bytes
               6 Dir(s)  209,496,424,448 bytes free
Luke Woodward
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  • Thanks A lot..:) I put another command after the cd i want to execute it on the current directory,it uses some android commands,but it gives me android' is not recognized as an internal or external command,Although it works on the cmd and i added the paths to the environment variables. – Reham Mar 18 '13 at 07:10
  • That sounds to me like a `PATH` issue. Try printing out the value of the `PATH` environment variable to see whether it contains the path to the Android commands you mention. (Use `System.getenv("PATH")` to get its value.) You don't say how you're running your Java code (from a command prompt, from an IDE, in a web app, ...), so I can't say what you could do to fix this apparent `PATH` issue. – Luke Woodward Mar 18 '13 at 22:14
  • @LukeWoodward - Thanks. Can you please explain what these string parameters mean - "/c" and "cd \"C:\\Program Files\\Microsoft SQL Server\" && dir" ? I am actually trying to execute an svn command `svn log --limit 1 http://svn.repo1.com/trunk/app` from C:\Windows\system32. Please help me to get this right. – Steam Nov 03 '14 at 06:46
  • I tried my luck and found out how to do it - `ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder("cmd.exe", "/c", my_svn_code);` It works, but I don't know how it works. – Steam Nov 03 '14 at 06:58
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    @Steam: `cmd.exe` is the Command Prompt. `/c` tells the Command Prompt to run the rest of the line and then exit. Using a Command Prompt allows me to change directory - `cd` is built in to the Command Prompt, there's no `cd.exe` - and also to chain together two commands using `&&`. – Luke Woodward Nov 03 '14 at 21:18
  • This helped me with Jenkins groovy console script. Thank you so much! – Oseack May 27 '15 at 13:54
  • @LukeWoodward .. can we run ( git-pull or git push ) long running task from shell script without opening cmd.exe, actually i dont black command_promt scree, ( i want it to run like background service ) – Tushar Pandey Nov 08 '17 at 09:02
  • @TusharPandey: why shell out to `git` when you could use a Java interface to Git such as JGit? – Luke Woodward Nov 08 '17 at 20:58
  • @LukeWoodward .. i agree but i want to use a script, and little bit confused .... that, will JGIT be able to run this script ( https://stackoverflow.com/a/17192101/2382964 ) this script is just a example – Tushar Pandey Nov 09 '17 at 05:05
  • @TusharPandey: if you want an answer to your question, please ask a separate question. – Luke Woodward Nov 09 '17 at 19:38
  • @LukeWoodward Hi Luke, Could you please provide the same command to execute in ubuntu OS. – Kumar Sep 30 '18 at 06:29
  • "cmd.exe", "/c" it is for Windows. And for other O.S.? – Boris Karloff Mar 01 '20 at 02:19
11

You can try this:-

Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command);
Perception
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Rahul Tripathi
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    Perhaps because you're using `Runtime.getRuntime().exec(...)` instead of a `ProcessBuilder`? Personally, I regard `Runtime.getRuntime().exec(...)` as deprecated. (It wasn't me that downvoted, though.) – Luke Woodward Mar 17 '13 at 18:06
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    I'm not the downvoter, but -- your code is almost exactly the same as the code the OP already has. It will not solve whatever problem the OP is currently having. – ruakh Mar 17 '13 at 18:08
7

If you want to perform actions like cd, then use:

String[] command = {command_to_be_executed, arg1, arg2};
ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder(command);
builder = builder.directory(new File("directory_location"));

Example:

String[] command = {"ls", "-al"};
ProcessBuilder builder = new ProcessBuilder(command);
builder = builder.directory(new File("/ngs/app/abc"));
Process p = builder.start();

It is important that you split the command and all arguments in separate strings of the string array (otherwise they will not be provided correctly by the ProcessBuilder API).

Boris Strandjev
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Ashwini Sinha
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5

Here is a more complete implementation of command line execution.

Usage

executeCommand("ls");

Output:

12/27/2017 11:18:11:732: ls
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: build.gradle
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: gradle
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: gradlew
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: gradlew.bat
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: out
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: settings.gradle
12/27/2017 11:18:11:820: src

Code

private void executeCommand(String command) {
    try {
        log(command);
        Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command);
        logOutput(process.getInputStream(), "");
        logOutput(process.getErrorStream(), "Error: ");
        process.waitFor();
    } catch (IOException | InterruptedException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}

private void logOutput(InputStream inputStream, String prefix) {
    new Thread(() -> {
        Scanner scanner = new Scanner(inputStream, "UTF-8");
        while (scanner.hasNextLine()) {
            synchronized (this) {
                log(prefix + scanner.nextLine());
            }
        }
        scanner.close();
    }).start();
}

private static SimpleDateFormat format = new SimpleDateFormat("MM/dd/yyyy hh:mm:ss:SSS");

private synchronized void log(String message) {
    System.out.println(format.format(new Date()) + ": " + message);
}
Ilya Gazman
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4

My example (from real project)

folder — File.

zipFile, filesString — String;

        final String command = "/bin/tar -xvf " + zipFile + " " + filesString;
        logger.info("Start unzipping: {}    into the folder {}", command, folder.getPath());
        final Runtime r = Runtime.getRuntime();
        final Process p = r.exec(command, null, folder);
        final int returnCode = p.waitFor();

        if (logger.isWarnEnabled()) {
            final BufferedReader is = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
            String line;
            while ((line = is.readLine()) != null) {
                logger.warn(line);
            }
            final BufferedReader is2 = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getErrorStream()));
            while ((line = is2.readLine()) != null) {
                logger.warn(line);
            }
        }
iMysak
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4

Try this:

Process runtime = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c start notepad++.exe");
Laurel
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3

The easiest way would be to use Runtime.getRuntime.exec().

For example, to get a registry value for the default browser on Windows:

String command = "REG QUERY HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\\http\\shell\\open\\command";
try
{
    Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec(command);
} catch (IOException e)
{
    e.printStackTrace();
}

Then use a Scanner to get the output of the command, if necessary.

Scanner kb = new Scanner(process.getInputStream());

Note: the \ is an escape character in a String, and must be escaped to work properly (hence the \\).


However, there is no executable called cd, because it can't be implemented in a separate process.

The one case where the current working directory matters is executing an external process (using ProcessBuilder or Runtime.exec()). In those cases you can specify the working directory to use for the newly started process explicitly.

Easiest way for your command:

System.setProperty("user.dir", "C:\\Program Files\\Flowella");
syb0rg
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  • where should i add this line ,do you mean Runtime.getRuntime().exec("cd what?"); can you give me an example for the cd command. – Reham Mar 17 '13 at 17:53
  • Edited my answer to hopefully add some clarity. – syb0rg Mar 17 '13 at 17:55
  • thank you ,,but i'm getting java.io.IOException: Cannot run program "cd": CreateProcess error=2, The system cannot find the file specified at java.lang.ProcessBuilder.start(Unknown Source) – Reham Mar 17 '13 at 18:03
  • @Reham See my revised answer as to why you can't use your specific command the way you want. – syb0rg Mar 17 '13 at 18:15
  • Re: "In a Java program you can't change your current working directory and you shouldn't need to": This is not true. See my answer. – ruakh Mar 17 '13 at 18:15
2

Once you get the reference to Process, you can call getOutpuStream on it to get the standard input of the cmd prompt. Then you can send any command over the stream using write method as with any other stream.

Note that it is process.getOutputStream() which is connected to the stdin on the spawned process. Similarly, to get the output of any command, you will need to call getInputStream and then read over this as any other input stream.

Akhilesh Singh
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2

Stopping and Disabling a service can be done via below code:

static void sdService() {
    String[] cmd = {"cmd.exe", "/c", "net", "stop", "MSSQLSERVER"};
    try {           
        Process process = new ProcessBuilder(cmd).start();
        process.waitFor();      
        String line = null;
        BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getInputStream()));
        while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            System.out.println(line);
        }
                            
        line = null;
        bufferedReader = null;
        Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("sc config MSSQLSERVER start= disabled");
        p.waitFor();
        bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
        while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            System.out.println(line);
        }                   
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }                   
}

Enabling and Starting a service can be done via below code

static void esService() {
    String[] cmd = {"cmd.exe", "/c", "net", "start", "MSSQLSERVER"};
                    
    try {
        Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("sc config MSSQLSERVER start= auto");
        //Process p = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("sc config MSSQLSERVER start= demand");
        p.waitFor();        
        String line = null;
        BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
        while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            System.out.println(line);
        }
                            
        line = null;
        bufferedReader = null;
        Process process = new ProcessBuilder(cmd).start();          
        process.waitFor();
        bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getInputStream()));
        while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            System.out.println(line);
        }
                        
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }               
}

Executing command from any folder can be done via below code.

static void runFromSpecificFolder() {       
    try {
        ProcessBuilder processBuilder = new ProcessBuilder("cmd.exe", "/c", "cd \"C:\\Users\\himan\\Desktop\\Java_Test_Deployment\\jarfiles\" && dir");
        //processBuilder.directory(new File("C://Users//himan//Desktop//Java_Test_Deployment//jarfiles"));
        processBuilder.redirectErrorStream(true);
        Process p = processBuilder.start();
        p.waitFor();        
        String line = null;
        BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(p.getInputStream()));
        while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
            System.out.println(line);
        }                
    } catch (Exception e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }               
}
    
public static void main(String args[]) {
    sdService();
    runFromSpecificFolder();
    esService();
}
nkrivenko
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1

You can't run cd this way, because cd isn't a real program; it's a built-in part of the command-line, and all it does is change the command-line's environment. It doesn't make sense to run it in a subprocess, because then you're changing that subprocess's environment — but that subprocess closes immediately, discarding its environment.

To set the current working directory in your actual Java program, you should write:

System.setProperty("user.dir", "C:\\Program Files\\Flowella");
ruakh
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1

one of the way to execute cmd from java !

public void executeCmd() {
    String anyCommand="your command";
    try {
        Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("cmd /c start cmd.exe /K " + anyCommand);

    } catch (IOException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}
Energy
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1

public class Demo { public static void main(String args[]) throws IOException {

    Process process = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("/Users/******/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools/adb" + " shell dumpsys battery ");
    BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(process.getInputStream()));
    String line = null;
    while (true) {
        line = in.readLine();
        if (line == null) { break; }
        System.out.println(line);
    }
}

}
  • While this code may provide a solution to OP's problem, it is highly recommended that you provide additional context regarding why and/or how this code answers the question. Code only answers typically become useless in the long-run because future viewers experiencing similar problems cannot understand the reasoning behind the solution. – E. Zeytinci Jan 11 '20 at 17:43
0

The simplest and shortest way is to use CmdTool library.

new Cmd()
         .configuring(new WorkDir("C:/Program Files/Flowella"))
         .command("cmd.exe", "/c", "start")
         .execute();

You can find more examples here.

Aleksei Sotnikov
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0

Here the value adder is use of ampersands to batch commands and correct format for change drive with cd.

public class CmdCommander {

public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
    //easyway to start native windows command prompt from Intellij

    /*
    Rules are:
    1.baseStart must be dual start
    2.first command must not have &.
    3.subsequent commands must be prepended with &
    4.drive change needs extra &
    5.use quotes at start and end of command batch
    */
    String startQuote = "\"";
    String endQuote = "\"";
    //String baseStart_not_taking_commands = " cmd  /K start ";
    String baseStart = " cmd  /K start cmd /K ";//dual start is must

    String first_command_chcp = " chcp 1251 ";
    String dirList = " &dir ";//& in front of commands after first command means enter
    //change drive....to yours
    String changeDir = " &cd &I: ";//extra & makes changing drive happen

    String javaLaunch = " &java ";//just another command
    String javaClass = " Encodes ";//parameter for java needs no &

    String javaCommand = javaLaunch + javaClass;
    //build batch command
    String totalCommand =
            baseStart +
                    startQuote +
                    first_command_chcp +
                    //javaCommand +
                    changeDir +
                    dirList +
                    endQuote;

    System.out.println(totalCommand);//prints into Intellij terminal
    runCmd(totalCommand);
    //Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
    //t.sleep(3000);
    System.out.println("loppu hep");//prints into Intellij terminal

}


public static void runCmd(String command) throws Exception {

    Runtime rt = Runtime.getRuntime();
    Process proc = rt.exec(command);


}

}

Kurskinen
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