Read From Stdin (<stdin>)
<stdin>
)
Read From Stdin (Read the stdin belonging to the parent code block
Description
This is used inside functions and other code blocks to pass that block's stdin down a pipeline
Usage
<stdin> -> <stdout>
Examples
When writing more complex scripts, you cannot always invoke your read as the first command in a code block. For example a simple pipeline might be:
» function example { -> match 2 }
But this only works if ->
is the very first command. The following would fail:
# Incorrect code
function example {
out "only match 2"
-> match 2
}
This is where <stdin>
comes to our rescue:
function example {
out "only match 2"
<stdin> -> match 2
}
This could also be written as:
function example { out "only match 2"; <stdin> -> match 2 }
Detail
<stdin>
makes use of a feature called named pipes, which are a way of piping data between processes without chaining them together as a single command pipeline (eg commands delimited with |
, ->
, =>
, ?
tokens).
What are Murex named pipes?
In POSIX, there is a concept of stdin, stdout and stderr, these are FIFO files while are "piped" from one executable to another. ie stdout for application 'A' would be the same file as stdin for application 'B' when A is piped to B: A | B
. Murex adds a another layer around this to enable support for passing data types and builtins which are agnostic to the data serialization format traversing the pipeline. While this does add overhead the advantage is this new wrapper can be used as a primitive for channelling any data from one point to another.
Murex named pipes are where these pipes are created in a global store, decoupled from any executing functions, named and can then be used to pass data along asynchronously.
For example
pipe example
bg {
<example> -> match Hello
}
out "foobar" -> <example>
out "Hello, world!" -> <example>
out "foobar" -> <example>
!pipe example
This returns Hello, world!
because out
is writing to the example named pipe and match
is also reading from it in the background (bg
).
Named pipes can also be inlined into the command parameters with <>
tags
pipe example
bg {
<example> -> match: Hello
}
out <example> "foobar"
out <example> "Hello, world!"
out <example> "foobar"
!pipe example
Please note this is also how
test
works.
Murex named pipes can also represent network sockets, files on a disk or any other read and/or write endpoint. Custom builtins can also be written in Golang to support different abstractions so your Murex code can work with those read or write endpoints transparently.
To see the different supported types run
runtime --pipes
Namespaces and usage in modules and packages
Pipes created via pipe
are created in the global namespace. This allows pipes to be used across different functions easily however it does pose a risk with name clashes where Murex named pipes are used heavily. Thus is it recommended that pipes created in modules should be prefixed with the name of its package.
Synonyms
<stdin>
See Also
- Create Named Pipe (
pipe
): Manage Murex named pipes - Match String (
match
): Match an exact value in an array - Output String (
out
): Print a string to the stdout with a trailing new line character - Pipeline: Overview of what a "pipeline" is
- Public Function (
function
): Define a function block - Read / Write To A Named Pipe (
<pipe>
): Reads from a Murex named pipe - Shell Runtime (
runtime
): Returns runtime information on the internal state of Murex
This document was generated from builtins/core/pipe/namedpipe_doc.yaml.