Name
jrunscript - run a command-line script shell that supports interactive and batch modes
Synopsis
Note:
This tool is experimental and unsupported. It is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
jrunscript
[options] [arguments]
- options
-
This represents the
jrunscript
command-line options that can be used. See Options for the jrunscript Command. - arguments
- Arguments, when used, follow immediately after options or the command name. See Arguments.
Description
The jrunscript
command is a language-independent
command-line script shell. The jrunscript
command supports
both an interactive (read-eval-print) mode and a batch (-f
option) mode of script execution. By default, JavaScript is the language
used, but the -l
option can be used to specify a different
language. By using Java to scripting language communication, the
jrunscript
command supports an exploratory programming
style.
If JavaScript is used, then before it evaluates a user defined
script, the jrunscript
command initializes certain built-in
functions and objects, which are documented in the API Specification for
jrunscript
JavaScript built-in functions.
Options for the jrunscript Command
-cp
path or-classpath
path- Indicates where any class files are that the script needs to access.
-D
name=
value- Sets a Java system property.
-J
flag-
Passes flag directly to the Java Virtual Machine where the
jrunscript
command is running. -l
language-
Uses the specified scripting language. By default, JavaScript is used.
To use other scripting languages, you must specify the corresponding
script engine's JAR file with the
-cp
or-classpath
option. -e
script- Evaluates the specified script. This option can be used to run one-line scripts that are specified completely on the command line.
-encoding
encoding- Specifies the character encoding used to read script files.
-f
script-file- Evaluates the specified script file (batch mode).
-f -
- Enters interactive mode to read and evaluate a script from standard input.
-help
or-?
- Displays a help message and exits.
-q
- Lists all script engines available and exits.
Arguments
If arguments are present and if no -e
or -f
option is used, then the first argument is the script file and the rest
of the arguments, if any, are passed as script arguments. If arguments
and the -e
or the -f
option are used, then all
arguments are passed as script arguments. If arguments -e
and -f
are missing, then the interactive mode is used.
Example of Executing Inline Scripts
jrunscript -e "print('hello world')"
jrunscript -e "cat('http://www.example.com')"
Example of Using Specified Language and Evaluate the Script File
jrunscript -l js -f test.js
Example of Interactive Mode
jrunscript
js> print('Hello World\n');
Hello World
js> 34 + 55
89.0
js> t = new java.lang.Thread(function() { print('Hello World\n'); })
Thread[Thread-0,5,main]
js> t.start()
js> Hello World
js>
Run Script File with Script Arguments
In this example, the test.js
file is the script file.
The arg1
, arg2
, and arg3
arguments are passed to the script. The script can access these
arguments with an arguments array.
jrunscript test.js arg1 arg2 arg3