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Go : Correctly running external program with arguments


Good evening, I'm working on converting some tools written in python to Go in order to better understand it.

I need the program to call an external .exe with some arguments in order for it to correctly format some data. In the windows shell I can do C:\path_to_exe\file.exe arg1 arg2 "C:\path_to_output\output.txt"

I believe the correct method to do this in Go would be using exec.Command, but I'm not getting any...meaningful results.

out, err := exec.Command("cmd", "C:\\path\\tools\\util\\Utility.exe C:\\file_Location \"select * from TABLE\" C:\\output_path\\output.txt").Output()

            fmt.Printf("\n", string(out))

            if err != nil {
                println(" Error running decomp ", err)
            }

This appears to be running command, as the output I am receiving is:

%!(EXTRA string=Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.22000.739]
(c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Process finished with the exit code 0

Just for giggles I tried breaking up the arguments, but the same result was achieved

out, err := exec.Command("cmd", exPath, utilPath, statement, textOutputPath+"test.txt").Output()

I'm expecting the executed program to run, parse the correct file based on the input, and output the specified txt file. I am left with no .txt file, and the go program runs much faster then the parsing should take.

There must be something I'm missing, could someone please provide some insight on the correct usage of exec.Command, because every example I can find appears to show that this should work.


Solution

  • Why are you spawning cmd.exe and having it run your utility.exe?

    You can just spawn utility on its own.

    For instance, suppose you have two binaries, hello and say-hello living in the same directory, compiled from

    • hello.gohello:

      package main
      
      import (
        "fmt"
        "os"
      )
      
      func main() {
      
        argv := os.Args[1:]
        if len(argv) == 0 {
          argv = []string{"world"}
        }
      
        for _, arg := range argv {
          fmt.Printf("Hello, %s!\n", arg)
        }
      
      }
      
    • say-hello.gosay-hello:

      package main
      
      import (
        "fmt"
        "os"
        "os/exec"
      )
      
      func main() {
        process := exec.Command("./hello", os.Args[1:]...)
        process.Stdin = os.Stdin
        process.Stdout = os.Stdout
        process.Stderr = os.Stderr
      
        if err := process.Run(); err != nil {
          fmt.Printf("Command failed with exit code %d\n", process.ProcessState.ExitCode())
          fmt.Println(err)
        }
      }
      

    You can then run the command:

    $ ./say-hello Arawn Gywdion Sarah Hannah
    

    And get back the expected

    Hello, Arawn!
    Hello, Gwydion!
    Hello, Sarah!
    Hello, Hannah!