Luis f4296bcada project initialized | 5 年 前 | |
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lib | 5 年 前 | |
CHANGELOG.md | 5 年 前 | |
LICENSE | 5 年 前 | |
README.md | 5 年 前 | |
index.js | 5 年 前 | |
package.json | 5 年 前 |
A cross platform solution to node’s spawn and spawnSync.
$ npm install cross-spawn
Node has issues when using spawn on Windows:
./my-folder/my-executable
)node_modules/.bin/
), where arguments with quotes and parenthesis would result in invalid syntax erroroptions.shell
support on node <v4.8
All these issues are handled correctly by cross-spawn
.
There are some known modules, such as win-spawn, that try to solve this but they are either broken or provide faulty escaping of shell arguments.
Exactly the same way as node’s spawn
or spawnSync
, so it’s a drop in replacement.
const spawn = require('cross-spawn');
// Spawn NPM asynchronously
const child = spawn('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' });
// Spawn NPM synchronously
const result = spawn.sync('npm', ['list', '-g', '-depth', '0'], { stdio: 'inherit' });
options.shell
as an alternative to cross-spawn
Starting from node v4.8
, spawn
has a shell
option that allows you run commands from within a shell. This new option solves
the PATHEXT issue but:
<v4.8
If you are using the shell
option to spawn a command in a cross platform way, consider using cross-spawn
instead. You have been warned.
options.shell
supportWhile cross-spawn
adds support for options.shell
in node <v4.8
, all of its enhancements are disabled.
This mimics the Node.js behavior. More specifically, the command and its arguments will not be automatically escaped nor shebang support will be offered. This is by design because if you are using options.shell
you are probably targeting a specific platform anyway and you don’t want things to get into your way.
While cross-spawn
handles shebangs on Windows, its support is limited. More specifically, it just supports #!/usr/bin/env <program>
where <program>
must not contain any arguments.
If you would like to have the shebang support improved, feel free to contribute via a pull-request.
Remember to always test your code on Windows!
$ npm test
$ npm test -- --watch
during development
Released under the MIT License.