Executing command-line directly from Xcode — Erica Sadun


I got pulled into one of those conversations where I end up saying, “Fine, I’ll put up a post about it” and this is the post. Yes, you can test and run command-line apps directly from Xcode but I pretty much never do. It’s a pain with few benefits. That said, here’s how you do it.

Arguments

Let’s say you need arguments. Open your scheme (⌘<) and select the Run > Arguments tab. Add the arguments you want to pass on launch one at a time. Double-click to edit any argument:

The arguments are vended byCommandLine.arguments. Either count the array or use CommandLine.argc to find out how many arguments you’re dealing with.

print(CommandLine.arguments)
print(CommandLine.argc)

Counter-intuitively, Xcode does not automatically quote the arguments for you. This produces five arguments, not three, or six if you include the command itself:

["/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug/Test", "first", "second", "third", "fourth", "fifth"]
6

And what do you expect from the following?

You get this if you run directly in Xcode’s console:

["/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug/Test", "first", "several items at once", "third"]
4
Program ended with exit code: 0

But if you set your code to execute using Terminal:

Launching: '/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug/Test'
Working directory: '/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug'
3 arguments:
argv[0] = '/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug/Test'
argv[1] = 'first'
argv[2] = 'several'
["/Users/ericasadun/Library/Developer/Xcode/DerivedData/Test-gwehknnihlcsiucsovtbnlrdtfun/Build/Products/Debug/Test", "first", "several"]
3

Xcode’s Crazy Terminal Option

If you’re running anything with direct key input (using POSIX termios/raw mode) or curses, running in the console doesn’t work. So Xcode provides a way to run those utilities in the terminal. Visit Run > Options and scroll all the way down.

This feature is buggy as hell, produces ridiculous amounts of excess text (see this), can take a significant time to launch, and even more time for Xcode to realize the process has finished. It is impossible to use with paths that use spaces (“warning: working directory doesn't exist: '/Volumes/Kiku/Xcode/Derived'“).

I don’t like it. I don’t use it. But it exists.

Sane Command-Line Execution

Unless you’re dealing with things like automation and such, you can try out your compiled command-line apps by dragging your executable from the Products group onto the terminal. This places the path to your build at the prompt. Type out your arguments and press return:

However, I prefer to use a Copy File build phase. Select your Target > Build Phases, click plus (+) and add the executable. (I use absolute path and disable “only when installing”.) This lets you install directly to  standard locations like /usr/local/bin or ~/bin, or if you don’t want to place it there until it is stable and ready for deployment, you can use a development folder:

Assuming your destination is in your shell’s path, start a new shell for the executable to be picked up the first time. After that, you can compile and run as you like.


Discover more from TrendyShopToBuy

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Latest articles

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

Leave a Reply

spot_imgspot_img

Discover more from TrendyShopToBuy

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading