property ChildProcess.prototype.stdio
Usage in Deno
import { ChildProcess } from "node:child_process";
A sparse array of pipes to the child process, corresponding with positions in
the stdio
option passed to spawn that have been set
to the value 'pipe'
. subprocess.stdio[0]
, subprocess.stdio[1]
, andsubprocess.stdio[2]
are also available as subprocess.stdin
,subprocess.stdout
, and subprocess.stderr
,
respectively.
In the following example, only the child's fd 1
(stdout) is configured as a
pipe, so only the parent's subprocess.stdio[1]
is a stream, all other values
in the array are null
.
const assert = require('node:assert'); const fs = require('node:fs'); const child_process = require('node:child_process'); const subprocess = child_process.spawn('ls', { stdio: [ 0, // Use parent's stdin for child. 'pipe', // Pipe child's stdout to parent. fs.openSync('err.out', 'w'), // Direct child's stderr to a file. ], }); assert.strictEqual(subprocess.stdio[0], null); assert.strictEqual(subprocess.stdio[0], subprocess.stdin); assert(subprocess.stdout); assert.strictEqual(subprocess.stdio[1], subprocess.stdout); assert.strictEqual(subprocess.stdio[2], null); assert.strictEqual(subprocess.stdio[2], subprocess.stderr);
The subprocess.stdio
property can be undefined
if the child process could
not be successfully spawned.