In Go, how do I capture stdout of a function into a string?

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庸人自扰
庸人自扰 2020-11-28 06:13

In Python, for example, I can do the following:

realout = sys.stdout
sys.stdout = StringIO.StringIO()
some_function() # prints to stdout get captured in the          


        
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4条回答
  • 2020-11-28 06:30

    I think the whole idea is not advisable (race condition) at all, but I guess one can mess with os.Stdout in a way similar/analogical to your example.

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  • 2020-11-28 06:32

    This answer is similar to the previous ones but looks cleaner by using io/ioutil.

    http://play.golang.org/p/fXpK0ZhXXf

    package main
    
    import (
      "fmt"
      "io/ioutil"
      "os"
    )
    
    func main() {
      rescueStdout := os.Stdout
      r, w, _ := os.Pipe()
      os.Stdout = w
    
      fmt.Println("Hello, playground") // this gets captured
    
      w.Close()
      out, _ := ioutil.ReadAll(r)
      os.Stdout = rescueStdout
    
      fmt.Printf("Captured: %s", out) // prints: Captured: Hello, playground
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-28 06:46

    I agree you should use the fmt.Fprint functions if you can manage it. However, if you don't control the code whose output you're capturing, you may not have that option.

    Mostafa's answer works, but if you want to do it without a temporary file you can use os.Pipe. Here's an example that's equivalent to Mostafa's with some code inspired by Go's testing package.

    package main
    
    import (
        "bytes"
        "fmt"
        "io"
        "os"
    )
    
    func print() {
        fmt.Println("output")
    }
    
    func main() {
        old := os.Stdout // keep backup of the real stdout
        r, w, _ := os.Pipe()
        os.Stdout = w
    
        print()
    
        outC := make(chan string)
        // copy the output in a separate goroutine so printing can't block indefinitely
        go func() {
            var buf bytes.Buffer
            io.Copy(&buf, r)
            outC <- buf.String()
        }()
    
        // back to normal state
        w.Close()
        os.Stdout = old // restoring the real stdout
        out := <-outC
    
        // reading our temp stdout
        fmt.Println("previous output:")
        fmt.Print(out)
    }
    
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  • 2020-11-28 06:47

    I don't recommend this, but you can achieve it with altering os.Stdout. Since this variable is of type os.File, your temporary output should also be a file.

    package main
    
    import (
        "fmt"
        "io/ioutil"
        "os"
        "path/filepath"
    )
    
    func print() {
        fmt.Println("output")
    }
    
    func main() {
        // setting stdout to a file
        fname := filepath.Join(os.TempDir(), "stdout")
        fmt.Println("stdout is now set to", fname)
        old := os.Stdout // keep backup of the real stdout
        temp, _ := os.Create(fname) // create temp file
        os.Stdout = temp
    
        print()
    
        // back to normal state
        temp.Close()
        os.Stdout = old // restoring the real stdout
    
        // reading our temp stdout
        fmt.Println("previous output:")
        out, _ := ioutil.ReadFile(fname)
        fmt.Print(string(out))
    }
    

    I don't recommend because this is too much hacking, and not very idiomatic in Go. I suggest passing an io.Writer to the functions and writing outputs to that. This is the better way to do almost the same thing.

    package main
    
    import (
        "bytes"
        "fmt"
        "io"
        "os"
    )
    
    func print(w io.Writer) {
        fmt.Fprintln(w, "output")
    }
    
    func main() {
        fmt.Println("print with byes.Buffer:")
        var b bytes.Buffer
        print(&b)
        fmt.Print(b.String())
    
        fmt.Println("print with os.Stdout:")
        print(os.Stdout)
    }
    
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