It is normal practice to open the Windows command prompt and execute commands. The command when executed shows the result onto the screen. There are many commands that we execute daily such as dir, find, etc. A situation may arise when you want to execute a (shell) command from the C# application.
Don't worry!!! Here is the code to do so…
The code given below creates a process i.e. a command process and then invokes the command that we want to execute. The result of the command is stored in a string
variable, which can then be used for further reference. The command execution can happen in two ways, synchronously and asynchronously. In the asynchronous command execution, we just invoke the command execution using a thread that runs independently. The code has enough comments, hence making it self-explanatory.
Below is the code to execute the command synchronously:
/// <summary> /// Executes a shell command synchronously. /// </summary> /// <param name="command">string command</param> /// <returns>string, as output of the command.</returns> public void ExecuteCommandSync(object command) { try { // create the ProcessStartInfo using "cmd" as the program to be run, // and "/c " as the parameters. // Incidentally, /c tells cmd that we want it to execute the command that follows, // and then exit. System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo procStartInfo = new System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo("cmd", "/c " + command); // The following commands are needed to redirect the standard output. // This means that it will be redirected to the Process.StandardOutput StreamReader. procStartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true; procStartInfo.UseShellExecute = false; // Do not create the black window. procStartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true; // Now we create a process, assign its ProcessStartInfo and start it System.Diagnostics.Process proc = new System.Diagnostics.Process(); proc.StartInfo = procStartInfo; proc.Start(); // Get the output into a string string result = proc.StandardOutput.ReadToEnd(); // Display the command output. Console.WriteLine(result); } catch (Exception objException) { // Log the exception } }
The above code invokes the cmd
process specifying the command to be executed. The optionprocStartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput
is set to true
, since we want the output to be redirected to theStreamReader
. The procStartInfo.CreateNoWindow
property is set to true
, as we don't want the standard black window to appear. This will execute the command silently.
Below is the code to execute the command asynchronously:
/// <summary> /// Execute the command Asynchronously. /// </summary> /// <param name="command">string command.</param> public void ExecuteCommandAsync(string command) { try { //Asynchronously start the Thread to process the Execute command request. Thread objThread = new Thread(new ParameterizedThreadStart(ExecuteCommandSync)); //Make the thread as background thread. objThread.IsBackground = true; //Set the Priority of the thread. objThread.Priority = ThreadPriority.AboveNormal; //Start the thread. objThread.Start(command); } catch (ThreadStartException objException) { // Log the exception } catch (ThreadAbortException objException) { // Log the exception } catch (Exception objException) { // Log the exception } }
If we observe carefully, the asynchronous execution of the command actually invokes the synchronous command execution method using a thread. The thread runs in the background making the command execution asynchronous in nature.
In the above execution sample, we find that there are two result sets of the command "dir
". The first one appears immediately after the command and the second appears after the "Done!" statement. In this case, the first one is the synchronous execution of the command, which happens immediately and the second is the asynchronous execution of the "dir
" command.