I can run a bat file in java, I can also get it to send info to java.
Code to run the bat file below. I think i can use an input stream to somehow get progress. I was also thinking maybe I could leave things in the bat file for it to read to get status.
I am hoping someone can give me some code on how to add a basic progress bar to this. I read the demo and examples from oracle but they don’t cover get progress from a bat file.
I updated my code below, I still need to run it and get the line count for the true 100% completion. However, it’s not showing the progress like I thought it would. It runs and stays at 0%, I can tell it’s running still because of task manager.
public class ProgressBar extends JPanel
implements ActionListener,
PropertyChangeListener {
private JProgressBar progressBar;
private JButton startButton;
private JTextArea taskOutput;
private Task task;
class Task extends SwingWorker<Void, Void> {
/*
* Main task. Executed in background thread.
*/
@Override
public Void doInBackground() {
Random random = new Random();
int progress = 0;
//Initialize progress property.
setProgress(0);
//Sleep for at least one second to simulate "startup".
try {
Thread.sleep(1000 + random.nextInt(2000));
} catch (InterruptedException ignore) {}
// while (progress < 100) {
//Sleep for up to one second.
try {
Thread.sleep(random.nextInt(1000));
} catch (InterruptedException ignore) {}
//Make random progress.
try {
String ls_str;
Process ls_proc = Runtime.getRuntime().exec("\\WMIRebuild.bat");
// get its output (your input) stream
DataInputStream ls_in = new DataInputStream(
ls_proc.getInputStream());
try {
while ((ls_str = ls_in.readLine()) != null) {
System.out.println(ls_str);
progress++;
}
} catch (IOException e) {
System.exit(0);
}
} catch (IOException e1) {
System.err.println(e1);
System.exit(1);
}
setProgress(Math.min(progress, 100));
// }
return null;
}
/*
* Executed in event dispatch thread
*/
public void done() {
Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().beep();
startButton.setEnabled(true);
taskOutput.append("Done!\n");
}
}
public ProgressBar() {
super(new BorderLayout());
//Create the demo's UI.
startButton = new JButton("Start");
startButton.setActionCommand("start");
startButton.addActionListener(this);
progressBar = new JProgressBar(0, 18);
progressBar.setValue(0);
//Call setStringPainted now so that the progress bar height
//stays the same whether or not the string is shown.
progressBar.setStringPainted(true);
taskOutput = new JTextArea(5, 20);
taskOutput.setMargin(new Insets(5,5,5,5));
taskOutput.setEditable(false);
JPanel panel = new JPanel();
panel.add(startButton);
panel.add(progressBar);
add(panel, BorderLayout.PAGE_START);
add(new JScrollPane(taskOutput), BorderLayout.CENTER);
setBorder(BorderFactory.createEmptyBorder(20, 20, 20, 20));
}
/**
* Invoked when the user presses the start button.
*/
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent evt) {
progressBar.setIndeterminate(true);
startButton.setEnabled(false);
//Instances of javax.swing.SwingWorker are not reusuable, so
//we create new instances as needed.
task = new Task();
task.addPropertyChangeListener(this);
task.execute();
}
/**
* Invoked when task's progress property changes.
*/
public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent evt) {
if ("progress" == evt.getPropertyName()) {
int progress = (Integer) evt.getNewValue();
progressBar.setIndeterminate(false);
progressBar.setValue(progress);
taskOutput.append(String.format(
"Completed %d%% of task.\n", progress));
}
}
/**
* Create the GUI and show it. As with all GUI code, this must run
* on the event-dispatching thread.
*/
private static void createAndShowGUI() {
//Create and set up the window.
JFrame frame = new JFrame("ProgressBarDemo2");
frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
//Create and set up the content pane.
JComponent newContentPane = new ProgressBar();
newContentPane.setOpaque(true); //content panes must be opaque
frame.setContentPane(newContentPane);
//Display the window.
frame.pack();
frame.setVisible(true);
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
//Schedule a job for the event-dispatching thread:
//creating and showing this application's GUI.
javax.swing.SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
public void run() {
createAndShowGUI();
}
});
}
}
Have the progress bar’s frame separate from your
main()method. Have it run on a thread of its own. As you read stuff from the batch filels_in.readLine(), update the progress in the other frame. For example, you can have a method in your frame calledaddTick()which adds another block to the progress bar, that can be called each time you read a line from your batch file.very rudimentary example:
Thread that reads from process:
Progress Bar, runs on its own thread:
I don’t know, something like that. Obviously the progress bar is going to be different from this, this is just pseudo-code to give you an idea of how the main() method interacts with the progress bar.