Matlab: Running an m-file from command-line
Suppose that;
I have an m-file at location:
C:\M1\M2\M3\mfile.m
And exe file of the matlab is at this location:
C:\E1\E2\E3\matlab.exe
I want to run this m-file with Matlab, from command-line, for example inside a .bat file. How ca开发者_开发技巧n I do this, is there a way to do it?
A command like this runs the m-file successfully:
"C:\<a long path here>\matlab.exe" -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -r "run('C:\<a long path here>\mfile.m'); exit;"
I think that one important point that was not mentioned in the previous answers is that, if not explicitly indicated, the matlab interpreter will remain open.
Therefore, to the answer of @hkBattousai I will add the exit
command:
"C:\<a long path here>\matlab.exe" -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -r "run('C:\<a long path here>\mfile.m');exit;"
Here is what I would use instead, to gracefully handle errors from the script:
"C:\<a long path here>\matlab.exe" -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -r "try, run('C:\<a long path here>\mfile.m'), catch, exit, end, exit"
If you want more verbosity:
"C:\<a long path here>\matlab.exe" -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -r "try, run('C:\<a long path here>\mfile.m'), catch me, fprintf('%s / %s\n',me.identifier,me.message), end, exit"
I found the original reference here. Since original link is now gone, here is the link to an alternate newreader still alive today:
- exit matlab when running batch m file
On Linux you can do the same and you can actually send back to the shell a custom error code, like the following:
#!/bin/bash
matlab -nodisplay -nojvm -nosplash -nodesktop -r \
"try, run('/foo/bar/my_script.m'), catch, exit(1), end, exit(0);"
echo "matlab exit code: $?"
it prints matlab exit code: 1
if the script throws an exception, matlab exit code: 0
otherwise.
Since R2019b, there is a new command line option, -batch
. It replaces -r
, which is no longer recommended. It also unifies the syntax across platforms. See for example the documentation for Windows, for the other platforms the description is identical.
matlab -batch "statement to run"
This starts MATLAB without the desktop or splash screen, logs all output to stdout
and stderr
, exits automatically when the statement completes, and provides an exit code reporting success or error.
It is thus no longer necessary to use try
/catch
around the code to run, and it is no longer necessary to add an exit
statement.
Here are the steps:
- Start the command line.
- Enter the folder containing the .m file with
cd C:\M1\M2\M3
- Run the following:
C:\E1\E2\E3\matlab.exe -r mfile
Windows systems will use your current folder as the location for MATLAB to search for .m files, and the -r
option tries to start the given .m file as soon as startup occurs.
cat 1.m | matlab -nodesktop -nosplash
And I use Ubuntu
Thanks to malat. Your comment helped me.
But I want to add my try-catch block, as I found the MExeption
method getReport()
that returns the whole error message and prints it to the matlab console.
Additionally I printed the filename as this compilation is part of a batch script that calls matlab.
try
some_code
...
catch message
display(['ERROR in file: ' message.stack.file])
display(['ERROR: ' getReport(message)])
end;
For a false model name passed to legacy code generation method, the output would look like:
ERROR in file: C:\..\..\..
ERROR: Undefined function or variable 'modelname'.
Error in sub-m-file (line 63)
legacy_code( 'slblock_generate', specs, modelname);
Error in m-file (line 11)
sub-m-file
Error in run (line 63)
evalin('caller', [script ';']);
Finally, to display the output at the windows command prompt window, just log the matlab console to a file with -logfile logfile.txt
(use additionally -wait
) and call the batch command type logfile.txt
I run this command within a bash script, in particular to submit SGE jobs and batch process things:
/Path_to_matlab -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop < m_file.m
Since none of the answers has information about feeding input argument, it is important to add it here. After some research, I found this link
Feeding the arguments is very similar to how we run a Matlab function.
matlab -r 'try myfunction(argument1,argument2); catch; end; quit'
If you are somehow getting an argument from bash/terminal, you simply need to insert that into the bash command as:
matlab -r 'try myfunction($MY_BASH_ARG,argument2); catch; end; quit'
(This is after a couple of trial and error)
精彩评论