Processors are functions that process the output of your commands. They are already embedded in Run. See `run --help` for more information on how you can enable, disable or configure processors. {% hint style="info" %} You can disable all processors by using the `--raw` flag. This will cause Run to not capture stdout/stderr, and could give a visible performance improvement in some cases. {% endhint %} ## Prefix This processors prefixes stdout and stderr with the command name. This processor is enabled by default. ```bash $ run 'echo foobar' [echo] foobar [echo] echo foobar terminated with status code 0 ``` ## OpenAI You can enable the OpenAI processor to ask ChatGPT for feedback when your command fails. A prompt is sent with stderr every time it fails. Keep an eye on the usage, and I'd recommend to set [billing limits](https://platform.openai.com/account/billing/limits) just in case. You need an active [OpenAI account](https://platform.openai.com/account) and an [API key](https://platform.openai.com/account/api-keys) for this to work. ````bash $ RUN_CLI_OPENAI_ENABLED=true RUN_CLI_OPENAI_API_KEY= run 'ls /tmp/missing' [ls] ls: /tmp/missing: No such file or directory +=============================[ ChatGPT Feedback ]=============================+ | | | The issue is that the command "ls" is trying to list the contents of a | | directory that does not exist. "/tmp/missing" is not a valid directory path | | which is why the terminal is throwing an error message. | | | | To fix this issue, we need to provide a valid directory path for the "ls" | | command to work with. Double-check the directory path to make sure it exists | | and is spelled correctly. If it doesn't exist, we need to create it before | | running the "ls" command. | | | | One command that might help fix this issue is "mkdir". This command is used | | to create a new directory. So, if we want to fix the issue by creating a new | | directory, we could use the following command: | | | | ``` | | mkdir /tmp/newdirectory | | ``` | | | | This command will create a new directory called "newdirectory" within the | | "/tmp" directory. After creating the directory, we could then run the "ls" | | command to list the contents of the new directory: | | | | ``` | | ls /tmp/newdirectory | | ``` | | | +==============================================================================+ [ls] ls /tmp/missing terminated with status code 1 ````