Prevent figure call from .p file

I need to run a function from a software package that is written in a .p file. To run it on a cluster, I need to start matlab with the following options:
matlab -nojvm -nodesktop -nosplash -nodisplay -singleCompThread
The .p file attempts to make figures which cause matlab to crash due to nojvm. Is there anyway to prevent the figure creation without being able to edit the source code?
Thanks in advance!

7 Kommentare

It should not work, but you can try something like this:
function x=figure(varargin), x = 1+rand; end
Fangjun Jiang
Fangjun Jiang am 22 Sep. 2022
I doubt this would work. What about the usual plot() commands after the figure()? But you could try and report what happened.
Rik
Rik am 22 Sep. 2022
It depends on how and when the p file determines which function to run. I personally think it should give preference to built-in functions, but I never tested it. This seems the easiest attack vector other than modifying the actual internal function (which is probably very much non-trivial in the case of figure).
Oliver Warrington
Oliver Warrington am 22 Sep. 2022
Thanks for the suggestion @Rik. No luck though I'm afraid. Seems there is preference for built-in functions. Unfortunate for this case but I'm sure reasonable overall.
When I test with my own .p and my own replacement figure(), the replacement does get called.
S = "function test_pcode; fprintf('function called!\n'); fig = figure(); dfig = double(fig); fprintf('figure number was %d\n', dfig); end"
fid = fopen('test_pcode.m', 'w');
fwrite(fid, S);
fclose(fid)
which test_pcode
pcode test_pcode
which test_pcode
clear figure
which figure
test_pcode
function fignum = figure(varargin)
fprintf('replacement figure called!\n');
fignum = randi(20);
end
When I test this code here in Answers, the replacement figure message does not get displayed -- it is calling the built-in figure() it appears. But when I test the code in R2022b rerelease on my desktop, the message does appear indicating that my replacement function was called.
Rik
Rik am 23 Sep. 2022
The whole point of p code is to prevent the end user digging around, so perhaps the writer of the code used the builtin() function to ensure built-in functions are called.
The inconsistent behavior is odd. I wonder whether it has something to do with the OS.
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson am 23 Sep. 2022
My guess at the moment would be that it has to do with Answers running in a LiveScript environment. LiveScript must be implicitly intercepting figure() so that it can inline figures.

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Antworten (1)

Oliver Warrington
Oliver Warrington am 23 Sep. 2022

1 Stimme

I did get this to work by using a brute force version of replacing the built in functions, as suggested in the comments.
I created dummy versions of the graphics, graph2d, graph3d and specgraph folders. Replaced all the functions, so no subsequent plot call of any kind would throw an error. Then removed the built in versions from the path and added my dummy versions.
rmpath(genpath('/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/toolbox/matlab/graph2d'))
rmpath(genpath('/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/toolbox/matlab/graphics'))
rmpath(genpath('/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/toolbox/matlab/specgraph'))
rmpath(genpath('/usr/local/MATLAB/R2021b/toolbox/matlab/graph3d'))
addpath(genpath('./graphics'));
addpath(genpath('./graph2d'));
addpath(genpath('./specgraph'));
addpath(genpath('./graph3d'));
Not sure this would be recommended in general, but my results are as expected and I can now run it on a cluster!

1 Kommentar

Rik
Rik am 23 Sep. 2022
I'm sure I would not recommend this in general, but in your case it seems the only feasible solution.

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am 22 Sep. 2022

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am 23 Sep. 2022

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