[issue2405] Drop w9xpopen and all dependencies

benrg report at bugs.python.org
Tue Mar 8 05:36:38 CET 2011


benrg <benrudiak at gmail.com> added the comment:

It turns out that, on Windows 7 32-bit with COMSPEC pointing to command.com, platform.popen('dir').read() works with w9xpopen and fails (no output) without it.

But the reason has nothing to do with the old Win9x problem. It's because subprocess always quotes the command line after /c, which command.com doesn't understand. But w9xpopen decodes the command line (in the runtime, before main() is called) and then reencodes it, this time quoting only arguments with spaces in them. Command.com then gets /c dir, and is happy. It would be interesting if this was the bug that led to w9xpopen being used in NT for the last ten years.

There are layers upon layers of brokenness here. w9xpopen should not be messing with the command line in the first place; it should call GetCommandLine() and pass the result untouched to CreateProcess (after skipping its own name). It certainly should not be using the argv[] contents, which are parsed with an algorithm that doesn't match the one used by cmd.exe. The decoding-encoding process munges the command line in hard-to-understand ways. Additionally, subprocess.py doesn't quote the shell name (my usual shell is C:\Program Files\TCCLE12\TCC.EXE), and it converts an argument list to a string using list2cmdline even when shell=True, which makes little sense to me.

I think w9xpopen should be deleted and forgotten. It was written badly and has apparently been largely ignored for 10+ years. There is probably a better solution to the problem even on Win9x, such as a worker thread in the Python process that waits on both the process and pipe handles. But also, all of the shell=True code in subprocess.py needs to be rethought from the ground up. I don't think it should exist at all; far better to provide convenient support in subprocess for setting up pipelines, and require people to explicitly invoke the shell for the few remaining legitimate use cases. That should probably be discussed elsewhere, though.

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