using subprocess for non-terminating command
Steve Holden
steve at holdenweb.com
Wed Jul 4 11:59:10 EDT 2007
O.R.Senthil Kumaran wrote:
> * zacherates <zacherates at gmail.com> [2007-07-04 12:09:03]:
>
>>> How should I handle these kind of commands (ping 127.0.0.1) with
>>> subprocess module. I am using subprocess, instead of os.system because
>>> at anypoint in time, I need access to stdout and stderr of execution.
>> Ping, for one, allows you to set an upper bound on how long it runs
>> (the -c option). This is probably the cleanest approach if it's
>> available.
>>
>
> Yes, I am aware of the ping -c option. But again even that does not help.
> try
> process = subprocess.Popen('ping -c 10 127.0.0.1', stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
> shell=True)
> process.stdout.read() # This will hang again.
>
> I am not sure, why subprocess is behaving so.
>
>> You can also send the subprocess signals if you need it to exit
>> (although, this is a unix thing so I'm not sure how portable it is).
>
> Yes, I have tried to kill and then get the standard output result.
> But the result has been the same. I could not read the Popen returned file
> object.
>
>> You could emulate having a timeout on child.stdout.read by registering
>> a callback with Timer to kill the child.
>
> I dont know how to do this. I shall give it a try ( by looking around ) and
> trying.
>
Is it possible your ping implementation outputs to stderr?
regards
Steve
--
Steve Holden +1 571 484 6266 +1 800 494 3119
Holden Web LLC/Ltd http://www.holdenweb.com
Skype: holdenweb http://del.icio.us/steve.holden
--------------- Asciimercial ------------------
Get on the web: Blog, lens and tag the Internet
Many services currently offer free registration
----------- Thank You for Reading -------------
More information about the Python-list
mailing list