execute shell script from python, needs sys.argv

Peter Otten __peter__ at web.de
Thu Nov 4 12:11:06 EDT 2010


Matt wrote:

> I am trying to execute a shell script from within python..  This shell
> script takes the format, where $1 and $2 are variables from the
> command line: cat $1 | Fastx_trimmer -n COUNT -o $2
> 
> straight into the cmd line it would be:  cat file.1 | Fastx_trimmer -n
> COUNT -o file.2
> 
> So,  know that there is a way to do this in python using the
> subprocess module, but despite a lot of effort, I can't seem to get
> this to work, and precisely because of those arguments taken from the
> command line.
> 
> I was thinking that the easiest thing to so was to
> 
> import sys, os, subprocess
> proc = subprocess.call([cat sys.argv[1] | fastx_trimmer -n COUNT -o
> sys.argv[2]], shell=True)
> 
> this clearly does not work...
> 
> alternatively, I could put the shell command in its own file, say
> fastx.sh, and pass it's arguments to it vie the command line.
> 
> import sys, os, subprocess
> proc = subprocess.call([fastx.sh, sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2]],
> shell=True)
> 
> But, this does not seem to work as this is not the proper way to pass
> arguments to the shell script.
> 
> in short, I'm sure that this is a easy fix, but given my still limited
> python vocabulary, it eludes me.

You could do it in two steps:

>>> from subprocess import *
>>> source = Popen(["cat", "/usr/share/dict/words"], stdout=PIPE)
>>> call(["wc"], stdin=source.stdout)
  98569   98568  931708
0
>>>

A similar example is here, under a "can't miss" headline:

http://docs.python.org/library/subprocess.html#replacing-shell-pipeline

Peter



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