"""Common utilities for the various process_* implementations. This file is only meant to be imported by the platform-specific implementations of subprocess utilities, and it contains tools that are common to all of them. """ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Copyright (C) 2010-2011 The IPython Development Team # # Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in # the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software. #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Imports #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- import subprocess import sys from IPython.utils import py3compat #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- # Function definitions #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- def read_no_interrupt(p): """Read from a pipe ignoring EINTR errors. This is necessary because when reading from pipes with GUI event loops running in the background, often interrupts are raised that stop the command from completing.""" import errno try: return p.read() except IOError, err: if err.errno != errno.EINTR: raise def process_handler(cmd, callback, stderr=subprocess.PIPE): """Open a command in a shell subprocess and execute a callback. This function provides common scaffolding for creating subprocess.Popen() calls. It creates a Popen object and then calls the callback with it. Parameters ---------- cmd : str A string to be executed with the underlying system shell (by calling :func:`Popen` with ``shell=True``. callback : callable A one-argument function that will be called with the Popen object. stderr : file descriptor number, optional By default this is set to ``subprocess.PIPE``, but you can also pass the value ``subprocess.STDOUT`` to force the subprocess' stderr to go into the same file descriptor as its stdout. This is useful to read stdout and stderr combined in the order they are generated. Returns ------- The return value of the provided callback is returned. """ sys.stdout.flush() sys.stderr.flush() # On win32, close_fds can't be true when using pipes for stdin/out/err close_fds = sys.platform != 'win32' p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=stderr, close_fds=close_fds) try: out = callback(p) except KeyboardInterrupt: print('^C') sys.stdout.flush() sys.stderr.flush() out = None finally: # Make really sure that we don't leave processes behind, in case the # call above raises an exception # We start by assuming the subprocess finished (to avoid NameErrors # later depending on the path taken) if p.returncode is None: try: p.terminate() p.poll() except OSError: pass # One last try on our way out if p.returncode is None: try: p.kill() except OSError: pass return out def getoutput(cmd): """Return standard output of executing cmd in a shell. Accepts the same arguments as os.system(). Parameters ---------- cmd : str A command to be executed in the system shell. Returns ------- stdout : str """ out = process_handler(cmd, lambda p: p.communicate()[0], subprocess.STDOUT) if out is None: return '' return py3compat.bytes_to_str(out) def getoutputerror(cmd): """Return (standard output, standard error) of executing cmd in a shell. Accepts the same arguments as os.system(). Parameters ---------- cmd : str A command to be executed in the system shell. Returns ------- stdout : str stderr : str """ out_err = process_handler(cmd, lambda p: p.communicate()) if out_err is None: return '', '' out, err = out_err return py3compat.bytes_to_str(out), py3compat.bytes_to_str(err)