0

Trying to obtain and print and further use just the local ip address on a pi:

import os
getipaddr = "ip addr show eth0 | grep inet"
ip = "%s" % (os.system(getipaddr))
print ip 

returns:

inet 192.168.1.200/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global eth0
0

which correctly includes the local address, but:

import os
getipaddr = "ip addr show eth0 | grep inet"
ip = "%s" % (os.system(getipaddr))
print ip[9:22]

returns:

inet 192.168.1.200/24 brd 192.168.1.255 scope global eth0

not my expected subset of characters from character 10 to 21. Maybe ip is not really a string variable. Any help on how to fix greatly appreciated. Thanks! [note: there are actually 4 spaces in front of inet in the print returns, just don't know how to show it in this forum]

1
  • Not sure what's causing your problem, but since the IP is technically variable length, I should think a regular expression is more suited to this problem.
    – jpmc26
    Feb 5, 2014 at 0:48

1 Answer 1

2

If you look at this question, you will see that the return value of os.system is the return value of the call, not it's output. The output you are seeing on the screen is not coming from python but from the ip call. If you want to capture output use the subprocess module:

from subprocess import check_output
getipaddr = "ip addr show eth0 | grep inet"
ip = check_output(getipaddr, shell=True)

Now, the output will be in ip and you should get your desired results.


As a side note, '%s' % something is an anti-pattern. The clearer way to convert a string is to do str(something).

1
  • Thank you Seth! I'm learning... I'll look up "anti-pattern"
    – NigelS
    Feb 7, 2014 at 4:29

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