5

The title pretty much says it all..

Suppose I have a bash script:

#!/bin/bash

# do some magic here, perhaps fetch something with wget, and then:
if [ "$VAR1" = "foo" ]; then
    export CASEVARA=1
fi
export CASEVARB=2

# and potentially many other vars...

How can I run this script from python and check what env variables were set. Ideally, I'd like to "reverse-inherit" them into the main environment that is running Python.

So that I can access them with

import os

# run the bash script somehow

print os.environ['CASEVARA']
1
  • 1
    no. variable exports apply only to "child" shells. you can't inherit into "ancestor" shells.
    – Marc B
    Apr 9, 2014 at 16:59

3 Answers 3

8

Certainly! It just requires some hacks:

variables = subprocess.Popen(
    ["bash", "-c", "trap 'env' exit; source \"$1\" > /dev/null 2>&1",
       "_", "yourscript"],
    shell=False, stdout=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]

This will run your unmodified script and give you all exported variables in the form foo=bar on different lines.

On supported OS (like GNU) you can trap 'env -0' exit to get \0 separated variables, to support multiline values.

6
  • Wow, this actually works! I've got next to no idea how, but it works :) I mean, trap, "_", whaat?
    – frnhr
    Apr 9, 2014 at 18:20
  • 1
    trap env exit runs env when bash exits (source file; env would work, but fail if the script used exit). The first non-option argument (_ here) becomes $0 in the script, it's largely arbitrary so I named it _ as conventionally used for "don't care". Apr 9, 2014 at 18:37
  • 1
    Thanks. To add to your answer, this is how I parsed them into the Python environment: os.environ.update(dict([line.split('=') for line in variables.split()]))
    – frnhr
    Apr 9, 2014 at 18:48
  • 2
    @frnhr Nice. You may want to use variables.split("\n") to not fail for variables with spaces, line.split('=', 1) to not fail for variables with equals signs, and filter out entries without = since this is merely conventional and not necessarily required. Apr 9, 2014 at 20:23
  • Is it working in python2.7? os.environ.update(dict([line.split('=') for line in variables.split()])) Aug 17, 2015 at 12:00
2

Use the subprocess module:

  • Echo the variables out in your shell script
  • Run the bash script from python using subprocess.Popen with stdout=subprocess.PIPE set
  • Pick them up using subprocess.communicate()
  • Save them to python variables
0

In order to make it transparent to the bash script, you could subclass Popen from subprocess and get it to expose the environ of it's process. You could also just grab the contents of it's environ off the disk

with open('/proc/%s/environ' % (pid,)) as f:
    env = f.read().replace('\x00', '\n')

Would work, but you're racing against the closing and clean up of the process.

1
  • And... that other guy's suggestion is MUCH better :)
    – aychedee
    Apr 9, 2014 at 17:14

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