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I am trying to run a Python script from another Python script, and getting its pid so I can kill it later.

I tried subprocess.Popen() with argument shell=True', but thepidattribute returns thepid` of the parent script, so when I try to kill the subprocess, it kills the parent.

Here is my code:

proc = subprocess.Popen(" python ./script.py", shell=True)
pid_ = proc.pid
.
.
.
# later in my code

os.system('kill -9 %s'%pid_)

#IT KILLS THE PARENT :(

2 Answers 2

16

shell=True starts a new shell process. proc.pid is the pid of that shell process. kill -9 kills the shell process making the grandchild python process into an orphan.

If the grandchild python script can spawn its own child processes and you want to kill the whole process tree then see How to terminate a python subprocess launched with shell=True:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
import signal
import subprocess

proc = subprocess.Popen("python script.py", shell=True, preexec_fn=os.setsid) 
# ...
os.killpg(proc.pid, signal.SIGTERM)

If script.py does not spawn any processes then use @icktoofay suggestion: drop shell=True, use a list argument, and call proc.terminate() or proc.kill() -- the latter always works eventually:

#!/usr/bin/env python
import subprocess

proc = subprocess.Popen(["python", "script.py"]) 
# ...
proc.terminate()

If you want to run your parent script from a different directory; you might need get_script_dir() function.

Consider importing the python module and running its functions, using its object (perhaps via multiprocessing) instead of running it as a script. Here's code example that demonstrates get_script_dir() and multiprocessing usage.

4
  • 1
    It should be os.killpg(os.getpgid(proc.pid), signal.SIGTERM) instead of os.killpg(proc.pid, signal.SIGTERM). Jun 21, 2018 at 16:02
  • @PJ_Finnegan: it works as is. os.getpgid(proc.pid) == proc.pid here.
    – jfs
    Jun 21, 2018 at 16:09
  • +jfs true, but in the cited example and in some code I've tested, it also worked without using setsid() in the Popen and using killpg. I think that Popen automatically assigns a new group id to the top shell. Plus, preexec_fn is not thread safe. Check this: stackoverflow.com/q/42257512/1141215 Jun 22, 2018 at 21:35
  • @PJ_Finnegan: 1- if you remove setsid(); the code breaks 2- there is no start_new_session in Python 2. Look at the shebang (it is python, not python3) 3- rule of thumb: unless the code is explicitly called "thread-safe"; it is not. You should not assume that any code is thread-safe unless you see the explicit claim to the contrary.
    – jfs
    Jun 22, 2018 at 21:45
4

So run it directly without a shell:

proc = subprocess.Popen(['python', './script.py'])

By the way, you may want to consider changing the hardcoded 'python' to sys.executable. Also, you can use proc.kill() to kill the process rather than extracting the PID and using that; furthermore, even if you did need to kill by PID, you could use os.kill to kill the process rather than spawning another command.

1
  • @farhawa: Can you update your question to clarify what’s happening? I understood you as saying that there’s a Python interpreter spawning a shell spawning another Python interpreter, and the kill kills the shell rather than the desired subordinate interpreter.
    – icktoofay
    Jun 25, 2015 at 2:39

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