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I'm writing a wrapper for Xfoil and my first command set of commands are:

commands=[]

commands.append('plop\n')
commands.append('g,f\n')
commands.append('\n')
commands.append('load '+ afile+'\n')
commands.append('\n')
#commands.append('ppar\n');
#commands.append('n %g\n',n);
commands.append('\n')
commands.append('\n')
commands.append('oper\n')
commands.append('iter '+ str(iter) + '\n')
commands.append('visc {0:f}\n'.format(Re))
commands.append('m {0:f}\n'.format(M))

I'm interacting with xfoil as below:

xfoil_path=os.getcwd()+'/xfoil.exe'
Xfoil = Popen(xfoil_path, shell=True, stdin=PIPE, stdout=None, stderr=None, creationflags=0)
for i in commands:
    print '\nExecuting:', i
    #stdin.write returns None if write is blocked and that seems to be the case here
    Xfoil.stdin.write(i)
    Xfoil.wait()
    #print Xfoil.stdin.write(i)

However, Xfoil.stdin.write is being blocked form interacting with the program -- xfoil.exe -- as Xfoil.stdin.write(i) returns a None.

This happens immediately after the first command i.e. plop

How do I resolve this?

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  • 1
    You are waiting for the program to end after you write the first command item. Are you sure that's not a/the source of problem? BTW shell=True is unnecessary here. Paths should be combined with os.path.join(). The building of commands with all those append() calls looks odd. Why not just create a list with those contents instead of creating an empty one and do all those append()s. i is a bad name for something that's not an integer, especially as loop variable.
    – BlackJack
    Sep 9, 2015 at 15:19

2 Answers 2

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Solution is to add Xfoil.stdin.close(); Closing the buffer allows the program to proceed.

Xfoil = Popen(xfoil_path, shell=True, stdin=PIPE, stdout=None, stderr=None, creationflags=0)
for i in commands:
    Xfoil.stdin.write(i)

Xfoil.stdin.close()
Xfoil.wait()

Seeking help understand why Xfoil.stdin.close() needs to be added. How does closing the buffer allow xfoil.exe to proceed?

2
  • Because only if you flush() or close() the file ensures the buffered data is actually written to that pipe.
    – BlackJack
    Sep 9, 2015 at 15:15
  • @BlackJack: bufsize=0 on Python 2; you don't need flush() here.
    – jfs
    Sep 10, 2015 at 11:01
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To send multiple commands, you could use Popen.communicate() method that sends commands, closes the pipe, and waits for the child process to finish:

import os
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE

process = Popen(os.path.abspath('xfoil.exe'), stdin=PIPE)
process.communicate(b"".join(commands))

Xfoil.wait() in your code waits for the executable to finish after the first command. Closing the pipe (Xfoil.stdin) indicates EOF otherwise the deadlock may happen if xfoil.exe read until EOF (no command makes it exit otherwise).

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