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I have a Python script which loops through a folder, creating a shell command for each file.

Each command is written to a shell script and this script is then run using subprocess.Popen. (I need to do this because I also need to set up the environment before for the commands to work).

Here is some pseudocode:

def create_shell_script(self):
    '''loop through a folder, create a command for each file and write this to a shell script'''
    # command to run
    base_command="run this"

    #list of files
    command_list=[]

    #loop through the files to create a folder
    for file in my_folder:
        command_list.append(base_command+" "+file)

    # open the shell script
    scriptname="shell.sh"
    shellscript = open(scriptname,'w')
    # set the environment using '.' as using bash below to run shell script
    shellscript.write("#!/bin/bash\n. /etc/profile.d/set_environment\n")

    #loop through commands and write to shellscript
    for command in command_list:
        shellscript.write(command+"\n")

    # use subprocess to run the shell script. Use bash to interpret the environment 
    cmd="bash "+scriptname
    proc = subprocess.Popen([cmd], stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True)

When I run this python script only the first 6 commands within the shell script are executed. The error message from the command suggests the command is truncated as it is read by subprocess.

When I run the shell script manually all commands are executed as expected so I know the shell script is correct.

Each command is pretty instantaneous but I can't imagine the speed causing an issue.

I did try running a subprocess command for each file but I ran into difficulties setting the environment and I like the approach of creating a single sh script as it also serves as a log file.

I have read the subprocess docs but haven't spotted anything and google hasn't helped.

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  • Have you tried closing the shellscript file object after writing to the file and before running it? Otherwise the file might not be written completely when you execute it.
    – Sven Rusch
    Oct 12, 2016 at 10:44
  • That fixed it! thank you. If you add it as an answer I'll mark it as accepted
    – aledj2
    Oct 12, 2016 at 10:51

2 Answers 2

2

You should close the shellscript file object after writing the commands to it and before running it via Popen. Otherwise, the file might not be written completely before you execute it.

The most elegant solution is to use a context manager, which closes the file automatically:

with open(scriptname, "w") as f:
    f.write(...)
2

Don't use Popen if you don't understand what it does. It creates a process, but it will not necessarily run to completion until you take additional steps.

You are probably looking simply for subprocess.check_call. Also, storing the commands in a file is unnecessary and somewhat fragile. Just run subprocess.check_call(['bash', '-c', string_of_commands) where string_of_commands has the commands separated by newlines or semicolons.

If you do want or need to use Popen, you will need to call communicate() or at least wait() on the Popen object.

Finally, avoid shell=True if you are passing in a list of commands; the purpose of the shell is to parse a string argument, and does nothing (useful) if that has already been done, or isn't necessary.

Here is an attempt at refactoring your script.

def create_shell_script(self):
    '''loop through a folder, create a command for each file and write this to a shell script'''

    command_list=['. /etc/profile.d/set_environment']    
    for file in my_folder:
        command_list.append("run this "+file)

    subprocess.check_call(['bash', '-c', ''.join(command_list)],
        stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)

If you want check_call to catch any error in any individual command, pass in the -e option, or include set -e before the commands which must not fail (but be aware that many innocent-looking constructs technically produce an error, such as false or grep nomatch file).

The majority of functions in the subprocess module are simple wrappers which use and manipulate a Popen object behind the scenes. You should only resort to the fundamental Popen if none of the other functions are suitable for your scenario.

If you genuinely need both stderr and stdout, perhaps you do need Popen, but then your question needs to describe how exactly your program manipulates the input and output of the shell.

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