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.