vote up 4 vote down star

I'm working on a wrapper script that will exercise a vmware executable, allowing for the automation of virtual machine startup/shutdown/register/deregister actions. I'm trying to use subprocess to handle invoking the executable, but the spaces in the executables path and in parameters of the executable are not being handled correctly by subprocess. Below is a code fragment:

vmrun_cmd = r"c:/Program Files/VMware/VMware Server/vmware-cmd.bat"
def vm_start(target_vm):
    list_arg = "start"
    list_arg2 = "hard"
    if vm_list(target_vm):
            p = Popen([vmrun_cmd, target_vm, list_arg, list_arg2],   stdout=PIPE).communicate()[0]
            print p
    else:
            vm_register(target_vm)
            vm_start(target_vm)
def vm_list2(target_vm):
    list_arg = "-l"
    p = Popen([vmrun_cmd, list_arg], stdout=PIPE).communicate()[0]
    for line in p.split('\n'):
            print line

If I call the vm_list2 function, I get the following output:

$ ./vmware_control.py --list                                                
C:\Virtual Machines\QAW2K3Server\Windows Server 2003 Standard Edition.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\ubunturouter\Ubuntu.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\vacc\vacc.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\EdgeAS-4.4.x\Other Linux 2.4.x kernel.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\UbuntuServer1\Ubuntu.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\Other Linux 2.4.x kernel\Other Linux 2.4.x kernel.vmx
C:\Virtual Machines\QAClient\Windows XP Professional.vmx

If I call the vm_start function, which requires a path-to-vm parameter, I get the following output:

$ ./vmware_control.py --start "C:\Virtual Machines\ubunturouter\Ubuntu.vmx"
'c:\Program' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.

Apparently, the presence of a second parameter with embedded spaces is altering the way that subprocess is interpreting the first parameter. Any suggestions on how to resolve this?

python2.5.2/cygwin/winxp

flag
Why are your slashes in c:/Program Files/VMware/VMware Server/vmware-cmd.bat going the wrong way? Isn't it c:\Program Files\... ? – S.Lott Apr 30 at 1:28
1  
Well, cygwin is *nix port, so it seems to like the standard (or what I understand to be the standard) *nix slash notation. My understanding is that subprocess should translate the separator to whatever the underlying system needs. – Rob Carr Apr 30 at 1:37

9 Answers

vote up -1 vote down

Why are you using r""? I believe that if you remove the "r" from the beginning, it will be treated as a standard string which may contain spaces. Python should then properly quote the string when sending it to the shell.

link|flag
I've checked this, and the raw string status doesn't change the behavior. – Rob Carr Apr 30 at 1:24
2  
Makes sense to use r"...\..." for Windows file names. – S.Lott Apr 30 at 1:27
vote up 3 vote down
'c:\Program' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.

To get this message, you are either:

  1. Using shell=True:

    vmrun_cmd = r"c:\Program Files\VMware\VMware Server\vmware-cmd.bat"
    subprocess.Popen(vmrun_cmd, shell=True)
    
  2. Changing vmrun_cmd on other part of your code

  3. Getting this error from something inside vmware-cmd.bat

Things to try:

  • Open a python prompt, run the following command:

    subprocess.Popen([r"c:\Program Files\VMware\VMware Server\vmware-cmd.bat"])
    

If that works, then quoting issues are out of the question. If not, you've isolated the problem.

link|flag
In order: 1: I explicitly stayed away from setting shell=True, so that isn't it. 2: vmrun_cmd is a global constant used in exactly the same way each time. 3: Nope. The executable hasn't been invoked by the time that error occurs - that's the start of the string specifying it's path. – Rob Carr Apr 30 at 2:03
@Rob Carr: edited my answer, please try the code above – nosklo Apr 30 at 11:28
vote up 0 vote down

2 things

1)

You probably don't want to use Pipe If the output of the subprogram is greater than 64KB it is likely your process will crash. http://thraxil.org/users/anders/posts/2008/03/13/Subprocess-Hanging-PIPE-is-your-enemy/

2) Subprocess.Popen has a keyword argument shell, making it as if the shell has been parsing your arguments, setting shell=True should do what you want.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I believe that list2cmdline(), which is doing the processing of your list args, splits any string arg on whitespace unless the string contains double quotes. So I would expect

vmrun_cmd = r'"c:/Program Files/VMware/VMware Server/vmware-cmd.bat"'

to be what you want.

You'll also likely want to surround the other arguments (like target_vm) in double quotes on the assumption that they, too, each represent a distinct arg to present to the command line. Something like

r'"%s"' % target_vm

(for example) should suit.

See the list2cmdline documentation

D'A

link|flag
Well, target_vm is an arguement, rather than a constant, so what's the best method for double quoting in that situation? – Rob Carr Apr 30 at 2:30
I would probably phrase it as r'"%s"' % target_vm – darch Apr 30 at 7:00
Man, that's hard to read in the comment. Moving it to the answer. – darch Apr 30 at 7:01
vote up -1 vote down

Possibly stupid suggestion, but perhaps try the following, to remove subprocess + spaces from the equation:

import os
from subprocess Popen, PIPE

os.chdir(
    os.path.join("C:", "Program Files", "VMware", "VMware Server")
)

p = Popen(
    ["vmware-cmd.bat", target_vm, list_arg, list_arg2],
    stdout=PIPE
).communicate()[0]

It might also be worth trying..

p = Popen(
    [os.path.join("C:", "Program Files", "VMware", "VMware Server", "vmware-cmd.bat"), ...
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

In Python on MS Windows, the subprocess.Popen class uses the CreateProcess API to started the process. CreateProcess takes a string rather than something like an array of arguments. Python uses subprocess.list2cmdline to convert the list of args to a string for CreateProcess.

If I were you, I'd see what subprocess.list2cmdline(args) returns (where args is the first argument of Popen). It would be interesting to see if it is putting quotes around the first argument.

Of course, this explanation might not apply in a Cygwin environment.

Having said all this, I don't have MS Windows.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Here's what I don't like

vmrun_cmd = r"c:/Program Files/VMware/VMware Server/vmware-cmd.bat"

You've got spaces in the name of the command itself -- which is baffling your shell. Hence the "'c:\Program' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file."

Option 1 -- put your .BAT file somewhere else. Indeed, put all your VMWare somewhere else. Here's the rule: Do Not Use "Program Files" Directory For Anything. It's just wrong.

Option 2 -- quote the vmrun_cmd value

vmrun_cmd = r'"c:/Program Files/VMware/VMware Server/vmware-cmd.bat"'
link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

If you have spaces in the path, the easiest way I've found to get them interpreted properly is this.

subprocess.call('""' + path + '""')

I don't know why exactly it needs double double quotes, but that is what works.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

One problem is that if the command is surrounded with quotes and doesn't have spaces, that could also confuse the shell.

So I do this:

if ' ' in raw_cmd:
    fmt = '"%s"'
else:
    fmt = '%s'

cmd = fmt % raw_cmd
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.