14

After installing and configuring Google Cloud SDK gsutil command can be run by simply typing its name and the argument(-s) using Windows cmd.

Here is the example:

"C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Cloud SDK\google-cloud-sdk\bin\gcloud" version

enter image description here

But the same command fails if run using Python subprocess. With subprocess's shell argument set to True the ImportError occurs:

import subprocess

cmd = '"C:/Program Files (x86)/Google/Cloud SDK/google-cloud-sdk/bin/gsutil" version'

p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=True)

.....

ImportError: No module named site

With subprocess's shell argument set to False then the WindowsError: [Error 2] The system cannot find the file specified occurs:

p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, shell=False)

Is there a way to run gsutil on Windows using Python?

1
  • If you still want to use command line, then you have to specify the full name of the file, i.e., gsutil.cmd Mar 29, 2019 at 12:19

2 Answers 2

12

Note that the proper and official way to interact with Google Cloud Storage is to make use of the Google Cloud Client Library for Python and not running the gsutil command through subprocess.Popen. If you are not setting up merely some tests I would suggest you to follow from the beginning this way if there is not any technological constrain that makes this way impracticable.

You can check at the following links the relative Overview and Documentation. A small example taken from the Documentation can be the following:

from google.cloud import storage

client = storage.Client()
bucket = client.get_bucket('<your-bucket-name>')
blob = bucket.blob('my-test-file.txt')
blob.upload_from_string('this is test content!')

You can find a further example here using google-cloud-python with the Datastore and Cloud Storage to manage expenses.

6
  • 16
    The python API does not allow use of the -m option for parallelism, as far as I know. So there are reasons for using subprocess and the gsutil command. Sep 9, 2019 at 22:41
  • @UricSou: You can share client instances across threads because the storage client uses the requests library. Just create client instances after multiprocessing.Pool.
    – tfad334
    Nov 8, 2019 at 17:28
  • 5
    Also, the python API is dead slow comapred to the commandline
    – CpILL
    Apr 24, 2020 at 2:44
  • @GalloCedrone how to upload folder using above approach?
    – MAC
    Mar 25, 2022 at 8:29
  • 2
    I highly recommend using gsutil and not the native python library for anything more than downloading one or two small files. gsutil's performance is 100x better, so the original direction of the question was good (invoking it from python)
    – orcaman
    Apr 27, 2022 at 8:38
1

Use shutil.which to get the full path to gsutil in a cross-platform manner:

import shutil

# If gsutil is in PATH:
path = shutil.which('gsutil')

# Or if gsutil isn't in PATH but you know where it is:
path = shutil.which('gsutil', path="C:/Program Files (x86)/Google/Cloud SDK/google-cloud-sdk/bin")

# Then you can use that path to run it.
import subprocess
cmd = [path, "version"]
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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