1

I am trying automate an interactive python script using pexpect. But it does not proceed after the control comes back to pexpect.

Here is a the mock up script try to simulate the same thing.

---------------- python script(script.py) -----------------
def issue_command():
        print "********** in issue_command ********"

def dummy_check():
        print "********** in dummy_check ********"
        raw_input("Now Press enter for next command")
        issue_command()

if __name__ == "__main__":
    dummy_check()

--------------------------------Pexpect script(pexp.py)-----------------------
import pexpect
import sys

def quick_test():

        pobj = pexpect.spawn("/bin/bash")
        pobj.logfile = sys.stdout
        pobj.sendline("script.py")
        pobj.expect("Now Press enter for next command")
        print "\n1st part is done. Now execute the oil command"
        pobj.sendline()
if __name__ == "__main__":
    quick_test()
-------------------------------------------------------------------

I expect the output to be following.

$python pexp.py
********** in dummy_check ********
Now Press enter for next command  -------------------> It should wait here. Upon   pressing enter it should print the next line.
********** in issue_command ********
$

Instead, it does not print the 2nd line i.e. the pexpect could not interact with the script after it returned in between.

$ python pexp.py
./script.py
********** in dummy_check ********
Now Press enter for next command -----> It ignored sendline() and did not execute issue_command function.
$

I have also tried passing the script(script.py) directly in the pexpect.spawn() instead of creating another shell(/bin/bash). It did not help. I am not sure what I am doing wrong. Can somebody please advise ?

Thanks.

1 Answer 1

1

Your pexpect is working correctly, but you haven't asked for more output from the spawn object yet.

Running the code you wrote as is, I get the following output:

********** in dummy_check ********
Now Press enter for next command
1st part is done. Now execute the oil command

$

If you add another pobj.expect() call to the end of pexp.py, you can get the remaining output. In particular, using the pexpect search constant pexpect.EOF will make your spawn object look for the end of the file (when the script completes) and log the output to stdout. Here is your code with the addition:

import pexpect
import sys

def quick_test():
    pobj = pexpect.spawn('/bin/bash')
    pobj.logfile = sys.stdout
    pobj.sendline('python script.py')
    pobj.expect("Now Press enter for next command")
    print "\n1st part is done. Now execute the oil command"
    pobj.sendline()
    pobj.expect(pexpect.EOF)  # <-- wait until we hit the end of the file

if __name__ == '__main__':
    quick_test()

Running this gives the following output:

********** in dummy_check ********
Now Press enter for next command
1st part is done. Now execute the oil command


********** in issue_command ********
$

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.