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I'm apprenticing into system administration without schooling, so sometimes I'm missing what is elementary information to many others.

I'm attempting to give my stdout line another argument before printing, but I'm not sure which process I should use, and I'm a bit fuzzy on the commands for subprocess if that's what I should be using.

My current code is:

f = open('filelist', 'r')
searchterm = f.readline()
f.close()|
#takes line from a separate file and gives it definition so that it may be callable.

import commands
commands.getoutput('print man searchterm')

This is running, but not giving me an ouput to the shell. My more important question is though, am I using the right command to get my preferred process? Should I be using one of the subprocess commands instead? I tried playing around with popen, but I don't understand it fully enough to use it correctly.

Ie, I was running

subprocess.Popen('print man searchterm') 

but I know without a doubt that's not how you're supposed to run it. Popen requires more arguments than I have given it, like file location and where to run it (Stdout or stderr). But I was having trouble making these commands work. Would it be something like:

subprocess.Popen(pipe=stdout 'man' 'searchterm')
#am unsure how to give the program my arguments here.  

I've been researching everywhere, but it is such a widely used process I seem to be suffering from a surplus of information rather than not enough. Any help would be appreciated, I'm quite new.

Preemptive thanks for any help.

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  • 3
    commands module is deprecated in favor of subprocess (It doesn't even exist in python3.x). So, you should probably be using subprocess
    – mgilson
    Jul 27, 2012 at 19:46
  • This tutorial gives extensive examples of using subprocess.
    – Lenna
    Jul 27, 2012 at 19:50

3 Answers 3

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The cannonical way to get data from a separate process is to use subprocess (commands is deprecated)

import subprocess
p = subprocess.Popen(['print','man','searchitem'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
stdoutdata, stderrdata = p.communicate()

Note that some convenience functions exist for splitting strings into lists of arguments. Most notably is shlex.split which will take a string and split it into a list the same way a shell does. (If nothing is quoted in the string, str.split() works just as well).

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commands is deprecated in Python 2.6 and later, and has been removed in Python 3. There's probably no situation where it's preferable in new code, even if you are stuck with Python 2.5 or earlier.

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From the docs:

Deprecated since version 2.6: The commands module has been removed in Python 3. Use the subprocess module instead.

To run man searchterm in a separate process and display the result in the terminal, you could do this:

import subprocess
proc = subprocess.Popen('man searchterm'.split())
proc.communicate()
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  • I understand that these above two examples are doing the same thing. Why is this one requiring me to split the string?
    – Claem
    Jul 27, 2012 at 19:54
  • Ah, nevermind. Mgwilson has covered that. Thank you so much for the help everyone.
    – Claem
    Jul 27, 2012 at 19:57
  • @Claem -- "man searchterm".split() is the same thing as ["man", "searchterm"]
    – mgilson
    Jul 27, 2012 at 19:57

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