191

I'm using a Python library that does something to an object

do_something(my_object)

and changes it. While doing so, it prints some statistics to stdout, and I'd like to get a grip on this information. The proper solution would be to change do_something() to return the relevant information,

out = do_something(my_object)

but it will be a while before the devs of do_something() get to this issue. As a workaround, I thought about parsing whatever do_something() writes to stdout.

How can I capture stdout output between two points in the code, e.g.,

start_capturing()
do_something(my_object)
out = end_capturing()

?

5

5 Answers 5

267

Try this context manager:

from io import StringIO 
import sys

class Capturing(list):
    def __enter__(self):
        self._stdout = sys.stdout
        sys.stdout = self._stringio = StringIO()
        return self
    def __exit__(self, *args):
        self.extend(self._stringio.getvalue().splitlines())
        del self._stringio    # free up some memory
        sys.stdout = self._stdout

Usage:

with Capturing() as output:
    do_something(my_object)

output is now a list containing the lines printed by the function call.

Advanced usage:

What may not be obvious is that this can be done more than once and the results concatenated:

with Capturing() as output:
    print('hello world')

print('displays on screen')

with Capturing(output) as output:  # note the constructor argument
    print('hello world2')

print('done')
print('output:', output)

Output:

displays on screen                     
done                                   
output: ['hello world', 'hello world2']

Update: They added redirect_stdout() to contextlib in Python 3.4 (along with redirect_stderr()). So you could use io.StringIO with that to achieve a similar result (though Capturing being a list as well as a context manager is arguably more convenient).

14
  • Thanks! And thanks for adding the advanced section... I originally used a slice assignment to stick the captured text into the list, then I bonked myself in the head and used .extend() instead so it could be used concatenatively, just as you noticed. :-)
    – kindall
    May 15, 2013 at 21:58
  • 31
    Great answer, thanks. For Python 3, use from io import StringIO instead of first line in context manager.
    – Wtower
    Nov 2, 2015 at 12:33
  • 1
    Is this thread-safe? What happens if some other thread/call uses print() while do_something runs?
    – Derorrist
    Nov 17, 2015 at 9:42
  • 1
    This answer will not work for output from C shared libraries, see this answer instead. Aug 13, 2018 at 21:03
  • 1
    is it possible to send the output to another object in real-time ?
    – Pablo
    Apr 28, 2021 at 20:17
187

In python >= 3.4, contextlib contains a redirect_stdout context manager. It can be used to answer your question like so:

import io
from contextlib import redirect_stdout

f = io.StringIO()
with redirect_stdout(f):
    do_something(my_object)
out = f.getvalue()

From the docs:

Context manager for temporarily redirecting sys.stdout to another file or file-like object.

This tool adds flexibility to existing functions or classes whose output is hardwired to stdout.

For example, the output of help() normally is sent to sys.stdout. You can capture that output in a string by redirecting the output to an io.StringIO object:

  f = io.StringIO() 
  with redirect_stdout(f):
      help(pow) 
  s = f.getvalue()

To send the output of help() to a file on disk, redirect the output to a regular file:

 with open('help.txt', 'w') as f:
     with redirect_stdout(f):
         help(pow)

To send the output of help() to sys.stderr:

with redirect_stdout(sys.stderr):
    help(pow)

Note that the global side effect on sys.stdout means that this context manager is not suitable for use in library code and most threaded applications. It also has no effect on the output of subprocesses. However, it is still a useful approach for many utility scripts.

This context manager is reentrant.

9
  • when tried f = io.StringIO() with redirect_stdout(f): logger = getLogger('test_logger') logger.debug('Test debug message') out = f.getvalue() self.assertEqual(out, 'DEBUG:test_logger:Test debug message') . It gives me an error: AssertionError: '' != 'Test debug message' Dec 12, 2019 at 15:19
  • which means i did something wrong or it could not catch stdout log. Dec 12, 2019 at 15:21
  • @EzizDurdyyev, logger.debug doesn't write to stdout by default. If you replace your log call with print() you should see the message. Dec 12, 2019 at 20:51
  • 1
    Yeah, I know, but I do make it write to stdout like so: stream_handler = logging.StreamHandler(sys.stdout). And add that handler to my logger. so it should write to stdout and redirect_stdout should catch it, right? Dec 13, 2019 at 9:55
  • I suspect the issue is with the way you've configured your logger. I would verify that it prints to stdout without the redirect_stdout. If it does, maybe the buffer isn't being flushed until the context manager exits. Dec 13, 2019 at 17:14
4

Here is an async solution using file pipes.

import threading
import sys
import os

class Capturing():
    def __init__(self):
        self._stdout = None
        self._stderr = None
        self._r = None
        self._w = None
        self._thread = None
        self._on_readline_cb = None

    def _handler(self):
        while not self._w.closed:
            try:
                while True:
                    line = self._r.readline()
                    if len(line) == 0: break
                    if self._on_readline_cb: self._on_readline_cb(line)
            except:
                break

    def print(self, s, end=""):
        print(s, file=self._stdout, end=end)

    def on_readline(self, callback):
        self._on_readline_cb = callback

    def start(self):
        self._stdout = sys.stdout
        self._stderr = sys.stderr
        r, w = os.pipe()
        r, w = os.fdopen(r, 'r'), os.fdopen(w, 'w', 1)
        self._r = r
        self._w = w
        sys.stdout = self._w
        sys.stderr = self._w
        self._thread = threading.Thread(target=self._handler)
        self._thread.start()

    def stop(self):
        self._w.close()
        if self._thread: self._thread.join()
        self._r.close()
        sys.stdout = self._stdout
        sys.stderr = self._stderr

Example usage:

from Capturing import *
import time

capturing = Capturing()

def on_read(line):
    # do something with the line
    capturing.print("got line: "+line)

capturing.on_readline(on_read)
capturing.start()
print("hello 1")
time.sleep(1)
print("hello 2")
time.sleep(1)
print("hello 3")
capturing.stop()
3

Based on kindall and ForeverWintr's answer.

I create redirect_stdout function for Python<3.4:

import io
from contextlib import contextmanager

@contextmanager
def redirect_stdout(f):
    try:
        _stdout = sys.stdout
        sys.stdout = f
        yield
    finally:
        sys.stdout = _stdout


f = io.StringIO()
with redirect_stdout(f):
    do_something()
out = f.getvalue()
3

Also drawing on @kindall and @ForeveWintr's answers, here's a class that accomplishes this. The main difference from previous answers is that this captures it as a string, not as a StringIO object, which is much more convenient to work with!

import io
from collections import UserString
from contextlib import redirect_stdout

class capture(UserString, str, redirect_stdout):
    '''
    Captures stdout (e.g., from ``print()``) as a variable.

    Based on ``contextlib.redirect_stdout``, but saves the user the trouble of
    defining and reading from an IO stream. Useful for testing the output of functions
    that are supposed to print certain output.
    '''

    def __init__(self, seq='', *args, **kwargs):
        self._io = io.StringIO()
        UserString.__init__(self, seq=seq, *args, **kwargs)
        redirect_stdout.__init__(self, self._io)
        return

    def __enter__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        redirect_stdout.__enter__(self, *args, **kwargs)
        return self

    def __exit__(self, *args, **kwargs):
        self.data += self._io.getvalue()
        redirect_stdout.__exit__(self, *args, **kwargs)
        return

    def start(self):
        self.__enter__()
        return self

    def stop(self):
        self.__exit__(None, None, None)
        return

Examples:

# Using with...as
with capture() as txt1:
    print('Assign these lines')
    print('to a variable')

# Using start()...stop()
txt2 = capture().start()
print('This works')
print('the same way')
txt2.stop()

print('Saved in txt1:')
print(txt1)
print('Saved in txt2:')
print(txt2)

This is implemented in Sciris as sc.capture().

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