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I'm working on a simple GUI Python script to do some simple tasks on a system. Some of that work involves apt-get install to install some packages.

While this is going on, I want to display a progress bar that should update with the progress of the download, using the little percentage shown in apt-get's interface in the terminal.

BUT! I can't find a way to get the progress info. Piping or redirecting the output of apt-get just gives static lines that show the "completed download" message for each package, and same for reading via subprocess.Popen() in my script.

How can I read from apt-get's output to get the percentages of the file downloaded?

2 Answers 2

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Instead of parsing the output of the apt-get, you can use python-apt to install packages. AFAIK it also has modules for reporting the progress.

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  • Look at /usr/share/doc/python-apt/examples/progress.py
    – unutbu
    Nov 7, 2009 at 19:16
  • Any way to do this without Python and without the huge mess of libapt?
    – Grant Paul
    Nov 8, 2009 at 6:11
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As I've often said, use pexpect, not subprocess etc, to run sub-processes when you need to get their continuous output. pexpect fools the subprocess into believing it's running on a terminal, so the subprocess will provide just the kind of output it would give on a real terminal... and you can catch it and transform it into any kind of fancy output you want!-)

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  • Any chance this could work in my C port as well using the posix popen()? Or is there a similar method?
    – Grant Paul
    Nov 7, 2009 at 6:05
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    popen will let the subprocess know its output is a pipe, so you're probably out of luck except with commands that are nice enough to let you ask them for "full unbuffered realtime output anyway pls!" and I don't think apt-get is in that elite group. To implement a "fake terminal" in C under Linux, start with the pty (7) man page, e.g. at linux.die.net/man/7/pty - and, good luck (lots of work will be needed!). Nov 7, 2009 at 6:12

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