44

I realized that when I write into a file using python it wait until the end of my Python file to execute it:

outputFile = open("./outputFile.txt","a")
outputFile.write("First")
print "Now you have 10sec to see that outputFile.txt is still the same as before"
time.sleep(10)
outputFile.write("Second")
print "Now if you look at outputFile.txt you will see 'First' and 'Second'"

How am I suppose to make python write instantly to the output file?

4 Answers 4

78

You can use flush() or you can set the file object to be unbuffered.

Details on using that parameter for open() here.

So you would change your open call to -

outputFile = open("./outputFile.txt", "a", 0)
3
  • 2
    Thank you, the second option is the best for me because I don't want to write outputFile.flush() each time but both work.
    – elbajo
    Sep 24, 2013 at 14:29
  • 1
    Instead of leaving the file open during time intensive operations it might be worth considering the with statement which would accomplish the same thing.
    – Shani
    Sep 24, 2013 at 14:54
  • 2
    @nachshon "accomplish the same thing": not for me on my system (RHEL 6.8 with conda-based Python 2.7.13). The os.fsync() call mentioned in ffeast's answer is required (can't say for sure for Microsoft Windows-based Python or other OS's).
    – bgoodr
    Aug 16, 2017 at 15:19
29

Force it with the flush() function, add

outputFile.flush()

at the end of your code.

1
  • 5
    If that code is added at the end of the Python file, nothing is accomplished that wouldn't have been anyway when the file is closed. Instead it should be executed possibly multiple times -- whenever it's desired to make sure all the output produced so far written to the file.
    – martineau
    Sep 24, 2013 at 14:28
9

Just to combine all of the above answers into a set of useful utility functions because a key requirement of the OP (and myself!) is "because I don't want to write outputFile.flush() each time":

import os
import tempfile
import time


def write_now(filep, msg):
    """Write msg to the file given by filep, forcing the msg to be written to the filesystem immediately (now).

    Without this, if you write to files, and then execute programs
    that should read them, the files will not show up in the program
    on disk.
    """
    filep.write(msg)
    filep.flush()
    # The above call to flush is not enough to write it to disk *now*;
    # according to https://stackoverflow.com/a/41506739/257924 we must
    # also call fsync:
    os.fsync(filep)


def print_now(filep, msg):
    """Call write_now with msg plus a newline."""
    write_now(filep, msg + '\n')


# Example use with the with..as statement:
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(prefix='some_prefix_here.', suffix='.log', dir='.', delete=False) as logf:
    print_now(logf, "this is a test1")
    time.sleep(20)
    print_now(logf, "this is a test2")
8

As @RyPeck said you can use flush() or set the file object to be unbuffered. But note the following (from https://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html?highlight=file%20flush#file.flush):

Flush the internal buffer, like stdio‘s fflush().

Note flush() does not necessarily write the file’s data to disk. Use flush() followed by os.fsync() to ensure this behavior.

And a quote from man 3 fflush:

Note that fflush() only flushes the user-space buffers provided by the C library. To ensure that the data is physically stored on disk the kernel buffers must be flushed too, for example, with sync(2) or fsync(2).

3
  • @Nam os.fsync() works perfectly on my system (RHEL 6.8 with conda-based Python 2.7.13). Are you sure you don't have filesystem problems or an overloaded system?
    – bgoodr
    Aug 16, 2017 at 15:15
  • I have no idea. I am on Ubuntu Desktop 16 and Python 2.7
    – Nam G VU
    Aug 16, 2017 at 15:42
  • I'd add that physical flushing to disk shouldn't really be necessary. It only makes a difference if you're about to unplug your HDD (in which case you should of course properly unmount it!) or expecting an imminent system crash. If the purpose is just to allow other programs to read the file in real time, it's perfectly sufficient to have the data in the kernel buffers. Feb 14, 2022 at 10:26

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