I know this is a repeat but I've looked through the answers and none of them make sense to why I'm getting ValueError: I/O operation on closed file in this specific python 2.7 function written here.
No error when separating this out to a stand alone sciptlet of:
import hashlib
import sys
sha256_hash = hashlib.sha256()
filename = 'result.txt'
with open(filename,"rb") as f:
# Read and update hash string value in blocks of 4K
for byte_block in iter(lambda: f.read(4096),b""):
sha256_hash.update(byte_block)
print(sha256_hash.hexdigest())
f.close()
But when I put this into a defined function I get a ValueError on the print function.
def sha256hashcheck():
with open( 'goldresult.txt' ,"rb") as f:
# Read and update hash string value in blocks of 4K
for byte_block in iter(lambda: f.read(4096),b""):
sha256_hash.update(byte_block)
print(sha256_hash.hexdigest())
f.close()
sha256hashcheck()
All the other defined functions run the close() method before exiting the function, plus I make a test file on the side that no function calls and use that as the open in the def and I still get the ValueError exception
File "parse-o365-ip-addrs.py", line 61, in sha256hashcheck
print(sha256_hash.hexdigest())
ValueError: I/O operation on closed file
Any pointers or suggestions?
TY
Here is my entire script .. yes I'm new to python .. :)
# Initial code - https://gist.github.com/cdodd/7679fb9c5f2a2e4700c7a9c7a53e2a19 (cdodd)
import xmltodict
from socket import inet_ntoa
from struct import pack
import sys
import urllib
import hashlib
# Read from URL
data = urllib.urlopen('https://support.content.office.net/en-us/static/O365IPAddresses.xml').read()
doc = xmltodict.parse(data)
# Read from local file
# doc = xmltodict.parse(open('/path/to/file.xml').read())
# set your variables
subnettestVar = 'test.txt'
subnetresultVar = 'result.txt'
subnetgoldVar = 'goldresult.txt'
sha256_hash = hashlib.sha256()
#define your functions or classes
def calcDottedNetmask(mask):
bits = 0xffffffff ^ (1 << 32 - mask) - 1
return inet_ntoa(pack('>I', bits))
# Work to be done, if x['@name'] still shells exception (KeyError) on 'OneNote' because OneNote has no IPv4 address
# Still need to work out either .get (dict) or try - exception errorhandling for that issue
def getsubnets():
sys.stdout = open( subnettestVar , 'w')
for x in doc['products']['product']:
if x['@name'] in ['o365', 'Identity', 'Planner', 'ProPlus', 'Yammer', 'Teams', 'SPO', 'LYO', 'WAC']:
for y in x['addresslist']:
if y['@type'] == 'IPv4':
for ip in y['address']:
if '/' not in ip:
ip, dot_mask = (ip, '255.255.255.255')
else:
ip, cidr_mask = ip.split('/')
dot_mask = calcDottedNetmask(int(cidr_mask))
print 'network-object ' + ip + ' ' + dot_mask
print
sys.stdout.close()
def removeblanklines():
with open( subnettestVar ,'r+') as file, open( subnetresultVar ,"w") as outfile:
for i in file.readlines():
if not i.strip():
continue
if i:
outfile.write(i)
file.close()
outfile.close()
def sha256hashcheck():
with open( 'goldresult.txt' ,"rb") as f:
# Read and update hash string value in blocks of 4K
for byte_block in iter(lambda: f.read(4096),b""):
sha256_hash.update(byte_block)
print(sha256_hash.hexdigest())
f.close()
#Run your full program with all functions, classes and variables
getsubnets()
removeblanklines()
sha256hashcheck()
with
statements, so you don't need to (and shouldn't) explicitly callclose
on your files. The whole point of thewith
is to provide guaranteed, deterministic cleanup. Beyond that, the error you're getting is for theprint
line (hexdigest
doesn't use a file at all), which indicates you've closedsys.stdout
somehow. Are you sure you've provided complete code?iter
withb
, using parentheses withprint
, etc.). Nothing about it is incompatible with Python 2.7, but I'm not seeing anything specific to 2.7 here either.python-2.7
(I added the generalpython
tag), so I was trying to figure out if they had some reason to believe the problem was 2.7 specific.