1419

How do I exit a script early, like the die() command in PHP?

2

14 Answers 14

1823
import sys
sys.exit()

details from the sys module documentation:

sys.exit([arg])

Exit from Python. This is implemented by raising the SystemExit exception, so cleanup actions specified by finally clauses of try statements are honored, and it is possible to intercept the exit attempt at an outer level.

The optional argument arg can be an integer giving the exit status (defaulting to zero), or another type of object. If it is an integer, zero is considered “successful termination” and any nonzero value is considered “abnormal termination” by shells and the like. Most systems require it to be in the range 0-127, and produce undefined results otherwise. Some systems have a convention for assigning specific meanings to specific exit codes, but these are generally underdeveloped; Unix programs generally use 2 for command line syntax errors and 1 for all other kind of errors. If another type of object is passed, None is equivalent to passing zero, and any other object is printed to stderr and results in an exit code of 1. In particular, sys.exit("some error message") is a quick way to exit a program when an error occurs.

Since exit() ultimately “only” raises an exception, it will only exit the process when called from the main thread, and the exception is not intercepted.

Note that this is the 'nice' way to exit. @glyphtwistedmatrix below points out that if you want a 'hard exit', you can use os._exit(*errorcode*), though it's likely os-specific to some extent (it might not take an errorcode under windows, for example), and it definitely is less friendly since it doesn't let the interpreter do any cleanup before the process dies. On the other hand, it does kill the entire process, including all running threads, while sys.exit() (as it says in the docs) only exits if called from the main thread, with no other threads running.

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  • 19
    Presumably sys.exit() doesn't work (doesn't kill the process, just kills the thread) if raised by a background thread?
    – user607021
    Commented Feb 7, 2011 at 19:53
  • 2
    @cesium62: Yes, sys.exit() raises a SystemExit exception in the current thread. Commented Oct 23, 2012 at 14:34
  • 20
    Is there a way to end a script without raising an exception? I am already passing relevant flags out of the script with print to stdout piping into Popen, so the exception in this case is causing more trouble than it is solving.
    – Elliot
    Commented Oct 1, 2014 at 15:26
  • 5
    Why, when I use this method do I get the following warning: UserWarning: To exit: use 'exit', 'quit', or Ctrl-D. warn("To exit: use 'exit', 'quit', or Ctrl-D.", stacklevel=1)
    – Bill
    Commented Oct 31, 2016 at 18:11
  • 2
    If you're using Tkinter it will not stop the root process mainLoop and the window it displays. For this, you need the additional line of root.destroy(). Commented Jul 20, 2017 at 17:17
518

A simple way to terminate a Python script early is to use the built-in quit() function. There is no need to import any library, and it is efficient and simple.

Example:

#do stuff
if this == that:
  quit()
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  • 136
    also sys.exit() will terminate all python scripts, but quit() only terminates the script which spawned it. Commented Dec 3, 2013 at 12:34
  • 5
    Do you know if this command works differently in python 2 and python 3?
    – David C.
    Commented Dec 27, 2016 at 18:33
  • 6
    for me it says 'quit' is not defined. I am using python 3.
    – Vincenzooo
    Commented Nov 30, 2018 at 3:37
  • 7
    I'm in python 3.7 and quit() stops the interpreter and closes the script. Commented Jan 15, 2019 at 5:41
  • 33
    According to the documentation quit() is "useful for the interactive interpreter shell and should not be used in programs."
    – wovano
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 9:05
153

Another way is:

raise SystemExit
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  • 47
    @Alessa: it looks more elegant, but it's not recommended: you're directly raising a builtin exception instead of the preferable (and overwrittable) sys.exit wrapper
    – MestreLion
    Commented May 4, 2012 at 7:06
  • 5
    This is a perfect way for me: Just quit the running script but not quit the IDLE
    – rml
    Commented Mar 24, 2018 at 4:26
101

You can also use simply exit().

Keep in mind that sys.exit(), exit(), quit(), and os._exit(0) kill the Python interpreter. Therefore, if it appears in a script called from another script by execfile(), it stops execution of both scripts.

See "Stop execution of a script called with execfile" to avoid this.

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80

While you should generally prefer sys.exit because it is more "friendly" to other code, all it actually does is raise an exception.

If you are sure that you need to exit a process immediately, and you might be inside of some exception handler which would catch SystemExit, there is another function - os._exit - which terminates immediately at the C level and does not perform any of the normal tear-down of the interpreter; for example, hooks registered with the "atexit" module are not executed.

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  • 1
    Used in AWS Glue Job, os._exit() is the only way to terminate the job properly without errors.
    – Jérémy
    Commented Sep 22, 2021 at 9:47
  • @Jérémy but is it a graceful shutdown? do you know if you can have hanging things after this? New to Python so ignore my lack of knowledge Commented Nov 3, 2021 at 8:24
  • 2
    @bogdan.rusu, os._exit() exits the entire process without any cleanup. Since in AWS the running VM instance will be discarded at the end of the job, this is not a problem for me.
    – Jérémy
    Commented Nov 3, 2021 at 10:56
75

I've just found out that when writing a multithreadded app, raise SystemExit and sys.exit() both kills only the running thread. On the other hand, os._exit() exits the whole process. This was discussed in "Why does sys.exit() not exit when called inside a thread in Python?".

The example below has 2 threads. Kenny and Cartman. Cartman is supposed to live forever, but Kenny is called recursively and should die after 3 seconds. (recursive calling is not the best way, but I had other reasons)

If we also want Cartman to die when Kenny dies, Kenny should go away with os._exit, otherwise, only Kenny will die and Cartman will live forever.

import threading
import time
import sys
import os

def kenny(num=0):
    if num > 3:
        # print("Kenny dies now...")
        # raise SystemExit #Kenny will die, but Cartman will live forever
        # sys.exit(1) #Same as above

        print("Kenny dies and also kills Cartman!")
        os._exit(1)
    while True:
        print("Kenny lives: {0}".format(num))
        time.sleep(1)
        num += 1
        kenny(num)

def cartman():
    i = 0
    while True:
        print("Cartman lives: {0}".format(i))
        i += 1
        time.sleep(1)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    daemon_kenny = threading.Thread(name='kenny', target=kenny)
    daemon_cartman = threading.Thread(name='cartman', target=cartman)
    daemon_kenny.setDaemon(True)
    daemon_cartman.setDaemon(True)

    daemon_kenny.start()
    daemon_cartman.start()
    daemon_kenny.join()
    daemon_cartman.join()
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  • 7
    This seem to be the only way to deal with obnoxiously deferred callbacks! (i.e. multi-threaded methods.)
    – not2qubit
    Commented Oct 11, 2018 at 19:45
  • 5
    Well done. None of the other answers directly address multiple threads, only scripts spawning other scripts. Commented Nov 7, 2019 at 1:39
36
from sys import exit
exit()

As a parameter you can pass an exit code, which will be returned to OS. Default is 0.

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  • 3
    in my case I didn't even need to import exit.
    – Kostanos
    Commented Nov 21, 2013 at 21:44
  • 13
    Just for posterity on the above comment - exit() and sys.exit() are not the same thing. Don't use the built-in exit() in scripts, this is just a helper for the interactive shell - use sys.exit() Commented May 22, 2019 at 23:30
25

I'm a total novice but surely this is cleaner and more controlled

def main():
    try:
        Answer = 1/0
        print  Answer
    except:
        print 'Program terminated'
        return
    print 'You wont see this'

if __name__ == '__main__': 
    main()

...

Program terminated

than

import sys
def main():
    try:
        Answer = 1/0
        print  Answer
    except:
        print 'Program terminated'
        sys.exit()
    print 'You wont see this'

if __name__ == '__main__': 
    main()

...

Program terminated Traceback (most recent call last): File "Z:\Directory\testdieprogram.py", line 12, in main() File "Z:\Directory\testdieprogram.py", line 8, in main sys.exit() SystemExit

Edit

The point being that the program ends smoothly and peacefully, rather than "I'VE STOPPED !!!!"

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  • 26
    One problem would be if you're in nested functions and just want to exit, you either have to send a flag all the way back up to the top function or you'll just return to the next level up.
    – horta
    Commented Mar 30, 2015 at 13:42
  • 18
    This is an absolute nonsense if you're trying to suggest that you can use return to terminate the script. All the return is doing is returning a value and a flow of control to the calling function. There it continues with the execution right after the call of the function which called return. Of course, if the return is the last statement in your script as in your example, then the script is terminated right after it is called. Commented Jan 16, 2017 at 22:24
  • 4
    There's a strong argument to be made for this approach: (1) "exit" from the middle is arguably a "goto", hence a natural aversion; (2) "exit" in libraries are definitely bad practice (and anything can become a library), since what a library considers "unrecoverable" is usually fine to the caller. (Note: using exceptions for exits is a python practical work-around for C/C++/Java devs always inappropriately calling exit -- hence python programmers may not notice the stench of this code smell as much); and lastly, (3) multi-threaded code (which pythonistas have historically just ignored).
    – michael
    Commented Dec 8, 2017 at 4:02
  • 2
    This is a philosophically different approach - OP is asking how to stop a script "early"; this answer is saying "don't": include a path to finish gracefully, return control to the main method and run to completion. I think this approach should be preferred when available.
    – scign
    Commented Aug 14, 2021 at 16:17
18

Problem

In my practice, there was even a case when it was necessary to kill an entire multiprocessor application from one of those processes.

The following functions work well if your application uses the only main process. But no one of the following functions didn't work in my case as the application had many other alive processes.

  • quit()
  • exit(0)
  • os._exit(0)
  • sys.exit(0)
  • os.kill(os.getppid(), 9) - where os.getppid() is the pid of parent process

The last one killed the main process and itself but the rest processes were still alive.

Solution

I had to kill it by external command and finally found the solution using pkill.

import os

# This can be called even in process worker and will kill
# whole application included correlated processes as well
os.system(f"pkill -f {os.path.basename(__file__)}")
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  • 2
    Your exact code didn't work for me, but you pointed me in the right direction: os.system("pkill -f " + sys.argv[0])
    – Grumoll
    Commented Jul 27, 2022 at 9:19
11

In Python 3.5, I tried to incorporate similar code without use of modules (e.g. sys, Biopy) other than what's built-in to stop the script and print an error message to my users. Here's my example:

## My example:
if "ATG" in my_DNA: 
    ## <Do something & proceed...>
else: 
    print("Start codon is missing! Check your DNA sequence!")
    exit() ## as most folks said above

Later on, I found it is more succinct to just throw an error:

## My example revised:
if "ATG" in my_DNA: 
    ## <Do something & proceed...>
else: 
    raise ValueError("Start codon is missing! Check your DNA sequence!")
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  • 1
    I completely agree that it's better to raise an exception for any error that can be handled by the application. But the question was how to terminate a Python script, so this is not really a (new) answer to the question.
    – wovano
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 9:28
3

Just put at the end of your code quit() and that should close a python script.

3

In Python 3.9, you can also use: raise SystemExit("Because I said so").

1

My two cents.

Python 3.8.1, Windows 10, 64-bit.

sys.exit() does not work directly for me.

I have several nexted loops.

First I declare a boolean variable, which I call immediateExit.

So, in the beginning of the program code I write:

immediateExit = False

Then, starting from the most inner (nested) loop exception, I write:

            immediateExit = True
            sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 0.')

Then I go into the immediate continuation of the outer loop, and before anything else being executed by the code, I write:

    if immediateExit:
        sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 1.')

Depending on the complexity, sometimes the above statement needs to be repeated also in except sections, etc.

    if immediateExit:
        sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 1.5.')

The custom message is for my personal debugging, as well, as the numbers are for the same purpose - to see where the script really exits.

'CSV file corrupted 1.5.'

In my particular case I am processing a CSV file, which I do not want the software to touch, if the software detects it is corrupted. Therefore for me it is very important to exit the whole Python script immediately after detecting the possible corruption.

And following the gradual sys.exit-ing from all the loops I manage to do it.

Full code: (some changes were needed because it is proprietory code for internal tasks):

immediateExit = False
start_date = '1994.01.01'
end_date = '1994.01.04'
resumedDate = end_date


end_date_in_working_days = False
while not end_date_in_working_days:
    try:
        end_day_position = working_days.index(end_date)

        end_date_in_working_days = True
    except ValueError: # try statement from end_date in workdays check
        print(current_date_and_time())
        end_date = input('>> {} is not in the list of working days. Change the date (YYYY.MM.DD): '.format(end_date))
        print('New end date: ', end_date, '\n')
        continue


    csv_filename = 'test.csv'
    csv_headers = 'date,rate,brand\n' # not real headers, this is just for example
    try:
        with open(csv_filename, 'r') as file:
            print('***\nOld file {} found. Resuming the file by re-processing the last date lines.\nThey shall be deleted and re-processed.\n***\n'.format(csv_filename))
            last_line = file.readlines()[-1]
            start_date = last_line.split(',')[0] # assigning the start date to be the last like date.
            resumedDate = start_date

            if last_line == csv_headers:
                pass
            elif start_date not in working_days:
                print('***\n\n{} file might be corrupted. Erase or edit the file to continue.\n***'.format(csv_filename))
                immediateExit = True
                sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 0.')
            else:
                start_date = last_line.split(',')[0] # assigning the start date to be the last like date.
                print('\nLast date:', start_date)
                file.seek(0) # setting the cursor at the beginnning of the file
                lines = file.readlines() # reading the file contents into a list
                count = 0 # nr. of lines with last date
                for line in lines: #cycling through the lines of the file
                    if line.split(',')[0] == start_date: # cycle for counting the lines with last date in it.
                        count = count + 1
        if immediateExit:
            sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 1.')
        for iter in range(count): # removing the lines with last date
            lines.pop()
        print('\n{} lines removed from date: {} in {} file'.format(count, start_date, csv_filename))



        if immediateExit:
            sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 1.2.')
        with open(csv_filename, 'w') as file:
            print('\nFile', csv_filename, 'open for writing')
            file.writelines(lines)

            print('\nRemoving', count, 'lines from', csv_filename)

        fileExists = True

    except:
        if immediateExit:
            sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 1.5.')
        with open(csv_filename, 'w') as file:
            file.write(csv_headers)
            fileExists = False
    if immediateExit:
        sys.exit('CSV file corrupted 2.')

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  • 2
    Thanks for your contribution, but to me this answer makes no sense. Since you only post a few snippets of code instead of a complete example it's hard to understand what you mean. With only the lines of code you posted here the script would exit immediately. I can only guess that you have a try-catch block, which catches the SystemExit exception that is already mentioned in other answers. If you would rewrite your answer with a full working example of how you would cleanly exit an application (i.e. by performing some necessary shutdown actions) I think your post could be a useful addition.
    – wovano
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 9:21
  • Thank you for your feedback. Now I added the part of the code, which concerns the exit statements.
    – Matthew
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 12:41
  • Okay, this gives a bit more context :) Although now I think that your solution is actually a work-around for very bad programming patterns. First of all, you should never use except: without exception type. If you just use except Exception: (or even a more detailed exception type if possible), the sys.exit() would work as intended and you would not need this work-around.
    – wovano
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 15:28
  • Secondly, it seems like you try to do quite a number of things in one method, or probably even in the global file scope. It would help to break down your code in smaller pieces (functions), for example: (1) load input file, (2) process data, and (3) write output file. Then if step 1 would fail, you would skip steps 2 and 3. You could raise an exception anywhere during the loading step and you could handle the exception in one place. Using sys.exit() is really a sort of last-resort solution for critical errors. Just my two cents :)
    – wovano
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 15:29
  • In general, I do not see a global exit/halt functionality in Python, and I am forced to make it this way. The CSV file is really critical for me, so I guard it by all means possible, even if the means might look ugly. I am reading The Hichhicker's Guide to Python to improve my style.
    – Matthew
    Commented Mar 25, 2020 at 16:26
-1

use exit and quit in .py files and sys.exit for exe files

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