running a command line containing Pipes and displaying result to STDOUT
How would one call a shell command from Python which contains a pipe and capture the output?
Suppose the command was something like:
cat file.log | tail -1
The Perl equivalent of what I am trying to do would be something like:
my $string = `ca开发者_StackOverflowt file.log | tail -1`;
Use a subprocess.PIPE, as explained in the subprocess docs section "Replacing shell pipeline":
import subprocess
p1 = subprocess.Popen(["cat", "file.log"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
p2 = subprocess.Popen(["tail", "-1"], stdin=p1.stdout, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
p1.stdout.close() # Allow p1 to receive a SIGPIPE if p2 exits.
output,err = p2.communicate()
Or, using the sh
module, piping becomes composition of functions:
import sh
output = sh.tail(sh.cat('file.log'), '-1')
import subprocess
task = subprocess.Popen("cat file.log | tail -1", shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
data = task.stdout.read()
assert task.wait() == 0
Note that this does not capture stderr. And if you want to capture stderr as well, you'll need to use task.communicate()
; calling task.stdout.read()
and then task.stderr.read()
can deadlock if the buffer for stderr fills. If you want them combined, you should be able to use 2>&1
as part of the shell command.
But given your exact case,
task = subprocess.Popen(['tail', '-1', 'file.log'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
data = task.stdout.read()
assert task.wait() == 0
avoids the need for the pipe at all.
This:
import subprocess
p = subprocess.Popen("cat file.log | tail -1", shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
#for shell=False use absolute paths
p_stdout = p.stdout.read()
p_stderr = p.stderr.read()
print p_stdout
Or this should work:
import os
result = os.system("cat file.log | tail -1")
Another way similar to Popen would be:
command=r"""cat file.log | tail -1 """
output=subprocess.check_output(command, shell=True)
This is a fork from @chown with some improvements:
- an alias for
import subprocess
, makes easier when setting parameters - if you just want the output, you don't need to set
stderr
orstdin
when callingPopen
- for better formatting, it's recommended to decode the output
shell=True
is necessary, in order to call an interpreter for the command line
#!/usr/bin/python3
import subprocess as sp
p = sp.Popen("cat app.log | grep guido", shell=True, stdout=sp.PIPE)
output = p.stdout.read()
print(output.decode('utf-8'))
$ cat app.log
2017-10-14 22:34:12, User Removed [albert.wesker]
2017-10-26 18:14:02, User Removed [alexei.ivanovich]
2017-10-28 12:14:56, User Created [ivan.leon]
2017-11-14 09:22:07, User Created [guido.rossum]
$ python3 subproc.py
2017-11-14 09:22:07, User Created [guido.rossum]
Simple function for run shell command with many pipes
Using
res, err = eval_shell_cmd('pacman -Qii | grep MODIFIED | grep -v UN | cut -f 2')
Function
import subprocess
def eval_shell_cmd(command, debug=False):
"""
Eval shell command with pipes and return result
:param command: Shell command
:param debug: Debug flag
:return: Result string
"""
processes = command.split(' | ')
if debug:
print('Processes:', processes)
for index, value in enumerate(processes):
args = value.split(' ')
if debug:
print(index, args)
if index == 0:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
else:
p = subprocess.Popen(args, stdin=p.stdout, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
if index == len(processes) - 1:
result, error = p.communicate()
return result.decode('utf-8'), error
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