sasa
sasa

Reputation: 61

How do I create a subprocess in Python?

I would like to create a subprocess of a process.

What would be a working example which shows how to accomplish this?

Upvotes: 6

Views: 15708

Answers (6)

LingYan Meng
LingYan Meng

Reputation: 774

Based on user225312's answer, I prepared the below one liner, it may help you to test the subprocess:

python -c "import subprocess;
output = subprocess.Popen(['uname', '-a'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]; 
print output"

result like: Linux xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 3.10.0-957.1.3.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Thu Nov 29 14:49:43 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

Upvotes: 0

Zohab Ali
Zohab Ali

Reputation: 9584

This is what worked for me if you want to run a simple command instead of giving a seperate file

import subprocess
process = subprocess.Popen(command, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
process.wait()
print process.returncode

To get returncode of process you can use process.returncode To get response you can use process.communicate()

in case if you are confuse you can just test this code by using command="ls"

if you are getting returncode other than 0 then you can check here what that error code means: http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/exitcodes.html

For more details about Subprocess: http://docs.python.org/library/subprocess.html

Upvotes: 1

imp
imp

Reputation: 2087

if os.name == 'nt':
startupinfo = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
startupinfo.dwFlags |= subprocess._subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
subprocess.call(os.popen(tempFileName), shell=True)
os.remove(tempFileName)

Upvotes: 0

AXE Labs
AXE Labs

Reputation: 4561

Launching and monitoring a subprocess:

import subprocess, time, os, signal
args=['/usr/bin/vmstat','-n','2']
app=subprocess.Popen(args=args, stdout=open('somefile','w'))
print "Your app's PID is %s. You can now process data..." % app.pid
time.sleep(5)
if app.poll() == None: print "Process is still running after 5s."
print "The app outputed %s bytes." % len(open('somefile','r').read())
print "Stopping the process..."
os.kill(app.pid, signal.SIGTERM)

There is more to it. Just check the Popen docs.

Upvotes: 3

user225312
user225312

Reputation: 131807

Start with the subprocess documentation.

If you want to get the output:

>>> import subprocess
>>> output = subprocess.Popen(['uname', '-a'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
>>> output
'Linux'

If you just want to call and not deal with the output:

>>> subprocess.call(['echo', 'Hi'])
Hi
0

subprocess.check_call is the same except that it throws up a CalledProcessError in case the command is called with invalid parameters.

A good subprocess tutorial.

Upvotes: 6

dan_waterworth
dan_waterworth

Reputation: 6481

import subprocess

subprocess.call(['echo', 'hello world'])

Upvotes: 1

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