Here's a few things I tried to write output to a python subprocess pipe.
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
p = Popen('less', stdin=PIPE)
for x in xrange(100):
p.communicate('Line number %d.\n' % x)
This seemed like the most obvious solution but it fails miserably. It seems that the first call to communicate
also closes the pipe and the second loop raises an exception.
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
p = Popen('less', stdin=PIPE)
for x in xrange(100):
p.stdin.write('Line number %d.\n' % x)
This is expressly stated to be a bad idea in the docs, but it works - sort of. I get some weird behavior. There's no call to p.wait()
(which communicate
does by default) so anything after the loop runs before the subproccess (less
in this case) is closed. Adding a call to wait
after the loop causes even weirder behavior.
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
out = []
p = Popen('less', stdin=PIPE)
for x in xrange(100):
out.append('Line number %d.' % x)
p.communicate('\n'.join(out))
This works. We only have one call to communicate
and that calls wait
properly. Unfortunately, we have to create the entire output in memory before writing any of it out. We can do better:
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
p = Popen('less', stdin=PIPE)
for x in xrange(100):
p.stdin.write('Line number %d.\n' % x)
p.stdin.close()
p.wait()
The key it to close stdin (flush and send EOF) before calling wait
. This is actually what communicate
does internally minus all the stdout and stderr stuff I don't need. If I wanted to force the buffer to remain empty, I suppose I could do p.stdin.flush()
on each loop, but why? Note that there probably should be some error checking on write (like there is in the source of communicate
. Perhaps something like:
import errno
...
try:
p.stdin.write(input)
except IOError as e:
if e.errno != errno.EPIPE and e.errno != errno.EINVAL:
raise
Note that errno.EPIPE
is "Broken pipe" and errno.EINVAL
is "Invalid argument".
So the final code looks like this:
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
import errno
p = Popen('less', stdin=PIPE)
for x in xrange(100):
line = 'Line number %d.\n' % x
try:
p.stdin.write(line)
except IOError as e:
if e.errno == errno.EPIPE or e.errno == errno.EINVAL:
# Stop loop on "Invalid pipe" or "Invalid argument".
# No sense in continuing with broken pipe.
break
else:
# Raise any other error.
raise
p.stdin.close()
p.wait()
print 'All done!' # This should always be printed below any output written to less.
hey so I don't understand your code writes to an inputstream? I am trying to write to an inputstream using java to set initial text to the console or idea console. https://stackoverflow.com/questions/65145471/write-to-ide-console-and-read-the-text-later-with-scanner . Or is it an outputstream? I don't know enough python to tell.