How do I pipe a subprocess call to a text file?

subprocess.call(["/home/myuser/run.sh", "/tmp/ad_xml",  "/tmp/video_xml"])

RIght now I have a script that I run. When I run it and it hits this line, it starts printing stuff because run.sh has prints in it.

How do I pipe this to a text file also? (And also print, if possible)

Answers:

Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Method 1

If you want to write the output to a file you can use the stdout-argument of subprocess.call.

It takes either

  • None (the default, stdout is inherited from the parent (your script))
  • subprocess.PIPE (allows you to pipe from one command/process to another)
  • a file object or a file descriptor (what you want, to have the output written to a file)

You need to open a file with something like open and pass the object or file descriptor integer to call:

f = open("blah.txt", "w")
subprocess.call(["/home/myuser/run.sh", "/tmp/ad_xml",  "/tmp/video_xml"], stdout=f)

I’m guessing any valid file-like object would work, like a socket (gasp :)), but I’ve never tried.

As marcog mentions in the comments you might want to redirect stderr as well, you can redirect this to the same location as stdout with stderr=subprocess.STDOUT. Any of the above mentioned values works as well, you can redirect to different places.

Method 2

The options for popen can be used in call

args, 
bufsize=0, 
executable=None, 
stdin=None, 
stdout=None, 
stderr=None, 
preexec_fn=None, 
close_fds=False, 
shell=False, 
cwd=None, 
env=None, 
universal_newlines=False, 
startupinfo=None, 
creationflags=0

So…

myoutput = open('somefile.txt', 'w')
subprocess.call(["/home/myuser/run.sh", "/tmp/ad_xml",  "/tmp/video_xml"], stdout=myoutput)

Then you can do what you want with myoutput

Also, you can do something closer to a piped output like this.

dmesg | grep hda

would be:

p1 = Popen(["dmesg"], stdout=PIPE)
p2 = Popen(["grep", "hda"], stdin=p1.stdout, stdout=PIPE)
output = p2.communicate()[0]

There’s plenty of lovely, useful info on the python manual page.


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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