runs
has improved versions of call()
, check_call()
, check_output()
,
and run()
from Python's subprocess
module that handle multiple commands and
blocks of text, fix some defects, and add some features.
import runs
runs('''
ls
df -k # or perhaps -h?
echo 'Done and done'
''')
---
subprocess
is essential but:
- You can only run one command at a time
- Commands to subprocess must be either a sequence of strings or a string,
depending on whether
shell=True
or not - Results are returned by default as bytes and not strings
---
The runs
functions let you run a block of text as a sequence of subprocess
calls.
runs
provides call-compatible replacements for the functions
subprocess.call()
, subprocess.check_call()
, subprocess.check_output()
,
and subprocess.run()
Each replacement function takes a block of text, which is split into individual command lines, or a list of commands, and returns a list of values, one for each command. A block of text can contain line continuations, and comments, which are ignored.
The replacement functions also add optional logging, error handling, and lazy evaluation, and use UTF-8 encoding by default.
The module runs
is callable - runs()
is a synonym for runs.run()
.
EXAMPLES:
# ``runs()`` or ``runs.run()`` writes to stdout and stderr just as if you'd run
# the commands from the terminal
import runs
runs('echo "hello, world!"') # prints hello, world!
# runs.check_output() returns a list, one string result for each command
results = check_output('''
echo line one # Here's line one.
echo 'line " two "' # and two!
''')
assert results == ['line one', 'line " two "']
# Line continuations work too, either single or double
runs('''
ls -cail
# One command that takes many lines.
g++ -DDEBUG -O0 -g -std=c++17 -pthread -I ./include -lm -lstdc++ \
-Wall -Wextra -Wno-strict-aliasing -Wpedantic \\
-MMD -MP -MF -c src/tests.cpp -o build/./src/tests.cpp.o
echo DONE
''')
NOTES:
Exactly like subprocess
, runs
differs from the shell in a few ways, so
you can't just paste your shell scripts in:
- Redirection doesn't work.
result = runs.check_output('echo foo > bar.txt')
assert result == ['foo > bar.txt\n']
- Pipes don't work.
result = runs.check_output('echo foo | wc')
assert result == ['foo | wc \n']
- Environment variables are not expanded in command lines
result = runs.check_output('echo $FOO', env={'FOO': 'bah!'})
assert result == ['$FOO\n']
Environment variables are exported to the subprocess, absolutely, but no environment variable expension happens on command lines.
runs(
commands,
*args,
iterate=False,
encoding='utf8',
on_exception=None,
echo=False,
**kwargs,
)
Call subprocess.run()
on each command.
Return a list of subprocess.CompletedProcess
instances.
See the help for subprocess.run()
for more information.
- Arguments:
- commands:
- A string, which gets split into lines on line endings, or a list of strings.
- args:
- Positional arguments to
subprocess.run()
(but prefer keyword arguments!) - on_exception:
If
on_exception
isFalse
, the default, exceptions fromsubprocess.run()
are raised as usual.If
on_exception
is True, they are ignored.If
on_exception
is a callable, the line that caused the exception is passed to it.If
on_exception
is a string, the line causing the exception is printed, prefixed with that string.- echo:
- If
echo
isFalse
, the default, then commands are silently executed. Ifecho
isTrue
, commands are printed prefixed with$
Ifecho
is a string, commands are printed prefixed with that string Ifecho
is callable, then each command is passed to it. - iterate:
If
iterate
isFalse
, the default, then a list of results is returned.Otherwise an iterator of results which is returned, allowing for lazy evaluation.
- encoding:
- Like the argument to
subprocess.run()
, except the default is'utf8'
- kwargs:
- Named arguments passed on to
subprocess.run()
runs.call(
commands,
*args,
iterate=False,
encoding='utf8',
on_exception=None,
echo=False,
**kwargs,
)
Call subprocess.call()
on each command.
Return a list of integer returncodes, one for each command executed.
See the help for subprocess.call()
for more information.
- Arguments:
- commands:
- A string, which gets split into lines on line endings, or a list of strings.
- args:
- Positional arguments to
subprocess.call()
(but prefer keyword arguments!) - on_exception:
If
on_exception
isFalse
, the default, exceptions fromsubprocess.call()
are raised as usual.If
on_exception
is True, they are ignored.If
on_exception
is a callable, the line that caused the exception is passed to it.If
on_exception
is a string, the line causing the exception is printed, prefixed with that string.- echo:
- If
echo
isFalse
, the default, then commands are silently executed. Ifecho
isTrue
, commands are printed prefixed with$
Ifecho
is a string, commands are printed prefixed with that string Ifecho
is callable, then each command is passed to it. - iterate:
If
iterate
isFalse
, the default, then a list of results is returned.Otherwise an iterator of results which is returned, allowing for lazy evaluation.
- encoding:
- Like the argument to
subprocess.call()
, except the default is'utf8'
- kwargs:
- Named arguments passed on to
subprocess.call()
runs.check_call(
commands,
*args,
iterate=False,
encoding='utf8',
on_exception=None,
echo=False,
**kwargs,
)
Call subprocess.check_call()
on each command.
If any command has a non-zero returncode, raise subprocess.CallProcessError
.
See the help for subprocess.check_call()
for more information.
- Arguments:
- commands:
- A string, which gets split into lines on line endings, or a list of strings.
- args:
- Positional arguments to
subprocess.check_call()
(but prefer keyword arguments!) - on_exception:
If
on_exception
isFalse
, the default, exceptions fromsubprocess.check_call()
are raised as usual.If
on_exception
is True, they are ignored.If
on_exception
is a callable, the line that caused the exception is passed to it.If
on_exception
is a string, the line causing the exception is printed, prefixed with that string.- echo:
- If
echo
isFalse
, the default, then commands are silently executed. Ifecho
isTrue
, commands are printed prefixed with$
Ifecho
is a string, commands are printed prefixed with that string Ifecho
is callable, then each command is passed to it. - iterate:
If
iterate
isFalse
, the default, then a list of results is returned.Otherwise an iterator of results which is returned, allowing for lazy evaluation.
- encoding:
- Like the argument to
subprocess.check_call()
, except the default is'utf8'
- kwargs:
- Named arguments passed on to
subprocess.check_call()
runs.check_output(
commands,
*args,
iterate=False,
encoding='utf8',
on_exception=None,
echo=False,
**kwargs,
)
Call subprocess.check_output()
on each command.
If a command has a non-zero exit code, raise a subprocess.CallProcessError
.
Otherwise, return the results as a list of strings, one for each command.
See the help for subprocess.check_output()
for more information.
- Arguments:
- commands:
- A string, which gets split into lines on line endings, or a list of strings.
- args:
- Positional arguments to
subprocess.check_output()
(but prefer keyword arguments!) - on_exception:
If
on_exception
isFalse
, the default, exceptions fromsubprocess.check_output()
are raised as usual.If
on_exception
is True, they are ignored.If
on_exception
is a callable, the line that caused the exception is passed to it.If
on_exception
is a string, the line causing the exception is printed, prefixed with that string.- echo:
- If
echo
isFalse
, the default, then commands are silently executed. Ifecho
isTrue
, commands are printed prefixed with$
Ifecho
is a string, commands are printed prefixed with that string Ifecho
is callable, then each command is passed to it. - iterate:
If
iterate
isFalse
, the default, then a list of results is returned.Otherwise an iterator of results which is returned, allowing for lazy evaluation.
- encoding:
- Like the argument to
subprocess.check_output()
, except the default is'utf8'
- kwargs:
- Named arguments passed on to
subprocess.check_output()
(automatically generated by doks on 2020-12-16T13:48:26.579866)