Python Interactive Shell - outputting to stdout?
Avi Berkovich
cold_fusion at fastmail.fm
Mon Dec 27 10:40:53 EST 2004
Hey Steve,
Well, I've tried flush() before, but I didn't know about the "-u" switch.
Thank you for tinkering on this, I shall post again if I make any progress.
Avi
Steve Holden wrote:
> Steve Holden wrote:
>
>> Avi Berkovich wrote:
>>
>>> Hey,
>>>
>>> I can't make it work, I don't get any data from either stdout nor
>>> stderr.
>>> If I send lines and then close the stdin pipe, I may get an exception
>>> message from several lines up.
>>>
>>> I tried manually reading from the stdout pipe, but it just blocks and
>>> hangs no matter what I send over via the stdin pipe.
>>>
>>> This behavior isn't presented by the command line interpreter by any
>>> chance.
>>>
>>> Any suggestions?
>>
>>
>>
>> Yes: post your code along with messages (if any)!
>>
>> regards
>> Steve
>
>
> Sorry, for some reason I can no longer find the message you posted the
> code in -- it didn't get correctly threaded in Mozilla. Anyway, I can't
> say that I exactly understand what's going on, but here are a couple of
> observations:
>
> 1. The interpreter performs buffering even when running in interactive
> mode unless it can see a terminal (which here it can't). Hence adding a
> "-u" to the interpreter command line is useful.
>
> 2. There's a problem with your stop condition, which is why the attached
> modified version sleeps before closing the pipe to the interpreter.
>
> import threading
> import sys
> import popen2
>
> class Piper(threading.Thread):
>
> def __init__(self, readPipe, output):
> threading.Thread.__init__(self)
>
> if not isinstance(readPipe, file):
> raise TypeError, "readPipe parameter must be of File type"
> #if not isinstance(output, file):
> # raise TypeError, "output parameter must be of File type"
>
> self.readPipe = readPipe
> self.output = output
> self.toStop = False
>
> def run(self):
> print "Running"
> while not self.toStop and not self.readPipe.closed:
> read = self.readPipe.readline()
> self.output.write(read)
> self.output.flush()
> print "Stopped"
>
> def stop(self):
> self.toStop = True
>
>
> if __name__ == "__main__":
> r, w = popen2.popen4('c:\\python24\\python.exe -u')
> piper = Piper(r, sys.stdout)
> piper.start()
> w.write("print 'Hello!'\r\n")
> w.flush()
> w.write("print 'Goodbye!'\r\n")
> w.flush()
> import time; time.sleep(2)
> w.close()
> #import time; time.sleep(3)
> #r.close()
> piper.stop()
>
> Various other bits and pieces of messing about didn't really yield any
> useful conclusions, so I pass this on only in the hope that you may be
> more motivated to follow up now you can actually see some interpreter
> output. I would have thought the flush() calls would have made output
> appear one line at a time, but sadly they do not.
>
> regards
> Steve
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