How to call a Perl script from Python, piping inpu

2019-02-10 06:44发布

问题:

I'm hacking some support for DomainKeys and DKIM into an open source email marketing program, which uses a python script to send the actual emails via SMTP. I decided to go the quick and dirty route, and just write a perl script that accepts an email message from STDIN, signs it, then returns it signed.

What I would like to do, is from the python script, pipe the email text that's in a string to the perl script, and store the result in another variable, so I can send the email signed. I'm not exactly a python guru, however, and I can't seem to find a good way to do this. I'm pretty sure I can use something like os.system for this, but piping a variable to the perl script is something that seems to elude me.

In short: How can I pipe a variable from a python script, to a perl script, and store the result in Python?

EDIT: I forgot to include that the system I'm working with only has python v2.3

回答1:

os.popen() will return a tuple with the stdin and stdout of the subprocess.



回答2:

Use subprocess. Here is the Python script:

#!/usr/bin/python

import subprocess

var = "world"

pipe = subprocess.Popen(["./x.pl", var], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)

result = pipe.stdout.read()

print result

And here is the Perl script:

#!/usr/bin/perl

use strict;
use warnings;

my $name = shift;

print "Hello $name!\n";


回答3:

from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
p = Popen(['./foo.pl'], stdin=PIPE, stdout=PIPE)
p.stdin.write(the_input)
p.stdin.close()
the_output = p.stdout.read()


回答4:

"I'm pretty sure I can use something like os.system for this, but piping a variable to the perl script is something that seems to elude me."

Correct. The subprocess module is like os.system, but provides the piping features you're looking for.



回答5:

I'm sure there's a reason you're going down the route you've chosen, but why not just do the signing in Python?

How are you signing it? Maybe we could provide some assitance in writing a python implementation?



回答6:

I tried also to do that only configure how to make it work as

pipe = subprocess.Popen(
            ['someperlfile.perl', 'param(s)'],
            stdin=subprocess.PIPE
        )
response = pipe.communicate()[0]

I wish this will assist u to make it work.