When running bash command using subprocess, I might run into situation where the command is not valid. In this case, bash would return an error messsage. How can we catch this message? I would like to save this message to a log file.
The following is an example, where I try to list files in a non-existed directory.
try:
subprocess.check_call(["ls", "/home/non"])
df = subprocess.Popen(["ls", "/home/non"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
output, err = df.communicate()
# process outputs
except Exception as error:
print error
sys.exit(1)
Bash would prints "ls: cannot access /home/non: No such file or directory". How can I get this error message? The error caught by the except line is clearly different, it says "Command '['ls', '/home/non']' returned non-zero exit status 2".
You can redirect stderr to a file object:
from subprocess import PIPE, CalledProcessError, check_call, Popen
with open("log.txt", "w") as f:
try:
check_call(["ls", "/home/non"], stderr=f)
df = Popen(["ls", "/home/non"], stdout=PIPE)
output, err = df.communicate()
except CalledProcessError as e:
print(e)
exit(1)
Output to log.txt:
ls: cannot access /home/non: No such file or directory
If you want the message in the except:
try:
check_call(["ls", "/home/non"])
df = Popen(["ls", "/home/non"], stdout=PIPE)
output, err = df.communicate()
except CalledProcessError as e:
print(e.message)
For python 2.6 the e.message
won't work. You can use a similar version of python 2.7's check_output
that will work with python 2.6:
from subprocess import PIPE, CalledProcessError, Popen
def check_output(*args, **kwargs):
process = Popen(stdout=PIPE, *args, **kwargs)
out, err = process.communicate()
ret = process.poll()
if ret:
cmd = kwargs.get("args")
if cmd is None:
cmd = args[0]
error = CalledProcessError(ret, cmd)
error.out = out
error.message = err
raise error
return out
try:
out = check_output(["ls", "/home"], stderr=PIPE)
df = Popen(["ls", "/home/non"], stdout=PIPE)
output, err = df.communicate()
except CalledProcessError as e:
print(e.message)
else:
print(out)
"ls: cannot access /home/non: No such file or directory" is generated by ls
command, not bash
here.
If you want to handle non-existing files using exception handling then use subprocess.check_output()
:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from subprocess import check_output, STDOUT, CalledProcessError
try:
output = check_output(['ls', 'nonexistent'], stderr=STDOUT)
except CalledProcessError as exc:
print(exc.output)
else:
assert 0
Output
ls: cannot access nonexistent: No such file or directory