test_ok1/py/process/cmdexec.py

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"""
module defining basic hook for executing commands
in a - as much as possible - platform independent way.
Current list:
exec_cmd(cmd) executes the given command and returns output
or ExecutionFailed exception (if exit status!=0)
"""
import os, sys
import py
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# posix external command execution
#-----------------------------------------------------------
def posix_exec_cmd(cmd):
""" return output of executing 'cmd'.
raise ExecutionFailed exeception if the command failed.
the exception will provide an 'err' attribute containing
the error-output from the command.
"""
__tracebackhide__ = True
import popen2
import errno
#print "execing", cmd
child = popen2.Popen3(cmd, 1)
stdin, stdout, stderr = child.tochild, child.fromchild, child.childerr
stdin.close()
# XXX sometimes we get a blocked r.read() call (see below)
# although select told us there is something to read.
# only the next three lines appear to prevent
# the read call from blocking infinitely.
import fcntl
def set_non_block(fd):
flags = fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_GETFL)
flags = flags | os.O_NONBLOCK
fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFL, flags)
set_non_block(stdout.fileno())
set_non_block(stderr.fileno())
#fcntl.fcntl(stdout, fcntl.F_SETFL, os.O_NONBLOCK)
#fcntl.fcntl(stderr, fcntl.F_SETFL, os.O_NONBLOCK)
import select
out, err = [], []
while 1:
r_list = filter(lambda x: x and not x.closed, [stdout, stderr])
if not r_list:
break
try:
r_list = select.select(r_list, [], [])[0]
except (select.error, IOError), se:
if se.args[0] == errno.EINTR:
continue
else:
raise
for r in r_list:
try:
data = r.read() # XXX see XXX above
except IOError, io:
if io.args[0] == errno.EAGAIN:
continue
# Connection Lost
raise
except OSError, ose:
if ose.errno == errno.EPIPE:
# Connection Lost
raise
if ose.errno == errno.EAGAIN: # MacOS-X does this
continue
raise
if not data:
r.close()
continue
if r is stdout:
out.append(data)
else:
err.append(data)
pid, systemstatus = os.waitpid(child.pid, 0)
if pid != child.pid:
raise ExecutionFailed, "child process disappeared during: "+ cmd
if systemstatus:
if os.WIFSIGNALED(systemstatus):
status = os.WTERMSIG(systemstatus) + 128
else:
status = os.WEXITSTATUS(systemstatus)
raise ExecutionFailed(status, systemstatus, cmd,
''.join(out), ''.join(err))
return "".join(out)
#-----------------------------------------------------------
# simple win32 external command execution
#-----------------------------------------------------------
def win32_exec_cmd(cmd):
""" return output of executing 'cmd'.
raise ExecutionFailed exeception if the command failed.
the exception will provide an 'err' attribute containing
the error-output from the command.
Note that this method can currently deadlock because
we don't have WaitForMultipleObjects in the std-python api.
Further note that the rules for quoting are very special
under Windows. Do a HELP CMD in a shell, and tell me if
you understand this. For now, I try to do a fix.
"""
#print "*****", cmd
# the following quoting is only valid for CMD.EXE, not COMMAND.COM
cmd_quoting = True
try:
if os.environ['COMSPEC'].upper().endswith('COMMAND.COM'):
cmd_quoting = False
except KeyError:
pass
if cmd_quoting:
if '"' in cmd and not cmd.startswith('""'):
cmd = '"%s"' % cmd
stdin, stdout, stderr = os.popen3(cmd)
out = stdout.read()
err = stderr.read()
stdout.close()
stderr.close()
status = stdin.close()
if status:
raise ExecutionFailed(status, status, cmd, out, err)
return out
class ExecutionFailed(py.error.Error):
def __init__(self, status, systemstatus, cmd, out, err):
Exception.__init__(self)
self.status = status
self.systemstatus = systemstatus
self.cmd = cmd
self.err = err
self.out = out
def __str__(self):
return "ExecutionFailed: %d %s\n%s" %(self.status, self.cmd, self.err)
#
# choose correct platform-version
#
if sys.platform == 'win32':
cmdexec = win32_exec_cmd
else:
cmdexec = posix_exec_cmd
# export the exception under the name 'py.process.cmdexec.Error'
cmdexec.Error = ExecutionFailed
try:
ExecutionFailed.__module__ = 'py.process.cmdexec'
ExecutionFailed.__name__ = 'Error'
except (AttributeError, TypeError):
pass