|
import os |
|
import sys |
|
import time |
|
import pty |
|
import tty |
|
import errno |
|
import signal |
|
from contextlib import contextmanager |
|
|
|
import ptyprocess |
|
from ptyprocess.ptyprocess import use_native_pty_fork |
|
|
|
from .exceptions import ExceptionPexpect, EOF, TIMEOUT |
|
from .spawnbase import SpawnBase |
|
from .utils import ( |
|
which, split_command_line, select_ignore_interrupts, poll_ignore_interrupts |
|
) |
|
|
|
@contextmanager |
|
def _wrap_ptyprocess_err(): |
|
"""Turn ptyprocess errors into our own ExceptionPexpect errors""" |
|
try: |
|
yield |
|
except ptyprocess.PtyProcessError as e: |
|
raise ExceptionPexpect(*e.args) |
|
|
|
PY3 = (sys.version_info[0] >= 3) |
|
|
|
class spawn(SpawnBase): |
|
'''This is the main class interface for Pexpect. Use this class to start |
|
and control child applications. ''' |
|
|
|
|
|
use_native_pty_fork = use_native_pty_fork |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, command, args=[], timeout=30, maxread=2000, |
|
searchwindowsize=None, logfile=None, cwd=None, env=None, |
|
ignore_sighup=False, echo=True, preexec_fn=None, |
|
encoding=None, codec_errors='strict', dimensions=None, |
|
use_poll=False): |
|
'''This is the constructor. The command parameter may be a string that |
|
includes a command and any arguments to the command. For example:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/usr/bin/ftp') |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/usr/bin/ssh [email protected]') |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('ls -latr /tmp') |
|
|
|
You may also construct it with a list of arguments like so:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/usr/bin/ftp', []) |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/usr/bin/ssh', ['[email protected]']) |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('ls', ['-latr', '/tmp']) |
|
|
|
After this the child application will be created and will be ready to |
|
talk to. For normal use, see expect() and send() and sendline(). |
|
|
|
Remember that Pexpect does NOT interpret shell meta characters such as |
|
redirect, pipe, or wild cards (``>``, ``|``, or ``*``). This is a |
|
common mistake. If you want to run a command and pipe it through |
|
another command then you must also start a shell. For example:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/bin/bash -c "ls -l | grep LOG > logs.txt"') |
|
child.expect(pexpect.EOF) |
|
|
|
The second form of spawn (where you pass a list of arguments) is useful |
|
in situations where you wish to spawn a command and pass it its own |
|
argument list. This can make syntax more clear. For example, the |
|
following is equivalent to the previous example:: |
|
|
|
shell_cmd = 'ls -l | grep LOG > logs.txt' |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('/bin/bash', ['-c', shell_cmd]) |
|
child.expect(pexpect.EOF) |
|
|
|
The maxread attribute sets the read buffer size. This is maximum number |
|
of bytes that Pexpect will try to read from a TTY at one time. Setting |
|
the maxread size to 1 will turn off buffering. Setting the maxread |
|
value higher may help performance in cases where large amounts of |
|
output are read back from the child. This feature is useful in |
|
conjunction with searchwindowsize. |
|
|
|
When the keyword argument *searchwindowsize* is None (default), the |
|
full buffer is searched at each iteration of receiving incoming data. |
|
The default number of bytes scanned at each iteration is very large |
|
and may be reduced to collaterally reduce search cost. After |
|
:meth:`~.expect` returns, the full buffer attribute remains up to |
|
size *maxread* irrespective of *searchwindowsize* value. |
|
|
|
When the keyword argument ``timeout`` is specified as a number, |
|
(default: *30*), then :class:`TIMEOUT` will be raised after the value |
|
specified has elapsed, in seconds, for any of the :meth:`~.expect` |
|
family of method calls. When None, TIMEOUT will not be raised, and |
|
:meth:`~.expect` may block indefinitely until match. |
|
|
|
|
|
The logfile member turns on or off logging. All input and output will |
|
be copied to the given file object. Set logfile to None to stop |
|
logging. This is the default. Set logfile to sys.stdout to echo |
|
everything to standard output. The logfile is flushed after each write. |
|
|
|
Example log input and output to a file:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('some_command') |
|
fout = open('mylog.txt','wb') |
|
child.logfile = fout |
|
|
|
Example log to stdout:: |
|
|
|
# In Python 2: |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('some_command') |
|
child.logfile = sys.stdout |
|
|
|
# In Python 3, we'll use the ``encoding`` argument to decode data |
|
# from the subprocess and handle it as unicode: |
|
child = pexpect.spawn('some_command', encoding='utf-8') |
|
child.logfile = sys.stdout |
|
|
|
The logfile_read and logfile_send members can be used to separately log |
|
the input from the child and output sent to the child. Sometimes you |
|
don't want to see everything you write to the child. You only want to |
|
log what the child sends back. For example:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('some_command') |
|
child.logfile_read = sys.stdout |
|
|
|
You will need to pass an encoding to spawn in the above code if you are |
|
using Python 3. |
|
|
|
To separately log output sent to the child use logfile_send:: |
|
|
|
child.logfile_send = fout |
|
|
|
If ``ignore_sighup`` is True, the child process will ignore SIGHUP |
|
signals. The default is False from Pexpect 4.0, meaning that SIGHUP |
|
will be handled normally by the child. |
|
|
|
The delaybeforesend helps overcome a weird behavior that many users |
|
were experiencing. The typical problem was that a user would expect() a |
|
"Password:" prompt and then immediately call sendline() to send the |
|
password. The user would then see that their password was echoed back |
|
to them. Passwords don't normally echo. The problem is caused by the |
|
fact that most applications print out the "Password" prompt and then |
|
turn off stdin echo, but if you send your password before the |
|
application turned off echo, then you get your password echoed. |
|
Normally this wouldn't be a problem when interacting with a human at a |
|
real keyboard. If you introduce a slight delay just before writing then |
|
this seems to clear up the problem. This was such a common problem for |
|
many users that I decided that the default pexpect behavior should be |
|
to sleep just before writing to the child application. 1/20th of a |
|
second (50 ms) seems to be enough to clear up the problem. You can set |
|
delaybeforesend to None to return to the old behavior. |
|
|
|
Note that spawn is clever about finding commands on your path. |
|
It uses the same logic that "which" uses to find executables. |
|
|
|
If you wish to get the exit status of the child you must call the |
|
close() method. The exit or signal status of the child will be stored |
|
in self.exitstatus or self.signalstatus. If the child exited normally |
|
then exitstatus will store the exit return code and signalstatus will |
|
be None. If the child was terminated abnormally with a signal then |
|
signalstatus will store the signal value and exitstatus will be None:: |
|
|
|
child = pexpect.spawn('some_command') |
|
child.close() |
|
print(child.exitstatus, child.signalstatus) |
|
|
|
If you need more detail you can also read the self.status member which |
|
stores the status returned by os.waitpid. You can interpret this using |
|
os.WIFEXITED/os.WEXITSTATUS or os.WIFSIGNALED/os.TERMSIG. |
|
|
|
The echo attribute may be set to False to disable echoing of input. |
|
As a pseudo-terminal, all input echoed by the "keyboard" (send() |
|
or sendline()) will be repeated to output. For many cases, it is |
|
not desirable to have echo enabled, and it may be later disabled |
|
using setecho(False) followed by waitnoecho(). However, for some |
|
platforms such as Solaris, this is not possible, and should be |
|
disabled immediately on spawn. |
|
|
|
If preexec_fn is given, it will be called in the child process before |
|
launching the given command. This is useful to e.g. reset inherited |
|
signal handlers. |
|
|
|
The dimensions attribute specifies the size of the pseudo-terminal as |
|
seen by the subprocess, and is specified as a two-entry tuple (rows, |
|
columns). If this is unspecified, the defaults in ptyprocess will apply. |
|
|
|
The use_poll attribute enables using select.poll() over select.select() |
|
for socket handling. This is handy if your system could have > 1024 fds |
|
''' |
|
super(spawn, self).__init__(timeout=timeout, maxread=maxread, searchwindowsize=searchwindowsize, |
|
logfile=logfile, encoding=encoding, codec_errors=codec_errors) |
|
self.STDIN_FILENO = pty.STDIN_FILENO |
|
self.STDOUT_FILENO = pty.STDOUT_FILENO |
|
self.STDERR_FILENO = pty.STDERR_FILENO |
|
self.str_last_chars = 100 |
|
self.cwd = cwd |
|
self.env = env |
|
self.echo = echo |
|
self.ignore_sighup = ignore_sighup |
|
self.__irix_hack = sys.platform.lower().startswith('irix') |
|
if command is None: |
|
self.command = None |
|
self.args = None |
|
self.name = '<pexpect factory incomplete>' |
|
else: |
|
self._spawn(command, args, preexec_fn, dimensions) |
|
self.use_poll = use_poll |
|
|
|
def __str__(self): |
|
'''This returns a human-readable string that represents the state of |
|
the object. ''' |
|
|
|
s = [] |
|
s.append(repr(self)) |
|
s.append('command: ' + str(self.command)) |
|
s.append('args: %r' % (self.args,)) |
|
s.append('buffer (last %s chars): %r' % (self.str_last_chars,self.buffer[-self.str_last_chars:])) |
|
s.append('before (last %s chars): %r' % (self.str_last_chars,self.before[-self.str_last_chars:] if self.before else '')) |
|
s.append('after: %r' % (self.after,)) |
|
s.append('match: %r' % (self.match,)) |
|
s.append('match_index: ' + str(self.match_index)) |
|
s.append('exitstatus: ' + str(self.exitstatus)) |
|
if hasattr(self, 'ptyproc'): |
|
s.append('flag_eof: ' + str(self.flag_eof)) |
|
s.append('pid: ' + str(self.pid)) |
|
s.append('child_fd: ' + str(self.child_fd)) |
|
s.append('closed: ' + str(self.closed)) |
|
s.append('timeout: ' + str(self.timeout)) |
|
s.append('delimiter: ' + str(self.delimiter)) |
|
s.append('logfile: ' + str(self.logfile)) |
|
s.append('logfile_read: ' + str(self.logfile_read)) |
|
s.append('logfile_send: ' + str(self.logfile_send)) |
|
s.append('maxread: ' + str(self.maxread)) |
|
s.append('ignorecase: ' + str(self.ignorecase)) |
|
s.append('searchwindowsize: ' + str(self.searchwindowsize)) |
|
s.append('delaybeforesend: ' + str(self.delaybeforesend)) |
|
s.append('delayafterclose: ' + str(self.delayafterclose)) |
|
s.append('delayafterterminate: ' + str(self.delayafterterminate)) |
|
return '\n'.join(s) |
|
|
|
def _spawn(self, command, args=[], preexec_fn=None, dimensions=None): |
|
'''This starts the given command in a child process. This does all the |
|
fork/exec type of stuff for a pty. This is called by __init__. If args |
|
is empty then command will be parsed (split on spaces) and args will be |
|
set to parsed arguments. ''' |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if isinstance(command, type(0)): |
|
raise ExceptionPexpect('Command is an int type. ' + |
|
'If this is a file descriptor then maybe you want to ' + |
|
'use fdpexpect.fdspawn which takes an existing ' + |
|
'file descriptor instead of a command string.') |
|
|
|
if not isinstance(args, type([])): |
|
raise TypeError('The argument, args, must be a list.') |
|
|
|
if args == []: |
|
self.args = split_command_line(command) |
|
self.command = self.args[0] |
|
else: |
|
|
|
self.args = args[:] |
|
self.args.insert(0, command) |
|
self.command = command |
|
|
|
command_with_path = which(self.command, env=self.env) |
|
if command_with_path is None: |
|
raise ExceptionPexpect('The command was not found or was not ' + |
|
'executable: %s.' % self.command) |
|
self.command = command_with_path |
|
self.args[0] = self.command |
|
|
|
self.name = '<' + ' '.join(self.args) + '>' |
|
|
|
assert self.pid is None, 'The pid member must be None.' |
|
assert self.command is not None, 'The command member must not be None.' |
|
|
|
kwargs = {'echo': self.echo, 'preexec_fn': preexec_fn} |
|
if self.ignore_sighup: |
|
def preexec_wrapper(): |
|
"Set SIGHUP to be ignored, then call the real preexec_fn" |
|
signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, signal.SIG_IGN) |
|
if preexec_fn is not None: |
|
preexec_fn() |
|
kwargs['preexec_fn'] = preexec_wrapper |
|
|
|
if dimensions is not None: |
|
kwargs['dimensions'] = dimensions |
|
|
|
if self.encoding is not None: |
|
|
|
self.args = [a if isinstance(a, bytes) else a.encode(self.encoding) |
|
for a in self.args] |
|
|
|
self.ptyproc = self._spawnpty(self.args, env=self.env, |
|
cwd=self.cwd, **kwargs) |
|
|
|
self.pid = self.ptyproc.pid |
|
self.child_fd = self.ptyproc.fd |
|
|
|
|
|
self.terminated = False |
|
self.closed = False |
|
|
|
def _spawnpty(self, args, **kwargs): |
|
'''Spawn a pty and return an instance of PtyProcess.''' |
|
return ptyprocess.PtyProcess.spawn(args, **kwargs) |
|
|
|
def close(self, force=True): |
|
'''This closes the connection with the child application. Note that |
|
calling close() more than once is valid. This emulates standard Python |
|
behavior with files. Set force to True if you want to make sure that |
|
the child is terminated (SIGKILL is sent if the child ignores SIGHUP |
|
and SIGINT). ''' |
|
|
|
self.flush() |
|
with _wrap_ptyprocess_err(): |
|
|
|
|
|
self.ptyproc.close(force=force) |
|
self.isalive() |
|
self.child_fd = -1 |
|
self.closed = True |
|
|
|
def isatty(self): |
|
'''This returns True if the file descriptor is open and connected to a |
|
tty(-like) device, else False. |
|
|
|
On SVR4-style platforms implementing streams, such as SunOS and HP-UX, |
|
the child pty may not appear as a terminal device. This means |
|
methods such as setecho(), setwinsize(), getwinsize() may raise an |
|
IOError. ''' |
|
|
|
return os.isatty(self.child_fd) |
|
|
|
def waitnoecho(self, timeout=-1): |
|
'''This waits until the terminal ECHO flag is set False. This returns |
|
True if the echo mode is off. This returns False if the ECHO flag was |
|
not set False before the timeout. This can be used to detect when the |
|
child is waiting for a password. Usually a child application will turn |
|
off echo mode when it is waiting for the user to enter a password. For |
|
example, instead of expecting the "password:" prompt you can wait for |
|
the child to set ECHO off:: |
|
|
|
p = pexpect.spawn('ssh [email protected]') |
|
p.waitnoecho() |
|
p.sendline(mypassword) |
|
|
|
If timeout==-1 then this method will use the value in self.timeout. |
|
If timeout==None then this method to block until ECHO flag is False. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
if timeout == -1: |
|
timeout = self.timeout |
|
if timeout is not None: |
|
end_time = time.time() + timeout |
|
while True: |
|
if not self.getecho(): |
|
return True |
|
if timeout < 0 and timeout is not None: |
|
return False |
|
if timeout is not None: |
|
timeout = end_time - time.time() |
|
time.sleep(0.1) |
|
|
|
def getecho(self): |
|
'''This returns the terminal echo mode. This returns True if echo is |
|
on or False if echo is off. Child applications that are expecting you |
|
to enter a password often set ECHO False. See waitnoecho(). |
|
|
|
Not supported on platforms where ``isatty()`` returns False. ''' |
|
return self.ptyproc.getecho() |
|
|
|
def setecho(self, state): |
|
'''This sets the terminal echo mode on or off. Note that anything the |
|
child sent before the echo will be lost, so you should be sure that |
|
your input buffer is empty before you call setecho(). For example, the |
|
following will work as expected:: |
|
|
|
p = pexpect.spawn('cat') # Echo is on by default. |
|
p.sendline('1234') # We expect see this twice from the child... |
|
p.expect(['1234']) # ... once from the tty echo... |
|
p.expect(['1234']) # ... and again from cat itself. |
|
p.setecho(False) # Turn off tty echo |
|
p.sendline('abcd') # We will set this only once (echoed by cat). |
|
p.sendline('wxyz') # We will set this only once (echoed by cat) |
|
p.expect(['abcd']) |
|
p.expect(['wxyz']) |
|
|
|
The following WILL NOT WORK because the lines sent before the setecho |
|
will be lost:: |
|
|
|
p = pexpect.spawn('cat') |
|
p.sendline('1234') |
|
p.setecho(False) # Turn off tty echo |
|
p.sendline('abcd') # We will set this only once (echoed by cat). |
|
p.sendline('wxyz') # We will set this only once (echoed by cat) |
|
p.expect(['1234']) |
|
p.expect(['1234']) |
|
p.expect(['abcd']) |
|
p.expect(['wxyz']) |
|
|
|
|
|
Not supported on platforms where ``isatty()`` returns False. |
|
''' |
|
return self.ptyproc.setecho(state) |
|
|
|
def read_nonblocking(self, size=1, timeout=-1): |
|
'''This reads at most size characters from the child application. It |
|
includes a timeout. If the read does not complete within the timeout |
|
period then a TIMEOUT exception is raised. If the end of file is read |
|
then an EOF exception will be raised. If a logfile is specified, a |
|
copy is written to that log. |
|
|
|
If timeout is None then the read may block indefinitely. |
|
If timeout is -1 then the self.timeout value is used. If timeout is 0 |
|
then the child is polled and if there is no data immediately ready |
|
then this will raise a TIMEOUT exception. |
|
|
|
The timeout refers only to the amount of time to read at least one |
|
character. This is not affected by the 'size' parameter, so if you call |
|
read_nonblocking(size=100, timeout=30) and only one character is |
|
available right away then one character will be returned immediately. |
|
It will not wait for 30 seconds for another 99 characters to come in. |
|
|
|
On the other hand, if there are bytes available to read immediately, |
|
all those bytes will be read (up to the buffer size). So, if the |
|
buffer size is 1 megabyte and there is 1 megabyte of data available |
|
to read, the buffer will be filled, regardless of timeout. |
|
|
|
This is a wrapper around os.read(). It uses select.select() or |
|
select.poll() to implement the timeout. ''' |
|
|
|
if self.closed: |
|
raise ValueError('I/O operation on closed file.') |
|
|
|
if self.use_poll: |
|
def select(timeout): |
|
return poll_ignore_interrupts([self.child_fd], timeout) |
|
else: |
|
def select(timeout): |
|
return select_ignore_interrupts([self.child_fd], [], [], timeout)[0] |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if select(0): |
|
try: |
|
incoming = super(spawn, self).read_nonblocking(size) |
|
except EOF: |
|
|
|
self.isalive() |
|
raise |
|
while len(incoming) < size and select(0): |
|
try: |
|
incoming += super(spawn, self).read_nonblocking(size - len(incoming)) |
|
except EOF: |
|
|
|
self.isalive() |
|
|
|
return incoming |
|
return incoming |
|
|
|
if timeout == -1: |
|
timeout = self.timeout |
|
|
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if select(0): |
|
return super(spawn, self).read_nonblocking(size) |
|
self.flag_eof = True |
|
raise EOF('End Of File (EOF). Braindead platform.') |
|
elif self.__irix_hack: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if timeout is not None and timeout < 2: |
|
timeout = 2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if (timeout != 0) and select(timeout): |
|
return super(spawn, self).read_nonblocking(size) |
|
|
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
self.flag_eof = True |
|
raise EOF('End of File (EOF). Very slow platform.') |
|
else: |
|
raise TIMEOUT('Timeout exceeded.') |
|
|
|
def write(self, s): |
|
'''This is similar to send() except that there is no return value. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
self.send(s) |
|
|
|
def writelines(self, sequence): |
|
'''This calls write() for each element in the sequence. The sequence |
|
can be any iterable object producing strings, typically a list of |
|
strings. This does not add line separators. There is no return value. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
for s in sequence: |
|
self.write(s) |
|
|
|
def send(self, s): |
|
'''Sends string ``s`` to the child process, returning the number of |
|
bytes written. If a logfile is specified, a copy is written to that |
|
log. |
|
|
|
The default terminal input mode is canonical processing unless set |
|
otherwise by the child process. This allows backspace and other line |
|
processing to be performed prior to transmitting to the receiving |
|
program. As this is buffered, there is a limited size of such buffer. |
|
|
|
On Linux systems, this is 4096 (defined by N_TTY_BUF_SIZE). All |
|
other systems honor the POSIX.1 definition PC_MAX_CANON -- 1024 |
|
on OSX, 256 on OpenSolaris, and 1920 on FreeBSD. |
|
|
|
This value may be discovered using fpathconf(3):: |
|
|
|
>>> from os import fpathconf |
|
>>> print(fpathconf(0, 'PC_MAX_CANON')) |
|
256 |
|
|
|
On such a system, only 256 bytes may be received per line. Any |
|
subsequent bytes received will be discarded. BEL (``'\a'``) is then |
|
sent to output if IMAXBEL (termios.h) is set by the tty driver. |
|
This is usually enabled by default. Linux does not honor this as |
|
an option -- it behaves as though it is always set on. |
|
|
|
Canonical input processing may be disabled altogether by executing |
|
a shell, then stty(1), before executing the final program:: |
|
|
|
>>> bash = pexpect.spawn('/bin/bash', echo=False) |
|
>>> bash.sendline('stty -icanon') |
|
>>> bash.sendline('base64') |
|
>>> bash.sendline('x' * 5000) |
|
''' |
|
|
|
if self.delaybeforesend is not None: |
|
time.sleep(self.delaybeforesend) |
|
|
|
s = self._coerce_send_string(s) |
|
self._log(s, 'send') |
|
|
|
b = self._encoder.encode(s, final=False) |
|
return os.write(self.child_fd, b) |
|
|
|
def sendline(self, s=''): |
|
'''Wraps send(), sending string ``s`` to child process, with |
|
``os.linesep`` automatically appended. Returns number of bytes |
|
written. Only a limited number of bytes may be sent for each |
|
line in the default terminal mode, see docstring of :meth:`send`. |
|
''' |
|
s = self._coerce_send_string(s) |
|
return self.send(s + self.linesep) |
|
|
|
def _log_control(self, s): |
|
"""Write control characters to the appropriate log files""" |
|
if self.encoding is not None: |
|
s = s.decode(self.encoding, 'replace') |
|
self._log(s, 'send') |
|
|
|
def sendcontrol(self, char): |
|
'''Helper method that wraps send() with mnemonic access for sending control |
|
character to the child (such as Ctrl-C or Ctrl-D). For example, to send |
|
Ctrl-G (ASCII 7, bell, '\a'):: |
|
|
|
child.sendcontrol('g') |
|
|
|
See also, sendintr() and sendeof(). |
|
''' |
|
n, byte = self.ptyproc.sendcontrol(char) |
|
self._log_control(byte) |
|
return n |
|
|
|
def sendeof(self): |
|
'''This sends an EOF to the child. This sends a character which causes |
|
the pending parent output buffer to be sent to the waiting child |
|
program without waiting for end-of-line. If it is the first character |
|
of the line, the read() in the user program returns 0, which signifies |
|
end-of-file. This means to work as expected a sendeof() has to be |
|
called at the beginning of a line. This method does not send a newline. |
|
It is the responsibility of the caller to ensure the eof is sent at the |
|
beginning of a line. ''' |
|
|
|
n, byte = self.ptyproc.sendeof() |
|
self._log_control(byte) |
|
|
|
def sendintr(self): |
|
'''This sends a SIGINT to the child. It does not require |
|
the SIGINT to be the first character on a line. ''' |
|
|
|
n, byte = self.ptyproc.sendintr() |
|
self._log_control(byte) |
|
|
|
@property |
|
def flag_eof(self): |
|
return self.ptyproc.flag_eof |
|
|
|
@flag_eof.setter |
|
def flag_eof(self, value): |
|
self.ptyproc.flag_eof = value |
|
|
|
def eof(self): |
|
'''This returns True if the EOF exception was ever raised. |
|
''' |
|
return self.flag_eof |
|
|
|
def terminate(self, force=False): |
|
'''This forces a child process to terminate. It starts nicely with |
|
SIGHUP and SIGINT. If "force" is True then moves onto SIGKILL. This |
|
returns True if the child was terminated. This returns False if the |
|
child could not be terminated. ''' |
|
|
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
try: |
|
self.kill(signal.SIGHUP) |
|
time.sleep(self.delayafterterminate) |
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
self.kill(signal.SIGCONT) |
|
time.sleep(self.delayafterterminate) |
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
self.kill(signal.SIGINT) |
|
time.sleep(self.delayafterterminate) |
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
if force: |
|
self.kill(signal.SIGKILL) |
|
time.sleep(self.delayafterterminate) |
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
else: |
|
return False |
|
return False |
|
except OSError: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
time.sleep(self.delayafterterminate) |
|
if not self.isalive(): |
|
return True |
|
else: |
|
return False |
|
|
|
def wait(self): |
|
'''This waits until the child exits. This is a blocking call. This will |
|
not read any data from the child, so this will block forever if the |
|
child has unread output and has terminated. In other words, the child |
|
may have printed output then called exit(), but, the child is |
|
technically still alive until its output is read by the parent. |
|
|
|
This method is non-blocking if :meth:`wait` has already been called |
|
previously or :meth:`isalive` method returns False. It simply returns |
|
the previously determined exit status. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
ptyproc = self.ptyproc |
|
with _wrap_ptyprocess_err(): |
|
|
|
|
|
exitstatus = ptyproc.wait() |
|
self.status = ptyproc.status |
|
self.exitstatus = ptyproc.exitstatus |
|
self.signalstatus = ptyproc.signalstatus |
|
self.terminated = True |
|
|
|
return exitstatus |
|
|
|
def isalive(self): |
|
'''This tests if the child process is running or not. This is |
|
non-blocking. If the child was terminated then this will read the |
|
exitstatus or signalstatus of the child. This returns True if the child |
|
process appears to be running or False if not. It can take literally |
|
SECONDS for Solaris to return the right status. ''' |
|
|
|
ptyproc = self.ptyproc |
|
with _wrap_ptyprocess_err(): |
|
alive = ptyproc.isalive() |
|
|
|
if not alive: |
|
self.status = ptyproc.status |
|
self.exitstatus = ptyproc.exitstatus |
|
self.signalstatus = ptyproc.signalstatus |
|
self.terminated = True |
|
|
|
return alive |
|
|
|
def kill(self, sig): |
|
|
|
'''This sends the given signal to the child application. In keeping |
|
with UNIX tradition it has a misleading name. It does not necessarily |
|
kill the child unless you send the right signal. ''' |
|
|
|
|
|
if self.isalive(): |
|
os.kill(self.pid, sig) |
|
|
|
def getwinsize(self): |
|
'''This returns the terminal window size of the child tty. The return |
|
value is a tuple of (rows, cols). ''' |
|
return self.ptyproc.getwinsize() |
|
|
|
def setwinsize(self, rows, cols): |
|
'''This sets the terminal window size of the child tty. This will cause |
|
a SIGWINCH signal to be sent to the child. This does not change the |
|
physical window size. It changes the size reported to TTY-aware |
|
applications like vi or curses -- applications that respond to the |
|
SIGWINCH signal. ''' |
|
return self.ptyproc.setwinsize(rows, cols) |
|
|
|
|
|
def interact(self, escape_character=chr(29), |
|
input_filter=None, output_filter=None): |
|
|
|
'''This gives control of the child process to the interactive user (the |
|
human at the keyboard). Keystrokes are sent to the child process, and |
|
the stdout and stderr output of the child process is printed. This |
|
simply echos the child stdout and child stderr to the real stdout and |
|
it echos the real stdin to the child stdin. When the user types the |
|
escape_character this method will return None. The escape_character |
|
will not be transmitted. The default for escape_character is |
|
entered as ``Ctrl - ]``, the very same as BSD telnet. To prevent |
|
escaping, escape_character may be set to None. |
|
|
|
If a logfile is specified, then the data sent and received from the |
|
child process in interact mode is duplicated to the given log. |
|
|
|
You may pass in optional input and output filter functions. These |
|
functions should take bytes array and return bytes array too. Even |
|
with ``encoding='utf-8'`` support, meth:`interact` will always pass |
|
input_filter and output_filter bytes. You may need to wrap your |
|
function to decode and encode back to UTF-8. |
|
|
|
The output_filter will be passed all the output from the child process. |
|
The input_filter will be passed all the keyboard input from the user. |
|
The input_filter is run BEFORE the check for the escape_character. |
|
|
|
Note that if you change the window size of the parent the SIGWINCH |
|
signal will not be passed through to the child. If you want the child |
|
window size to change when the parent's window size changes then do |
|
something like the following example:: |
|
|
|
import pexpect, struct, fcntl, termios, signal, sys |
|
def sigwinch_passthrough (sig, data): |
|
s = struct.pack("HHHH", 0, 0, 0, 0) |
|
a = struct.unpack('hhhh', fcntl.ioctl(sys.stdout.fileno(), |
|
termios.TIOCGWINSZ , s)) |
|
if not p.closed: |
|
p.setwinsize(a[0],a[1]) |
|
|
|
# Note this 'p' is global and used in sigwinch_passthrough. |
|
p = pexpect.spawn('/bin/bash') |
|
signal.signal(signal.SIGWINCH, sigwinch_passthrough) |
|
p.interact() |
|
''' |
|
|
|
|
|
self.write_to_stdout(self.buffer) |
|
self.stdout.flush() |
|
self._buffer = self.buffer_type() |
|
mode = tty.tcgetattr(self.STDIN_FILENO) |
|
tty.setraw(self.STDIN_FILENO) |
|
if escape_character is not None and PY3: |
|
escape_character = escape_character.encode('latin-1') |
|
try: |
|
self.__interact_copy(escape_character, input_filter, output_filter) |
|
finally: |
|
tty.tcsetattr(self.STDIN_FILENO, tty.TCSAFLUSH, mode) |
|
|
|
def __interact_writen(self, fd, data): |
|
'''This is used by the interact() method. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
while data != b'' and self.isalive(): |
|
n = os.write(fd, data) |
|
data = data[n:] |
|
|
|
def __interact_read(self, fd): |
|
'''This is used by the interact() method. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
return os.read(fd, 1000) |
|
|
|
def __interact_copy( |
|
self, escape_character=None, input_filter=None, output_filter=None |
|
): |
|
|
|
'''This is used by the interact() method. |
|
''' |
|
|
|
while self.isalive(): |
|
if self.use_poll: |
|
r = poll_ignore_interrupts([self.child_fd, self.STDIN_FILENO]) |
|
else: |
|
r, w, e = select_ignore_interrupts( |
|
[self.child_fd, self.STDIN_FILENO], [], [] |
|
) |
|
if self.child_fd in r: |
|
try: |
|
data = self.__interact_read(self.child_fd) |
|
except OSError as err: |
|
if err.args[0] == errno.EIO: |
|
|
|
break |
|
raise |
|
if data == b'': |
|
|
|
break |
|
if output_filter: |
|
data = output_filter(data) |
|
self._log(data, 'read') |
|
os.write(self.STDOUT_FILENO, data) |
|
if self.STDIN_FILENO in r: |
|
data = self.__interact_read(self.STDIN_FILENO) |
|
if input_filter: |
|
data = input_filter(data) |
|
i = -1 |
|
if escape_character is not None: |
|
i = data.rfind(escape_character) |
|
if i != -1: |
|
data = data[:i] |
|
if data: |
|
self._log(data, 'send') |
|
self.__interact_writen(self.child_fd, data) |
|
break |
|
self._log(data, 'send') |
|
self.__interact_writen(self.child_fd, data) |
|
|
|
|
|
def spawnu(*args, **kwargs): |
|
"""Deprecated: pass encoding to spawn() instead.""" |
|
kwargs.setdefault('encoding', 'utf-8') |
|
return spawn(*args, **kwargs) |
|
|