how to run an executable file and then later kill or terminate the same process with R in Windows - windows

let's say i have an executable file stored in c:\my directory\my file.exe that i would like to initiate near the beginning of my R script, and then terminate near the end of my R script. what are some clean ways do this on a windows platform?
i am aware of R commands like shell and shell.exec, but it's not clear to me that these will allow a clean capture of the process id to then use something like the pskill function. it's also not clear if it makes more sense to run this executable through some sort of pipe conection - or how that pipe would work. this particular executable should be included in my windows PATH as a system variable, so it's conceivable that the system function might be of value here as well.
additional clarification: capturing the process id might be important, because (at least for me) this will be used on a database server's executable -- if multiple database servers are currently running on the same machine, the process shouldn't kill all of them - just the one initialized at the start of the R script.
for extra credit: let's say c:\my directory\my file.exe should be called by actually executing another file - c:\my directory\another file.bat - but it's my file.exe that needs to be killed at the end of the R script.

drawing on the other two answers received, this technique seems like a reasonable way to accomplish the stated goal..
# specify executable file
exe.file <- "C:\\Users\\AnthonyD\\AppData\\Local\\Google\\Chrome\\Application\\chrome.exe"
# capture the result of a `tasklist` system call
before.win.tasklist <- system2( 'tasklist' , stdout = TRUE )
# store all pids before running the process
before.pids <- substr( before.win.tasklist[ -(1:3) ] , 27 , 35 )
# run the process
shell.exec( exe.file )
# capture the result of a `tasklist` system call
after.win.tasklist <- system2( 'tasklist' , stdout = TRUE )
# store all tasks after running the process
after.tasks <- substr( after.win.tasklist[ -(1:3) ] , 1 , 25 )
# store all pids after running the process
after.pids <- substr( after.win.tasklist[ -(1:3) ] , 27 , 35 )
# store the number in the task list containing the PIDs you've just initiated
initiated.pid.positions <- which( !( after.pids %in% before.pids ) )
# remove whitespace
after.tasks <- gsub( " " , "" , after.tasks )
# find the pid position that matches the executable file name
correct.pid.position <-
intersect(
which( after.tasks %in% basename( exe.file ) ) ,
initiated.pid.positions
)
# remove whitespace
correct.pid <- gsub( " " , "" , after.pids[ correct.pid.position ] )
# write the taskkill command line
taskkill.cmd <- paste( "taskkill" , "/PID" , correct.pid )
# wait thirty seconds (so the program fully loads)
Sys.sleep( 30 )
# kill the same process that was loaded
system( taskkill.cmd )

You could use system function:
system("Taskkill /IM myfile.exe /F")
edit: This worked in my computer with Windows 7 (tested with killing skype.exe).

In the past, I used psKill. It is really powerful and maybe dangerous. You kill multi-procees even ina remote computer. I think you konw we must be extremely careful when we want to kill brutally process.
Download the tool , unzip and copy in a known path.
First time you launch is asking for liscence..You launch it from the cmd once and you agree.
Then you use somthing like this
process_name <- 'your_process_name'
system(paste(path_to_pskil,'pskill ',process_name,sep=''),intern=T)
For example to kill all chrome instances, you do this
system('c:/temp/pskill chrome',intern=T) !!
EDIT
Assuming you have multi process with the same name. You can use pslist to list all process with this name. Find the id of the process you want to kill according to its elapsed time, then call pskill by id.
For example here I want to kill , the last launched chrome process
my.process <- system('c:/temp/pslist chrome ',intern=T)[-c(1:8)]
my.process
[1] "chrome 3852 8 38 1052 141008 0:01:58.108 1:43:11.547"
[2] "chrome 5428 8 11 202 220392 0:02:08.092 1:43:11.359"
[3] "chrome 6228 8 9 146 73692 0:01:58.467 1:43:00.091"
[4] "chrome 6312 6 9 130 45420 0:00:08.704 1:17:30.153"
[5] "chrome 360 6 9 127 29252 0:00:01.263 0:57:01.084"
[6] "chrome 5032 6 9 126 29596 0:00:00.717 0:31:39.875"
[7] "chrome 2572 8 9 120 23816 0:00:00.452 0:19:10.307"
## ids are orderd according to the elpased time
## I use tail to get the last one
## some regular expression to get the id from the string
## mine is ugly but I am sure you can do better.
id <- substr(gsub("([^[:digit:]]*)", "", tail(my.process,1)),1,4)
system(paste('c:/temp/pskill ', id) ,intern=T)

Related

Bash Script - Not collateral after echo due to new line [duplicate]

I want to write a function that will execute a shell command and return its output as a string, no matter, is it an error or success message. I just want to get the same result that I would have gotten with the command line.
What would be a code example that would do such a thing?
For example:
def run_command(cmd):
# ??????
print run_command('mysqladmin create test -uroot -pmysqladmin12')
# Should output something like:
# mysqladmin: CREATE DATABASE failed; error: 'Can't create database 'test'; database exists'
In all officially maintained versions of Python, the simplest approach is to use the subprocess.check_output function:
>>> subprocess.check_output(['ls', '-l'])
b'total 0\n-rw-r--r-- 1 memyself staff 0 Mar 14 11:04 files\n'
check_output runs a single program that takes only arguments as input.1 It returns the result exactly as printed to stdout. If you need to write input to stdin, skip ahead to the run or Popen sections. If you want to execute complex shell commands, see the note on shell=True at the end of this answer.
The check_output function works in all officially maintained versions of Python. But for more recent versions, a more flexible approach is available.
Modern versions of Python (3.5 or higher): run
If you're using Python 3.5+, and do not need backwards compatibility, the new run function is recommended by the official documentation for most tasks. It provides a very general, high-level API for the subprocess module. To capture the output of a program, pass the subprocess.PIPE flag to the stdout keyword argument. Then access the stdout attribute of the returned CompletedProcess object:
>>> import subprocess
>>> result = subprocess.run(['ls', '-l'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
>>> result.stdout
b'total 0\n-rw-r--r-- 1 memyself staff 0 Mar 14 11:04 files\n'
The return value is a bytes object, so if you want a proper string, you'll need to decode it. Assuming the called process returns a UTF-8-encoded string:
>>> result.stdout.decode('utf-8')
'total 0\n-rw-r--r-- 1 memyself staff 0 Mar 14 11:04 files\n'
This can all be compressed to a one-liner if desired:
>>> subprocess.run(['ls', '-l'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE).stdout.decode('utf-8')
'total 0\n-rw-r--r-- 1 memyself staff 0 Mar 14 11:04 files\n'
If you want to pass input to the process's stdin, you can pass a bytes object to the input keyword argument:
>>> cmd = ['awk', 'length($0) > 5']
>>> ip = 'foo\nfoofoo\n'.encode('utf-8')
>>> result = subprocess.run(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, input=ip)
>>> result.stdout.decode('utf-8')
'foofoo\n'
You can capture errors by passing stderr=subprocess.PIPE (capture to result.stderr) or stderr=subprocess.STDOUT (capture to result.stdout along with regular output). If you want run to throw an exception when the process returns a nonzero exit code, you can pass check=True. (Or you can check the returncode attribute of result above.) When security is not a concern, you can also run more complex shell commands by passing shell=True as described at the end of this answer.
Later versions of Python streamline the above further. In Python 3.7+, the above one-liner can be spelled like this:
>>> subprocess.run(['ls', '-l'], capture_output=True, text=True).stdout
'total 0\n-rw-r--r-- 1 memyself staff 0 Mar 14 11:04 files\n'
Using run this way adds just a bit of complexity, compared to the old way of doing things. But now you can do almost anything you need to do with the run function alone.
Older versions of Python (3-3.4): more about check_output
If you are using an older version of Python, or need modest backwards compatibility, you can use the check_output function as briefly described above. It has been available since Python 2.7.
subprocess.check_output(*popenargs, **kwargs)
It takes takes the same arguments as Popen (see below), and returns a string containing the program's output. The beginning of this answer has a more detailed usage example. In Python 3.5+, check_output is equivalent to executing run with check=True and stdout=PIPE, and returning just the stdout attribute.
You can pass stderr=subprocess.STDOUT to ensure that error messages are included in the returned output. When security is not a concern, you can also run more complex shell commands by passing shell=True as described at the end of this answer.
If you need to pipe from stderr or pass input to the process, check_output won't be up to the task. See the Popen examples below in that case.
Complex applications and legacy versions of Python (2.6 and below): Popen
If you need deep backwards compatibility, or if you need more sophisticated functionality than check_output or run provide, you'll have to work directly with Popen objects, which encapsulate the low-level API for subprocesses.
The Popen constructor accepts either a single command without arguments, or a list containing a command as its first item, followed by any number of arguments, each as a separate item in the list. shlex.split can help parse strings into appropriately formatted lists. Popen objects also accept a host of different arguments for process IO management and low-level configuration.
To send input and capture output, communicate is almost always the preferred method. As in:
output = subprocess.Popen(["mycmd", "myarg"],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
Or
>>> import subprocess
>>> p = subprocess.Popen(['ls', '-a'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
... stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
>>> out, err = p.communicate()
>>> print out
.
..
foo
If you set stdin=PIPE, communicate also allows you to pass data to the process via stdin:
>>> cmd = ['awk', 'length($0) > 5']
>>> p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
... stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
... stdin=subprocess.PIPE)
>>> out, err = p.communicate('foo\nfoofoo\n')
>>> print out
foofoo
Note Aaron Hall's answer, which indicates that on some systems, you may need to set stdout, stderr, and stdin all to PIPE (or DEVNULL) to get communicate to work at all.
In some rare cases, you may need complex, real-time output capturing. Vartec's answer suggests a way forward, but methods other than communicate are prone to deadlocks if not used carefully.
As with all the above functions, when security is not a concern, you can run more complex shell commands by passing shell=True.
Notes
1. Running shell commands: the shell=True argument
Normally, each call to run, check_output, or the Popen constructor executes a single program. That means no fancy bash-style pipes. If you want to run complex shell commands, you can pass shell=True, which all three functions support. For example:
>>> subprocess.check_output('cat books/* | wc', shell=True, text=True)
' 1299377 17005208 101299376\n'
However, doing this raises security concerns. If you're doing anything more than light scripting, you might be better off calling each process separately, and passing the output from each as an input to the next, via
run(cmd, [stdout=etc...], input=other_output)
Or
Popen(cmd, [stdout=etc...]).communicate(other_output)
The temptation to directly connect pipes is strong; resist it. Otherwise, you'll likely see deadlocks or have to do hacky things like this.
This is way easier, but only works on Unix (including Cygwin) and Python2.7.
import commands
print commands.getstatusoutput('wc -l file')
It returns a tuple with the (return_value, output).
For a solution that works in both Python2 and Python3, use the subprocess module instead:
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
output = Popen(["date"],stdout=PIPE)
response = output.communicate()
print response
I had the same problem but figured out a very simple way of doing this:
import subprocess
output = subprocess.getoutput("ls -l")
print(output)
Note: This solution is Python3 specific as subprocess.getoutput() doesn't work in Python2
Something like that:
def runProcess(exe):
p = subprocess.Popen(exe, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
while(True):
# returns None while subprocess is running
retcode = p.poll()
line = p.stdout.readline()
yield line
if retcode is not None:
break
Note, that I'm redirecting stderr to stdout, it might not be exactly what you want, but I want error messages also.
This function yields line by line as they come (normally you'd have to wait for subprocess to finish to get the output as a whole).
For your case the usage would be:
for line in runProcess('mysqladmin create test -uroot -pmysqladmin12'.split()):
print line,
This is a tricky but super simple solution which works in many situations:
import os
os.system('sample_cmd > tmp')
print(open('tmp', 'r').read())
A temporary file(here is tmp) is created with the output of the command and you can read from it your desired output.
Extra note from the comments:
You can remove the tmp file in the case of one-time job. If you need to do this several times, there is no need to delete the tmp.
os.remove('tmp')
Vartec's answer doesn't read all lines, so I made a version that did:
def run_command(command):
p = subprocess.Popen(command,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
return iter(p.stdout.readline, b'')
Usage is the same as the accepted answer:
command = 'mysqladmin create test -uroot -pmysqladmin12'.split()
for line in run_command(command):
print(line)
You can use following commands to run any shell command. I have used them on ubuntu.
import os
os.popen('your command here').read()
Note: This is deprecated since python 2.6. Now you must use subprocess.Popen. Below is the example
import subprocess
p = subprocess.Popen("Your command", shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
print p.split("\n")
I had a slightly different flavor of the same problem with the following requirements:
Capture and return STDOUT messages as they accumulate in the STDOUT buffer (i.e. in realtime).
#vartec solved this Pythonically with his use of generators and the 'yield'
keyword above
Print all STDOUT lines (even if process exits before STDOUT buffer can be fully read)
Don't waste CPU cycles polling the process at high-frequency
Check the return code of the subprocess
Print STDERR (separate from STDOUT) if we get a non-zero error return code.
I've combined and tweaked previous answers to come up with the following:
import subprocess
from time import sleep
def run_command(command):
p = subprocess.Popen(command,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
shell=True)
# Read stdout from subprocess until the buffer is empty !
for line in iter(p.stdout.readline, b''):
if line: # Don't print blank lines
yield line
# This ensures the process has completed, AND sets the 'returncode' attr
while p.poll() is None:
sleep(.1) #Don't waste CPU-cycles
# Empty STDERR buffer
err = p.stderr.read()
if p.returncode != 0:
# The run_command() function is responsible for logging STDERR
print("Error: " + str(err))
This code would be executed the same as previous answers:
for line in run_command(cmd):
print(line)
Your Mileage May Vary, I attempted #senderle's spin on Vartec's solution in Windows on Python 2.6.5, but I was getting errors, and no other solutions worked. My error was: WindowsError: [Error 6] The handle is invalid.
I found that I had to assign PIPE to every handle to get it to return the output I expected - the following worked for me.
import subprocess
def run_command(cmd):
"""given shell command, returns communication tuple of stdout and stderr"""
return subprocess.Popen(cmd,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()
and call like this, ([0] gets the first element of the tuple, stdout):
run_command('tracert 11.1.0.1')[0]
After learning more, I believe I need these pipe arguments because I'm working on a custom system that uses different handles, so I had to directly control all the std's.
To stop console popups (with Windows), do this:
def run_command(cmd):
"""given shell command, returns communication tuple of stdout and stderr"""
# instantiate a startupinfo obj:
startupinfo = subprocess.STARTUPINFO()
# set the use show window flag, might make conditional on being in Windows:
startupinfo.dwFlags |= subprocess.STARTF_USESHOWWINDOW
# pass as the startupinfo keyword argument:
return subprocess.Popen(cmd,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
startupinfo=startupinfo).communicate()
run_command('tracert 11.1.0.1')
On Python 3.7+, use subprocess.run and pass capture_output=True:
import subprocess
result = subprocess.run(['echo', 'hello', 'world'], capture_output=True)
print(repr(result.stdout))
This will return bytes:
b'hello world\n'
If you want it to convert the bytes to a string, add text=True:
result = subprocess.run(['echo', 'hello', 'world'], capture_output=True, text=True)
print(repr(result.stdout))
This will read the bytes using your default encoding:
'hello world\n'
If you need to manually specify a different encoding, use encoding="your encoding" instead of text=True:
result = subprocess.run(['echo', 'hello', 'world'], capture_output=True, encoding="utf8")
print(repr(result.stdout))
Splitting the initial command for the subprocess might be tricky and cumbersome.
Use shlex.split() to help yourself out.
Sample command
git log -n 5 --since "5 years ago" --until "2 year ago"
The code
from subprocess import check_output
from shlex import split
res = check_output(split('git log -n 5 --since "5 years ago" --until "2 year ago"'))
print(res)
>>> b'commit 7696ab087a163e084d6870bb4e5e4d4198bdc61a\nAuthor: Artur Barseghyan...'
Without shlex.split() the code would look as follows
res = check_output([
'git',
'log',
'-n',
'5',
'--since',
'5 years ago',
'--until',
'2 year ago'
])
print(res)
>>> b'commit 7696ab087a163e084d6870bb4e5e4d4198bdc61a\nAuthor: Artur Barseghyan...'
Here a solution, working if you want to print output while process is running or not.
I added the current working directory also, it was useful to me more than once.
Hoping the solution will help someone :).
import subprocess
def run_command(cmd_and_args, print_constantly=False, cwd=None):
"""Runs a system command.
:param cmd_and_args: the command to run with or without a Pipe (|).
:param print_constantly: If True then the output is logged in continuous until the command ended.
:param cwd: the current working directory (the directory from which you will like to execute the command)
:return: - a tuple containing the return code, the stdout and the stderr of the command
"""
output = []
process = subprocess.Popen(cmd_and_args, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, cwd=cwd)
while True:
next_line = process.stdout.readline()
if next_line:
output.append(str(next_line))
if print_constantly:
print(next_line)
elif not process.poll():
break
error = process.communicate()[1]
return process.returncode, '\n'.join(output), error
For some reason, this one works on Python 2.7 and you only need to import os!
import os
def bash(command):
output = os.popen(command).read()
return output
print_me = bash('ls -l')
print(print_me)
If you need to run a shell command on multiple files, this did the trick for me.
import os
import subprocess
# Define a function for running commands and capturing stdout line by line
# (Modified from Vartec's solution because it wasn't printing all lines)
def runProcess(exe):
p = subprocess.Popen(exe, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
return iter(p.stdout.readline, b'')
# Get all filenames in working directory
for filename in os.listdir('./'):
# This command will be run on each file
cmd = 'nm ' + filename
# Run the command and capture the output line by line.
for line in runProcess(cmd.split()):
# Eliminate leading and trailing whitespace
line.strip()
# Split the output
output = line.split()
# Filter the output and print relevant lines
if len(output) > 2:
if ((output[2] == 'set_program_name')):
print filename
print line
Edit: Just saw Max Persson's solution with J.F. Sebastian's suggestion. Went ahead and incorporated that.
According to #senderle, if you use python3.6 like me:
def sh(cmd, input=""):
rst = subprocess.run(cmd, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, input=input.encode("utf-8"))
assert rst.returncode == 0, rst.stderr.decode("utf-8")
return rst.stdout.decode("utf-8")
sh("ls -a")
Will act exactly like you run the command in bash
Improvement for better logging.
For better output you can use iterator.
From below, we get better
from subprocess import Popen, getstatusoutput, PIPE
def shell_command(cmd):
result = Popen(cmd, shell=True, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE)
output = iter(result.stdout.readline, b'')
error = iter(result.stderr.readline, b'')
print("##### OutPut ###")
for line in output:
print(line.decode("utf-8"))
print("###### Error ########")
for line in error:
print(error.decode("utf-8")) # Convert bytes to str
status, terminal_output = run_command(cmd)
print(terminal_output)
shell_command("ls") # this will display all the files & folders in directory
Other method using getstatusoutput ( Easy to understand)
from subprocess import Popen, getstatusoutput, PIPE
status_Code, output = getstausoutput(command)
print(output) # this will give the terminal output
# status_code, output = getstatusoutput("ls") # this will print the all files & folder available in the directory
If you use the subprocess python module, you are able to handle the STDOUT, STDERR and return code of command separately. You can see an example for the complete command caller implementation. Of course you can extend it with try..except if you want.
The below function returns the STDOUT, STDERR and Return code so you can handle them in the other script.
import subprocess
def command_caller(command=None)
sp = subprocess.Popen(command, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=False)
out, err = sp.communicate()
if sp.returncode:
print(
"Return code: %(ret_code)s Error message: %(err_msg)s"
% {"ret_code": sp.returncode, "err_msg": err}
)
return sp.returncode, out, err
I would like to suggest simppl as an option for consideration. It is a module that is available via pypi: pip install simppl and was runs on python3.
simppl allows the user to run shell commands and read the output from the screen.
The developers suggest three types of use cases:
The simplest usage will look like this:
from simppl.simple_pipeline import SimplePipeline
sp = SimplePipeline(start=0, end=100):
sp.print_and_run('<YOUR_FIRST_OS_COMMAND>')
sp.print_and_run('<YOUR_SECOND_OS_COMMAND>') ```
To run multiple commands concurrently use:
commands = ['<YOUR_FIRST_OS_COMMAND>', '<YOUR_SECOND_OS_COMMAND>']
max_number_of_processes = 4
sp.run_parallel(commands, max_number_of_processes) ```
Finally, if your project uses the cli module, you can run directly another command_line_tool as part of a pipeline. The other tool will
be run from the same process, but it will appear from the logs as
another command in the pipeline. This enables smoother debugging and
refactoring of tools calling other tools.
from example_module import example_tool
sp.print_and_run_clt(example_tool.run, ['first_number', 'second_nmber'],
{'-key1': 'val1', '-key2': 'val2'},
{'--flag'}) ```
Note that the printing to STDOUT/STDERR is via python's logging module.
Here is a complete code to show how simppl works:
import logging
from logging.config import dictConfig
logging_config = dict(
version = 1,
formatters = {
'f': {'format':
'%(asctime)s %(name)-12s %(levelname)-8s %(message)s'}
},
handlers = {
'h': {'class': 'logging.StreamHandler',
'formatter': 'f',
'level': logging.DEBUG}
},
root = {
'handlers': ['h'],
'level': logging.DEBUG,
},
)
dictConfig(logging_config)
from simppl.simple_pipeline import SimplePipeline
sp = SimplePipeline(0, 100)
sp.print_and_run('ls')
Here is a simple and flexible solution that works on a variety of OS versions, and both Python 2 and 3, using IPython in shell mode:
from IPython.terminal.embed import InteractiveShellEmbed
my_shell = InteractiveShellEmbed()
result = my_shell.getoutput("echo hello world")
print(result)
Out: ['hello world']
It has a couple of advantages
It only requires an IPython install, so you don't really need to worry about your specific Python or OS version when using it, it comes with Jupyter - which has a wide range of support
It takes a simple string by default - so no need to use shell mode arg or string splitting, making it slightly cleaner IMO
It also makes it cleaner to easily substitute variables or even entire Python commands in the string itself
To demonstrate:
var = "hello world "
result = my_shell.getoutput("echo {var*2}")
print(result)
Out: ['hello world hello world']
Just wanted to give you an extra option, especially if you already have Jupyter installed
Naturally, if you are in an actual Jupyter notebook as opposed to a .py script you can also always do:
result = !echo hello world
print(result)
To accomplish the same.
The output can be redirected to a text file and then read it back.
import subprocess
import os
import tempfile
def execute_to_file(command):
"""
This function execute the command
and pass its output to a tempfile then read it back
It is usefull for process that deploy child process
"""
temp_file = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False)
temp_file.close()
path = temp_file.name
command = command + " > " + path
proc = subprocess.run(command, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, universal_newlines=True)
if proc.stderr:
# if command failed return
os.unlink(path)
return
with open(path, 'r') as f:
data = f.read()
os.unlink(path)
return data
if __name__ == "__main__":
path = "Somepath"
command = 'ecls.exe /files ' + path
print(execute(command))
eg, execute('ls -ahl')
differentiated three/four possible returns and OS platforms:
no output, but run successfully
output empty line, run successfully
run failed
output something, run successfully
function below
def execute(cmd, output=True, DEBUG_MODE=False):
"""Executes a bash command.
(cmd, output=True)
output: whether print shell output to screen, only affects screen display, does not affect returned values
return: ...regardless of output=True/False...
returns shell output as a list with each elment is a line of string (whitespace stripped both sides) from output
could be
[], ie, len()=0 --> no output;
[''] --> output empty line;
None --> error occured, see below
if error ocurs, returns None (ie, is None), print out the error message to screen
"""
if not DEBUG_MODE:
print "Command: " + cmd
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/40139101/2292993
def _execute_cmd(cmd):
if os.name == 'nt' or platform.system() == 'Windows':
# set stdin, out, err all to PIPE to get results (other than None) after run the Popen() instance
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True)
else:
# Use bash; the default is sh
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True, executable="/bin/bash")
# the Popen() instance starts running once instantiated (??)
# additionally, communicate(), or poll() and wait process to terminate
# communicate() accepts optional input as stdin to the pipe (requires setting stdin=subprocess.PIPE above), return out, err as tuple
# if communicate(), the results are buffered in memory
# Read stdout from subprocess until the buffer is empty !
# if error occurs, the stdout is '', which means the below loop is essentially skipped
# A prefix of 'b' or 'B' is ignored in Python 2;
# it indicates that the literal should become a bytes literal in Python 3
# (e.g. when code is automatically converted with 2to3).
# return iter(p.stdout.readline, b'')
for line in iter(p.stdout.readline, b''):
# # Windows has \r\n, Unix has \n, Old mac has \r
# if line not in ['','\n','\r','\r\n']: # Don't print blank lines
yield line
while p.poll() is None:
sleep(.1) #Don't waste CPU-cycles
# Empty STDERR buffer
err = p.stderr.read()
if p.returncode != 0:
# responsible for logging STDERR
print("Error: " + str(err))
yield None
out = []
for line in _execute_cmd(cmd):
# error did not occur earlier
if line is not None:
# trailing comma to avoid a newline (by print itself) being printed
if output: print line,
out.append(line.strip())
else:
# error occured earlier
out = None
return out
else:
print "Simulation! The command is " + cmd
print ""

How can I use the Win32::LongPath module in Perl to manipulate long path names?

My Perl scripts need to work with pathnames that are longer than 260 characters, and I can not turn on the feature in the registry to enable Windows Long Path support.
I included a small Perl test, using the Win32::LongPath module to do this, and found that only a few functions from that module work. No luck with:
chdirL
getcwdL
Environment:
Windows 10 version 10.0.19041 build 19041
Strawberry Perl 5.30.3
I can't really find evidence that Win32::LongPath will not work in that environment, except for CPAN saying that the module has only been tested on XP and Windows 8...
⚠ However all of the help for Perl/Windows Long Paths in Windows 10 seems to recommend this module?
Am I using it wrong? I have included the output of the last iteration of the loop in the MRE (Minimal Reproducible Example):
The chdirL command never changes directories.
The getcwdL command only has 249 characters (513 expected).
package main 1.0;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Carp;
use Readonly;
use File::Spec::Functions;
use Cwd;
use Win32::LongPath;
my $dir = 'd123456789';
my $file = 'test.txt';
my $long_path = 'C:\\Temp';
my $long_file;
my $long_root = catdir $long_path, $dir;
my $fh;
# Maximum path length on linux : 4096
# Maximum path length on Windows : 260
Readonly::Scalar my $MAX_PATH => 512;
chdirL $long_path;
while ( length $long_path < $MAX_PATH ) {
$long_path = catdir $long_path, $dir;
$long_file = catfile $long_path, $file;
printf "%-5d: %s\n", length $long_path, "Making $long_path...";
mkdirL $long_path;
# === Does not change directories ==>
chdirL $long_path;
system 'CD';
# === Truncates path name ==>
my $curdir = getcwdL;
printf "%-20s: %s (%d)\n", 'getcwpdL', $curdir, length $curdir;
printf "%-5d: %s\n", length $long_file, "Making $long_file...";
openL \$fh, '>', $long_file or die "unable to create file\n";
print {$fh} "$long_path\n" or die "unable to print to file\n";
close $fh or die "unable to close file\n";
last if ( !( testL 'e', $long_path ) );
last if ( !( testL 'e', $long_file ) );
}
unlinkL $long_file or warn "unable to delete file\n";
1;
Last loop iteration:
513 : Making C:\Temp\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789...
W:\home\_PERL\long_path
getcwpdL : C:\Temp\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789 (249)
522 : Making C:\Temp\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\d123456789\test.txt...
chdirL is failing with The filename or extension is too long. chdirL, like the others, converts the path to a long path (\\?\...), and calls the appropriate system call. This is SetCurrentDirectoryW for chdirL and GetCurrentDirectoryW for getcwdL.
Using paths of the form \\?\... extends the use length limit for some calls, but not for SetCurrentDirectoryW and GetCurrentDirectoryW. It also doesn't extend the limit for CreateDirectoryW, CreateDirectoryExW and RemoveDirectoryW. These five retain the classical length limit even when using "long paths", at least according to Maximum Path Length Limitation, which provides a registry setting PLUS a manifest entry you can use to remove the limit on long paths for those calls.
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem]
"LongPathsEnabled"=dword:00000001
<application xmlns="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:asm.v3">
<windowsSettings xmlns:ws2="http://schemas.microsoft.com/SMI/2016/WindowsSettings">
<ws2:longPathAware>true</ws2:longPathAware>
</windowsSettings>
</application>
I don't remember if DLLs have their own manifest or not. If they do, the settings could be changed for just the module, and nothing would break. If they don't and perl's manifest needs to be changed, this would affect all uses of GetCurrentDirectoryW in the process, and that could cause problems. (GetCurrentDirectoryW could return an error because the buffer is too small, which could lead to a failure or crash depending on whether error checking is performed.)

Gfortran not read a file on mac

Here is the file to be read, a.tab:
7.600000e-05
1.580000e-04
1.384140e-01
4.566700e-02
1.530000e-04
1.374210e-01
2.238700e-02
3.871300e-02
1.339930e-01
-2.231400e-02
3.835000e-02
1.313520e-01
-4.551300e-02
2.350000e-04
1.327270e-01
-2.207500e-02
-3.697500e-02
1.261490e-01
My program:
PROGRAM MAIN
implicit none
integer :: j,iostatus
double precision :: test(18)
open(unit = 100, file = 'a.tab', status = 'old', action = 'read',iostat=iostatus)
write(*,*) iostatus
do j = 1,18
read(100,*,end=10) test
end do
10 close(100)
write(*,*)test
end
the output is:
0
0
Why not read the file correctly if the iostat is equal to 0? The same program run on Windows works.
Since the program works on Windows, you might need to convert your input file for use in Unix. Try the dos2unix utility on a.tab before running on the Mac.

Convert markdown italics and boldface to latex

I want to be able to convert markdown italics and boldface to latex versions on the fly (i.e., give a text string(s) return a text string(s)). I thought easy. Wrong! (Which it still may be). See the sill buisness and error I tried at the bottom.
What I have (note the starting asterisk that's been escaped as in markdown):
x <- "\\*note: I *like* chocolate **milk** too ***much***!"
What I would like:
"*note: I \\emph{like} chocolate \\textbf{milk} too \\textbf{\\emph{much}}!"
I'm not attached to regex but would prefer a base solution (though not essential).
Silly business:
helper <- function(ins, outs, x) {
gsub(paste0(ins[1], ".+?", ins[2]), paste0(outs[1], ".+?", outs[2]), x)
}
helper(rep("***", 2), c("\\textbf{\\emph{", "}}"), x)
Error in gsub(paste0(ins[1], ".+?", ins[2]), paste0(outs[1], ".+?", outs[2]), :
invalid regular expression '***.+?***', reason 'Invalid use of repetition operators'
I have this toy that Ananda Mahto helped me make if it's helpful. You could access it from reports via wheresPandoc <- reports:::wheresPandoc
EDIT Per Ben's comments I tried:
action <- paste0(" echo ", x, " | ", wheresPandoc(), " -t latex ")
system(action)
*note: I *like* chocolate **milk** too ***much***! | C:\PROGRA~2\Pandoc\bin\pandoc.exe -t latex
EDIT2 Per Dason's comments I tried:
out <- paste("echo", shQuote(x), "|", wheresPandoc(), " -t latex"); system(out)
system(out, intern = T)
> system(out, intern = T)
\*note: I *like* chocolate **milk** too ***much***! | C:\PROGRA~2\Pandoc\bin\pandoc.exe -t latex
The lack of pipes on Windows made this tricky, but you can get around it using input to provide the stdin:
> x = system("pandoc -t latex", intern=TRUE, input="\\*note: I *like* chocolate **milk** too ***much***!")
> x
[1] "*note: I \\emph{like} chocolate \\textbf{milk} too \\textbf{\\emph{much}}!"
Noting I am working on windows and from ?system
This means that redirection, pipes, DOS internal commands, ... cannot be used
and the note from ?system2
Note
system2 is a more portable and flexible interface than system,
introduced in R 2.12.0. It allows redirection of output without
needing to invoke a shell on Windows, a portable way to set
environment variables for the execution of command, and finer control
over the redirection of stdout and stderr. Conversely, system (and
shell on Windows) allows the invocation of arbitrary command lines.
Using system2
system2('pandoc', '-t latex', input = '**em**', stdout = TRUE)

command line arguments in bash to Rscript

I have a bash script that creates a csv file and an R file that creates graphs from that.
At the end of the bash script I call Rscript Graphs.R 10
The response I get is as follows:
Error in is.vector(X) : subscript out of bounds
Calls: print ... <Anonymous> -> lapply -> FUN -> lapply -> is.vector
Execution halted
The first few lines of my Graphs.R are:
#!/bin/Rscript
args <- commandArgs(TRUE)
CorrAns = args[1]
No idea what I am doing wrong? The advice on the net appears to me to say that this should work. Its very hard to make sense of commandArgs
With the following in args.R
print(commandArgs(TRUE)[1])
and the following in args.sh
Rscript args.R 10
I get the following output from bash args.sh
[1] "10"
and no error. If necessary, convert to a numberic type using as.numeric(commandArgs(TRUE)[1]).
Just a guess, perhaps you need to convert CorrAns from character to numeric, since Value section of ?CommandArgs says:
A character vector containing the name
of the executable and the
user-supplied command line arguments.
UPDATE: It could be as easy as:
#!/bin/Rscript
args <- commandArgs(TRUE)
(CorrAns = args[1])
(CorrAns = as.numeric(args[1]))
Reading the docs, it seems you might need to remove the TRUE from the call to commandArgs() as you don't call the script with --args. Either that, or you need to call Rscript Graphs.R --args 10.
Usage
commandArgs(trailingOnly = FALSE)
Arguments
trailingOnly logical. Should only
arguments after --args be returned?
Rscript args.R 10 where 10 is the numeric value we want to pass to the R script.
print(as.numeric(commandArgs(TRUE)[1]) prints out the value which can then be assigned to a variable.

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