How to get exit code when using Python subprocess communicate method?

PythonSubprocess

Python Problem Overview


How do I retrieve the exit code when using Python's subprocess module and the communicate() method?

Relevant code:

import subprocess as sp
data = sp.Popen(openRTSP + opts.split(), stdout=sp.PIPE).communicate()[0]

Should I be doing this another way?

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

Popen.communicate will set the returncode attribute when it's done(*). Here's the relevant documentation section:

Popen.returncode 
  The child return code, set by poll() and wait() (and indirectly by communicate()). 
  A None value indicates that the process hasn’t terminated yet.

  A negative value -N indicates that the child was terminated by signal N (Unix only).

So you can just do (I didn't test it but it should work):

import subprocess as sp
child = sp.Popen(openRTSP + opts.split(), stdout=sp.PIPE)
streamdata = child.communicate()[0]
rc = child.returncode

(*) This happens because of the way it's implemented: after setting up threads to read the child's streams, it just calls wait.

Solution 2 - Python

.poll() will update the return code.

Try

child = sp.Popen(openRTSP + opts.split(), stdout=sp.PIPE)
returnCode = child.poll()

In addition, after .poll() is called the return code is available in the object as child.returncode.

Solution 3 - Python

You should first make sure that the process has completed running and the return code has been read out using the .wait method. This will return the code. If you want access to it later, it's stored as .returncode in the Popen object.

Solution 4 - Python

exitcode = data.wait(). The child process will be blocked If it writes to standard output/error, and/or reads from standard input, and there are no peers.

Solution 5 - Python

Use process.wait() after you call process.communicate().
For example:

import subprocess

process = subprocess.Popen(['ipconfig', '/all'], stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
stdout, stderr = process.communicate()
exit_code = process.wait()
print(stdout, stderr, exit_code)

Solution 6 - Python

This worked for me. It also prints the output returned by the child process

child = subprocess.Popen(serial_script_cmd, shell=True, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
    retValRunJobsSerialScript = 0
    for line in child.stdout.readlines():
        child.wait()
        print line           
    retValRunJobsSerialScript= child.returncode

Solution 7 - Python

Just to point out a common misconception, you should avoid Popen always when you can. To quote the documentation,

> The recommended approach > to invoking subprocesses is > to use the run() function > for all use cases > it can handle. > For more advanced > use cases, the underlying > Popen interface > can be used directly.

If you just want to run a subprocess and wait for it to finish, that's a single line of code with subprocess.run or its legacy siblings subprocess.call and subprocess.check_output, and you don't need to copy/paste and/or understand the intricacies of the communicate and wait etc methods required around the low-level Popen object.

import subprocess

proc = subprocess.run(
    [openRTSP] + opts.split(),
    capture_output=True,
    # avoid having to explicitly encode
    text=True)
data = proc.stdout
result = proc.returncode

If you don't want to capture the output from the process, maybe replace capture_output=True with stdout=subprocess.DEVNULL (and perhaps similarly for stderr); in the absence of either, the output will simply be displayed to the user, outside of Python's control.

Also, unless your options in opts are completely trivial, generally replace the regular string split() here with shlex.split() which understands how to cope with quoted strings.

Solution 8 - Python

Please see the comments.

Code:

import subprocess


class MyLibrary(object):

    def execute(self, cmd):
        return subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, universal_newlines=True,)
      
    def list(self):
        command = ["ping", "google.com"]
        sp = self.execute(command)
        status = sp.wait()  # will wait for sp to finish
        out, err = sp.communicate()
        print(out)
        return status # 0 is success else error


test = MyLibrary()

print(test.list())

Output:

C:\Users\shita\Documents\Tech\Python>python t5.py

Pinging google.com [142.250.64.78] with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from 142.250.64.78: bytes=32 time=108ms TTL=116
Reply from 142.250.64.78: bytes=32 time=224ms TTL=116
Reply from 142.250.64.78: bytes=32 time=84ms TTL=116
Reply from 142.250.64.78: bytes=32 time=139ms TTL=116

Ping statistics for 142.250.64.78:
    Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds:
    Minimum = 84ms, Maximum = 224ms, Average = 138ms

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionCarpeNoctemView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PythonEli BenderskyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PythonMatthew VernonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PythonNoufal IbrahimView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - PythonkhachikView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - PythonJossef Harush KadouriView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PythonChinni MaheshView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PythontripleeeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PythonAaj KaalView Answer on Stackoverflow