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11:56
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Q: python subprocess and reading stdout

user1048138What is the proper way of reading subprocess and the stdout Here are my files: traffic.sh code.py traffic.sh: sudo tcpdump -i lo -A | grep Host: code.py: proc = subprocess.Popen(['./traffic.sh'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True) # Do some network stuff like ping...

The read continues until the input stream is closed. Nothing obviously there closes the output stream from the script (thus, the input stream to the subprocess) while the pipeline in the script is still running.
What's your actual desired behavior? Maybe you want to only read one line, instead of reading all input? If that's the case, have your pipeline end in head -n 1.
@CharlesDuffy, can I force the pipe to close, I also did proc.kill() before the read hoping it would close. but had the same issue
Ahh -- so there's a delay first. Yes, you need to do the kill() before you can do a blocking read. Though the blocking read is a bloody bad idea even so -- it means that tcpdump's output is limited by your buffer size.
@CharlesDuffy. No go. :( Note my edit please.
Your edit doesn't make sense. What does ongoing activity have to do with signal handling?
The read is blocking because .read() is always blocking, by definition, unless you've changed the source it's reading from to be non-blocking. By default, blocking is exactly what it's supposed to do. If you didn't want it to block, you'd need to be in async mode.
11:56
@CharlesDuffy Sorry. I guess Im not understudying the purpose of the kill. My intent is to get all of the data traffic.sh has produced (printed to stdout) to be save in a veritable. When I make this call, I dont care what comes in the feature. I want what has already been printed out.
The read doesn't block until things that are actively being printed finish printing -- it blocks until the stream it's reading from is closed. So, as long as grep is still running, read() won't return, even if there's nothing being actively printed, unless you go into async mode. Which the question I linked you to is directly on-point for. Make sense, now?
I had followed that link before I posted my question with the same results. Thats why I noted "Any clean alternative to the thread?"
Yes, the alternative is async I/O. Which some of the answers other than the accepted one in that link discuss. Not everything there uses threads.
To be a little more specific -- take the answer given by Sebastien Clays, and get rid of the awful exception handling, and don't do the kill until/unless you actually want to (it's not needed for the IO itself).
In an ideal world, you'd be looping on select() and read() while tcpdump is running -- that way you don't have tcpdump's writes blocked by a full buffer.
The select() call blocks until there's actually something to read, and the fcntl() setup to add in O_NONBLOCK makes read() non-blocking.
...and select() takes a timeout, so (if you provide it with same) it doesn't wait there forever even when there's no more input.

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