Subprocesses¶
Source code: Lib/asyncio/subprocess.py, Lib/asyncio/base_subprocess.py
This section describes high-level async/await asyncio APIs to create and manage subprocesses.
Here’s an example of how asyncio can run a shell command and obtain its result:
import asyncio
async def run(cmd):
proc = await asyncio.create_subprocess_shell(
cmd,
stdout=asyncio.subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=asyncio.subprocess.PIPE)
stdout, stderr = await proc.communicate()
print(f'[{cmd!r} exited with {proc.returncode}]')
if stdout:
print(f'[stdout]\n{stdout.decode()}')
if stderr:
print(f'[stderr]\n{stderr.decode()}')
asyncio.run(run('ls /zzz'))
will print:
['ls /zzz' exited with 1]
[stderr]
ls: /zzz: No such file or directory
Because all asyncio subprocess functions are asynchronous and asyncio provides many tools to work with such functions, it is easy to execute and monitor multiple subprocesses in parallel. It is indeed trivial to modify the above example to run several commands simultaneously:
async def main():
await asyncio.gather(
run('ls /zzz'),
run('sleep 1; echo "hello"'))
asyncio.run(main())
See also the Examples subsection.
Creating Subprocesses¶
- coroutine asyncio.create_subprocess_exec(program, *args, stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None, limit=None, **kwds)¶
Create a subprocess.
The limit argument sets the buffer limit for
StreamReader
wrappers forProcess.stdout
andProcess.stderr
(ifsubprocess.PIPE
is passed to stdout and stderr arguments).Return a
Process
instance.See the documentation of
loop.subprocess_exec()
for other parameters.Deprecated since version 3.8, removed in version 3.10: The
loop
parameter. This function has been implicitly getting the current running loop since 3.7. See What’s New in 3.10’s Removed section for more information.
- coroutine asyncio.create_subprocess_shell(cmd, stdin=None, stdout=None, stderr=None, limit=None, **kwds)¶
Run the cmd shell command.
The limit argument sets the buffer limit for
StreamReader
wrappers forProcess.stdout
andProcess.stderr
(ifsubprocess.PIPE
is passed to stdout and stderr arguments).Return a
Process
instance.See the documentation of
loop.subprocess_shell()
for other parameters.Important
It is the application’s responsibility to ensure that all whitespace and special characters are quoted appropriately to avoid shell injection vulnerabilities. The
shlex.quote()
function can be used to properly escape whitespace and special shell characters in strings that are going to be used to construct shell commands.Deprecated since version 3.8, removed in version 3.10: The
loop
parameter. This function has been implicitly getting the current running loop since 3.7. See What’s New in 3.10’s Removed section for more information.
Note
Subprocesses are available for Windows if a ProactorEventLoop
is
used. See Subprocess Support on Windows
for details.
See also
asyncio also has the following low-level APIs to work with subprocesses:
loop.subprocess_exec()
, loop.subprocess_shell()
,
loop.connect_read_pipe()
, loop.connect_write_pipe()
,
as well as the Subprocess Transports
and Subprocess Protocols.
Constants¶
- asyncio.subprocess.PIPE¶
Can be passed to the stdin, stdout or stderr parameters.
If PIPE is passed to stdin argument, the
Process.stdin
attribute will point to aStreamWriter
instance.If PIPE is passed to stdout or stderr arguments, the
Process.stdout
andProcess.stderr
attributes will point toStreamReader
instances.
- asyncio.subprocess.STDOUT¶
Special value that can be used as the stderr argument and indicates that standard error should be redirected into standard output.
- asyncio.subprocess.DEVNULL¶
Special value that can be used as the stdin, stdout or stderr argument to process creation functions. It indicates that the special file
os.devnull
will be used for the corresponding subprocess stream.
Interacting with Subprocesses¶
Both create_subprocess_exec()
and create_subprocess_shell()
functions return instances of the Process class. Process is a high-level
wrapper that allows communicating with subprocesses and watching for
their completion.
- class asyncio.subprocess.Process¶
An object that wraps OS processes created by the
create_subprocess_exec()
andcreate_subprocess_shell()
functions.This class is designed to have a similar API to the
subprocess.Popen
class, but there are some notable differences:unlike Popen, Process instances do not have an equivalent to the
poll()
method;the
communicate()
andwait()
methods don’t have a timeout parameter: use thewait_for()
function;the
Process.wait()
method is asynchronous, whereassubprocess.Popen.wait()
method is implemented as a blocking busy loop;the universal_newlines parameter is not supported.
This class is not thread safe.
See also the Subprocess and Threads section.
- coroutine wait()¶
Wait for the child process to terminate.
Set and return the
returncode
attribute.Note
This method can deadlock when using
stdout=PIPE
orstderr=PIPE
and the child process generates so much output that it blocks waiting for the OS pipe buffer to accept more data. Use thecommunicate()
method when using pipes to avoid this condition.
- coroutine communicate(input=None)¶
Interact with process:
send data to stdin (if input is not
None
);read data from stdout and stderr, until EOF is reached;
wait for process to terminate.
The optional input argument is the data (
bytes
object) that will be sent to the child process.Return a tuple
(stdout_data, stderr_data)
.If either
BrokenPipeError
orConnectionResetError
exception is raised when writing input into stdin, the exception is ignored. This condition occurs when the process exits before all data are written into stdin.If it is desired to send data to the process’ stdin, the process needs to be created with
stdin=PIPE
. Similarly, to get anything other thanNone
in the result tuple, the process has to be created withstdout=PIPE
and/orstderr=PIPE
arguments.Note, that the data read is buffered in memory, so do not use this method if the data size is large or unlimited.
- send_signal(signal)¶
Sends the signal signal to the child process.
Note
On Windows,
SIGTERM
is an alias forterminate()
.CTRL_C_EVENT
andCTRL_BREAK_EVENT
can be sent to processes started with a creationflags parameter which includesCREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP
.
- terminate()¶
Stop the child process.
On POSIX systems this method sends
signal.SIGTERM
to the child process.On Windows the Win32 API function
TerminateProcess()
is called to stop the child process.
- kill()¶
Kill the child process.
On POSIX systems this method sends
SIGKILL
to the child process.On Windows this method is an alias for
terminate()
.
- stdin¶
Standard input stream (
StreamWriter
) orNone
if the process was created withstdin=None
.
- stdout¶
Standard output stream (
StreamReader
) orNone
if the process was created withstdout=None
.
- stderr¶
Standard error stream (
StreamReader
) orNone
if the process was created withstderr=None
.
Warning
Use the
communicate()
method rather thanprocess.stdin.write()
,await process.stdout.read()
orawait process.stderr.read
. This avoids deadlocks due to streams pausing reading or writing and blocking the child process.- pid¶
Process identification number (PID).
Note that for processes created by the
create_subprocess_shell()
function, this attribute is the PID of the spawned shell.
- returncode¶
Return code of the process when it exits.
A
None
value indicates that the process has not terminated yet.A negative value
-N
indicates that the child was terminated by signalN
(POSIX only).
Subprocess and Threads¶
Standard asyncio event loop supports running subprocesses from different threads by default.
On Windows subprocesses are provided by ProactorEventLoop
only (default),
SelectorEventLoop
has no subprocess support.
On UNIX child watchers are used for subprocess finish waiting, see Process Watchers for more info.
Changed in version 3.8: UNIX switched to use ThreadedChildWatcher
for spawning subprocesses from
different threads without any limitation.
Spawning a subprocess with inactive current child watcher raises
RuntimeError
.
Note that alternative event loop implementations might have own limitations; please refer to their documentation.
See also
The Concurrency and multithreading in asyncio section.
Examples¶
An example using the Process
class to
control a subprocess and the StreamReader
class to read from
its standard output.
The subprocess is created by the create_subprocess_exec()
function:
import asyncio
import sys
async def get_date():
code = 'import datetime; print(datetime.datetime.now())'
# Create the subprocess; redirect the standard output
# into a pipe.
proc = await asyncio.create_subprocess_exec(
sys.executable, '-c', code,
stdout=asyncio.subprocess.PIPE)
# Read one line of output.
data = await proc.stdout.readline()
line = data.decode('ascii').rstrip()
# Wait for the subprocess exit.
await proc.wait()
return line
date = asyncio.run(get_date())
print(f"Current date: {date}")
See also the same example written using low-level APIs.