# Module 'commands' # # Various tools for executing commands and looking at their output and status. import rand import posix import path # Get 'ls -l' status for an object into a string # def getstatus(file): return getoutput('ls -ld' + mkarg(file)) # Get the output from a shell command into a string. # The exit status is ignored; a trailing newline is stripped. # Assume the command will work with ' >tempfile 2>&1' appended. # XXX This should use posix.popen() instead, should it exist. # def getoutput(cmd): return getstatusoutput(cmd)[1] # Ditto but preserving the exit status. # Returns a pair (sts, output) # def getstatusoutput(cmd): tmp = '/usr/tmp/wdiff' + `rand.rand()` sts = -1 try: sts = posix.system(cmd + ' >' + tmp + ' 2>&1') text = readfile(tmp) finally: altsts = posix.system('rm -f ' + tmp) if text[-1:] = '\n': text = text[:-1] return sts, text # Return a string containing a file's contents. # def readfile(fn): fp = open(fn, 'r') a = '' n = 8096 while 1: b = fp.read(n) if not b: break a = a + b return a # Make command argument from directory and pathname (prefix space, add quotes). # def mk2arg(head, x): return mkarg(path.cat(head, x)) # Make a shell command argument from a string. # Two strategies: enclose in single quotes if it contains none; # otherwis, enclose in double quotes and prefix quotable characters # with backslash. # def mkarg(x): if '\'' not in x: return ' \'' + x + '\'' s = ' "' for c in x: if c in '\\$"': s = s + '\\' s = s + c s = s + '"' return s