116 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
116 lines
4.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
:mod:`pty` --- Pseudo-terminal utilities
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========================================
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.. module:: pty
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:platform: Linux
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:synopsis: Pseudo-Terminal Handling for Linux.
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.. moduleauthor:: Steen Lumholt
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.. sectionauthor:: Moshe Zadka <moshez@zadka.site.co.il>
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**Source code:** :source:`Lib/pty.py`
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--------------
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The :mod:`pty` module defines operations for handling the pseudo-terminal
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concept: starting another process and being able to write to and read from its
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controlling terminal programmatically.
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Because pseudo-terminal handling is highly platform dependent, there is code to
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do it only for Linux. (The Linux code is supposed to work on other platforms,
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but hasn't been tested yet.)
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The :mod:`pty` module defines the following functions:
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.. function:: fork()
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Fork. Connect the child's controlling terminal to a pseudo-terminal. Return
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value is ``(pid, fd)``. Note that the child gets *pid* 0, and the *fd* is
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*invalid*. The parent's return value is the *pid* of the child, and *fd* is a
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file descriptor connected to the child's controlling terminal (and also to the
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child's standard input and output).
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.. function:: openpty()
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Open a new pseudo-terminal pair, using :func:`os.openpty` if possible, or
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emulation code for generic Unix systems. Return a pair of file descriptors
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``(master, slave)``, for the master and the slave end, respectively.
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.. function:: spawn(argv[, master_read[, stdin_read]])
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Spawn a process, and connect its controlling terminal with the current
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process's standard io. This is often used to baffle programs which insist on
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reading from the controlling terminal. It is expected that the process
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spawned behind the pty will eventually terminate, and when it does *spawn*
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will return.
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The functions *master_read* and *stdin_read* are passed a file descriptor
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which they should read from, and they should always return a byte string. In
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order to force spawn to return before the child process exits an
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:exc:`OSError` should be thrown.
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The default implementation for both functions will read and return up to 1024
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bytes each time the function is called. The *master_read* callback is passed
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the pseudoterminal’s master file descriptor to read output from the child
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process, and *stdin_read* is passed file descriptor 0, to read from the
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parent process's standard input.
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Returning an empty byte string from either callback is interpreted as an
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end-of-file (EOF) condition, and that callback will not be called after
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that. If *stdin_read* signals EOF the controlling terminal can no longer
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communicate with the parent process OR the child process. Unless the child
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process will quit without any input, *spawn* will then loop forever. If
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*master_read* signals EOF the same behavior results (on linux at least).
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If both callbacks signal EOF then *spawn* will probably never return, unless
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*select* throws an error on your platform when passed three empty lists. This
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is a bug, documented in `issue 26228 <https://bugs.python.org/issue26228>`_.
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.. audit-event:: pty.spawn argv pty.spawn
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.. versionchanged:: 3.4
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:func:`spawn` now returns the status value from :func:`os.waitpid`
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on the child process.
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Example
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-------
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.. sectionauthor:: Steen Lumholt
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The following program acts like the Unix command :manpage:`script(1)`, using a
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pseudo-terminal to record all input and output of a terminal session in a
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"typescript". ::
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import argparse
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import os
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import pty
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import sys
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import time
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parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
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parser.add_argument('-a', dest='append', action='store_true')
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parser.add_argument('-p', dest='use_python', action='store_true')
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parser.add_argument('filename', nargs='?', default='typescript')
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options = parser.parse_args()
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shell = sys.executable if options.use_python else os.environ.get('SHELL', 'sh')
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filename = options.filename
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mode = 'ab' if options.append else 'wb'
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with open(filename, mode) as script:
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def read(fd):
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data = os.read(fd, 1024)
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script.write(data)
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return data
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print('Script started, file is', filename)
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script.write(('Script started on %s\n' % time.asctime()).encode())
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pty.spawn(shell, read)
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script.write(('Script done on %s\n' % time.asctime()).encode())
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print('Script done, file is', filename)
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