If you are using any major operating system, you are indirectly interacting with bash. If you are running Ubuntu, Linux Mint, or any other Linux distribution, you are interacting with bash every time you use the terminal. Suppose you have written your bash script that needs to be invoked from python code. The two common modules for interacting with the system terminal are os and subprocess module.
Let’s consider such a simple example, presenting a recommended approach to invoking subprocesses. As an argument, you have to pass the command you want to invoke and its arguments, all wrapped in a list.
Running simple bash script on terminal using Python
Python3
import os os.system( "echo GeeksForGeeks" ) |
Output:
GeeksForGeeks
Executing bash scripts using Python subprocess module
A new process is created, and command echo is invoked with the argument “Geeks for Lazyroar”. Although, the command’s result is not captured by the python script. We can do it by adding optional keyword argument capture_output=True to run the function, or by invoking check_output function from the same module. Both functions invoke the command, but the first one is available in Python3.7 and newer versions.
Python3
import subprocess # From Python3.7 you can add # keyword argument capture_output print (subprocess.run([ "echo" , "Geeks for Lazyroar" ], capture_output = True )) # For older versions of Python: print (subprocess.check_output([ "echo" , "Geeks for Lazyroar" ])) |
Output:
CompletedProcess(args=['echo', 'Geeks for Lazyroar'], returncode=0, stdout=b'Geeks for Lazyroar\n', stderr=b'') b'Geeks for Lazyroar\n'
Execute an existing bash script using Python subprocess module
We can also execute an existing a bash script using Python subprocess module.
Python3
import subprocess # If your shell script has shebang, # you can omit shell=True argument. print (subprocess.run([ "/path/to/your/shell/script" , "arguments" ], shell = True )) |
Output:
CompletedProcess(args=['/path/to/your/shell/script', 'arguments'], returncode=127)
Common problems with invoking shell script and how to solve them:
- Permission denied when invoking script — don’t forget to make your script executable! Use chmod +x /path/to/your/script
- OSError: [Errno 8] Exec format error — run functions lacks shell=True option or script has no shebang.
Executing bash command using Python os module
Using os module also, we can execute bash command. Here, we have executed a bash command to find the current date.
Python3
import os os.system( 'date +"Today is: %A %d %B"' ) |
Output:
Today is: Friday 02 September