On 5 Dic, 03:06, Carl Banks <pavlovevide...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Dec 4, 3:44 pm, luca72 <lucabe...@libero.it> wrote: > > > > > On 5 Dic, 00:14, luca72 <lucabe...@libero.it> wrote: > > > > On 5 Dic, 00:03, luca72 <lucabe...@libero.it> wrote: > > > > > On 4 Dic, 23:23, Mike Driscoll <kyoso...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > On Dec 4, 3:50 pm, luca72 <lucabe...@libero.it> wrote: > > > > > > > Hello i'm using subprocess in this way: > > > > > > self.luca = subprocess.Popen(['/usr/bin/ > > > > > > dvbtune'+frase_sint],shell=True, > > > > > > stdout=self.f_s_l,stderr=self.f_s_e ) > > > > > > > then i kill: > > > > > > self.luca.Kill() > > > > > > > but the process is still active and the file self.f_s_l increase it > > > > > > size because the process is not killed. > > > > > > > How i can kill the process? > > > > > > Regards > > > > > > > Luca > > > > > > Seehttp://lmgtfy.com/?q=python+kill+subprocess+linux > > > > > > When I do that on my machine, the 2nd result has the answer: > > > > > >http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1064335/in-python-2-5-how-do-i-kil... > > > > > > ------------------- > > > > > Mike Driscoll > > > > > > Blog: http://blog.pythonlibrary.org > > > > > Hello Mike i have also test but they never kill the process the file > > > > (stdout=self.f_s_l) increase it's size, haveyou some idea. > > > > also if i close the program the process is still active. > > > > > Regards > > > > > Luca > > > > i'm able only to kill via shell like kill -9 process pid, Why? > > > Now the only way to solve the problem is to call a c program that kill > > the process via subprocess in other case i can't close it, i have also > > try with > > > subprocess.Popen(['kill -9 dvbtune'] shell=True), but the process is > > still active > > This is not working because the kill command does not accept the name > of a program. You have to give it a process id. > > As for your general question, we really can't answer it. There a lot > of reasons a process might not die when you try to kill it: it could > be trapping and ignoring signals (which is rude but it happens), it > could be stuck in a critical section, the program might be threaded > and not handling signals well, the program might have forked itself > and the original process id has disappeared, etc. We can't read your > mind or divine what's running on your computer, so we can't answer > your question. We can only suggest things that might be wrong. It's > up to you to investigate and/or dig deeper. > > Carl Banks
The firs thing that i have tested is with the process id get by Popen.pid ,but it don't works. Thanks -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list