L.S. I have a problem that a background process that I'm trying to start with subprocess.Popen gets interrupted and starts waiting for input no matter what I try to do to have it continue to run. It happens when I run it with nohup in the background. I've tried to find a solution searching the internet, but found none. I've written a small test script that reproduces the problem and hope maybe here there is someone who can tell me what's going wrong. Any suggestions are welcome.
(renting)myhost> cat test.py #!/usr/bin/python # script to test subprocess problem import subprocess, sys, time for f in range(3): command = ["ssh", "-T", "localhost", "uptime"] comm = subprocess.Popen(command, shell=False, stdin=None, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT, close_fds=True) print '1' if comm.returncode: print "error: %i" % (comm.return_code) else: print '2' (output, output2) = comm.communicate(input=None) print output print output2 print '3' time.sleep(3) (renting)myhost> python --version Python 2.5.2 (renting)myhost> nohup ./test.py -O2 & [1] 15679 (renting)myhost> 1 2 22:40:30 up 24 days, 7:32, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 None 3 1 2 [1] + Suspended (tty input) ./test.py -O2 (renting)myhost> fg ./test.py -O2 22:40:35 up 24 days, 7:32, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 None 3 1 2 22:40:56 up 24 days, 7:32, 1 user, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 None 3 (renting)myhost> Now as you can see, it suspends on the second time through the for loop, until I bring it to the foreground and hit . What you don't see, is that I make it do this by pushing the arrow keys a couple of times. The same happens when I would exit the shell, despite it running with nohup. I don't need to exit to make it suspend, any combination of a few random keystrokes makes it do this. It seems depending on the timing though, during the sleep(3) it seems to ignore me, only when subprocess is actually running will it suspend if I generate keystrokes. If the ssh command is executed without -T option it suspends directly, so I think it's related to the ssh command. I log in with a public/private key pair to avoid having to enter a password. Any suggestions are welcome, thanks, Adriaan Renting -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list