I'm trying to read lines from a pipe and process them, but I'm doing something silly and I can't figure out what. The producer is going to keep producing lines indefinitely, like this:
producer.py
import time
while True:
print 'Data'
time.sleep(1)
The consumer just needs to check for lines periodically:
consumer.py
import sys, time
while True:
line = sys.stdin.readline()
if line:
print 'Got data:', line
else:
time.sleep(1)
When I run this in the Windows shell as python producer.py | python consumer.py
, it just sleeps forever (never seems to get data?) It seems that maybe the problem is that the producer never terminates, since if I send a finite amount of data then it works fine.
How can I get the data to be received and show up for the consumer? In the real application, the producer is a C++ program I have no control over.
Some old versions of Windows simulated pipes through files (so they were prone to such problems), but that hasn't been a problem in 10+ years. Try adding a
sys.stdout.flush()
to the producer after the print
, and also try to make the producer's stdout unbuffered (by using python -u
).
Of course this doesn't help if you have no control over the producer -- if it buffers too much of its output you're still going to wait a long time.
Unfortunately - while there are many approaches to solve that problem on Unix-like operating systems, such as pyexpect, pexpect, exscript, and paramiko, I doubt any of them works on Windows; if that's indeed the case, I'd try Cygwin, which puts enough of a Linux-like veneer on Windows as to often enable the use of Linux-like approaches on a Windows box.
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