Subprocess check_output returned non-zero exit status 1
This is my python code:
import subprocess
subprocess.check_output("ls",shell=True,stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
import subprocess
subprocess.check_output("yum",shell=True,stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
The first .check_output()
works well, but the second returns this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/gedit/plugins/pythonconsole/console.py", line 378, in __run
r = eval(command, self.namespace, self.namespace)
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python3.4/subprocess.py", line 616, in check_output
raise CalledProcessError(retcode, process.args, output=output)
subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command 'yum' returned non-zero exit status 1
Why does this happen? Is it because ls
is the original shell command but yum
is the new package? How can I solve this problem?
Solution 1:
The command yum
that you launch was executed properly. It returns a non zero status which means that an error occured during the processing of the command. You probably want to add some argument to your yum
command to fix that.
Your code could show this error this way:
import subprocess
try:
subprocess.check_output("dir /f",shell=True,stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
except subprocess.CalledProcessError as e:
raise RuntimeError("command '{}' return with error (code {}): {}".format(e.cmd, e.returncode, e.output))
Solution 2:
The word check_
in the name means that if the command (the shell in this case that returns the exit status of the last command (yum
in this case)) returns non-zero status then it raises CalledProcessError
exception. It is by design. If the command that you want to run may return non-zero status on success then either catch this exception or don't use check_
methods. You could use subprocess.call
in your case because you are ignoring the captured output, e.g.:
import subprocess
rc = subprocess.call(['grep', 'pattern', 'file'],
stdout=subprocess.DEVNULL, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
if rc == 0: # found
...
elif rc == 1: # not found
...
elif rc > 1: # error
...
You don't need shell=True
to run the commands from your question.