Command line execution in different folder

Question:

I’m calling a command line program in python using the os.system(command) call.

How can I call this command passing a different folder for execution? There is a system call for this? Or I should save the current folder, and, after execution, change restore it.

Asked By: Victor

||

Answers:

Try to os.chdir(path) before invoking the command.

From here:

os.chdir(path) Change the current working directory to path.

Availability: Unix, Windows

EDIT

This will change the current working dir, you can get the current working by:

os.getcwd()

If you want to save it and restore it later, if you need to do some work in the original working dir.

EDIT 2

In any case you should probably move to subprocess (doc) as suggested here. If you use subprocess‘s Popen you have the choice of providing cwd parameter to specify the working directory for the subprocess: read this.

subprocess.Popen(args, bufsize=0, executable=None, stdin=None,
stdout=None, stderr=None, preexec_fn=None, close_fds=False,
shell=False, cwd=None, env=None, universal_newlines=False,
startupinfo=None, creationflags=0)

If cwd is not None, the child’s current directory will be changed to
cwd before it is executed. Note that this directory is not considered
when searching the executable, so you can’t specify the program’s path
relative to cwd.

Answered By: zenpoy

The subprocess module is a very good solution.

import subprocess
p = subprocess.Popen([command, argument1,...], cwd=working_directory)
p.wait()

It has also arguments for modifying environment variables, redirecting input/output to the calling program, etc.

Answered By: hynekcer

Here, I made a little function to change the path you’re working on :

import os
def make_path(r_path):  
    ack = 1
    try:
        root = os.path.dirname(__file__)
        rel_path = os.path.join("..", r_path)

        abs_path = os.path.join(root, rel_path)
        os.chdir(abs_path)
        ack = 0
    except Exception as details:
        print('problem to get to the path '+r_path+' (0001) : ' + str(details))
    return ack

So here, r_path is the relative path you want to go to. I added ".." to the path.join() methode so, if you’re in a folder and want to exit it before searching for your path, it does it automatically. So, if your relative directory looks like this :

-path_to_reach
    -a_random_file.txt
-your_current_folder
    -your_program.py

you can do those lines to go inside the path_to_reach and make your command, in exemple :

command = ls
make_path('path_to_reach/')
os.system(command)

This command would not be useful, but you see the idea!

Categories: questions Tags: , ,
Answers are sorted by their score. The answer accepted by the question owner as the best is marked with
at the top-right corner.