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How to redirect stderr in Python? Via Python C API?


This is a combination of my two recent questions:
[1] Python instance method in C
[2] How to redirect stderr in Python?

I would like to log the output of both stdout and stderr from a python script.

The thing I want to ask is, to create a new type according to [1] seems fairly complicated. Does it simplifies the things if there was no need to expose the new type to Python, i.e. it would only exist in C?

I mean, when Python prints something it goes to "Objects/fileobject.c" and there in "PyFile_WriteObject" it check whether it is possible to write to its argument:

writer = PyObject_GetAttrString(f, "write");
if (writer == NULL)
...

Also, it is possible to get stdout and stderr like this:

PyObject* out = PySys_GetObject("stdout");
PyObject* err = PySys_GetObject("stderr");

My question is then, is it somehow possible to construct necessary PyObject which satisfies the above 'PyObject_GetAttrString(f, "write")' and is callable so I can write:

PySys_SetObject("stdout", <my writer object / class / type / ?>);

http://docs.python.org/c-api/sys.html?highlight=pysys_setobject#PySys_SetObject

This way, there would be no need to expose the new "writer type" to the rest of Python script so I thought it might be a bit simpler to write the code...?


Solution

  • Just make a module object (you're doing that anyway, if you're using the C API!-) and make it have a suitable write function -- that module object will be suitable as the second argument to PySys_SetObject.

    In my answer to your other question I pointed you to xxmodule.c, an example file in Python's C sources, which is a module with a lot of examples including types and functions of various kinds -- you can work from there even if (mysteriously to me) you consider the "make a new type" part too difficult;-).

    Edit: here's a trivial working example (aview.py):

    #include "Python.h"
    #include <stdio.h>
    
    static PyObject *
    aview_write(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)
    {
        const char *what;
        if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "s", &what))
            return NULL;
        printf("==%s==", what);
        return Py_BuildValue("");
    }
    
    static PyMethodDef a_methods[] = {
        {"write", aview_write, METH_VARARGS, "Write something."},
        {NULL, NULL, 0, NULL}
    };
    
    PyMODINIT_FUNC
    initaview(void)
    {
        PyObject *m = Py_InitModule("aview", a_methods);
        if (m == NULL) return;
        PySys_SetObject("stdout", m);
    }
    

    Once this aview module is properly installed:

    $ python
    Python 2.5.4 (r254:67917, Dec 23 2008, 14:57:27) 
    [GCC 4.0.1 (Apple Computer, Inc. build 5363)] on darwin
    Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
    >>> import aview
    >>> print 'ciao'
    ==ciao====
    ==>>> 
    

    ...any string emitted to standard output is written with == signs around it (and this print calls .write twice: with 'ciao', and then again with a newline).