I have a .sh script that I call with source the_script.sh
. Calling this regularly is fine. However, I am trying to call it from my python script, through subprocess.Popen
.
Calling it from Popen, I am getting the following errors in the following two scenario calls:
foo = subprocess.Popen("source the_script.sh")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/subprocess.py", line 672, in __init__
errread, errwrite)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/subprocess.py", line 1213, in _execute_child
raise child_exception
OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory
>>> foo = subprocess.Popen("source the_script.sh", shell = True)
>>> /bin/sh: source: not found
What gives? Why can't I call "source" from Popen, when I can outside of python?
source
is not an executable command, it's a shell builtin.
The most usual case for using source
is to run a shell script that changes the environment and to retain that environment in the current shell. That's exactly how virtualenv works to modify the default python environment.
Creating a sub-process and using source
in the subprocess probably won't do anything useful, it won't modify the environment of the parent process, none of the side-effects of using the sourced script will take place.
Python has an analogous command, execfile
, which runs the specified file using the current python global namespace (or another, if you supply one), that you could use in a similar way as the bash command source
.