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| Started by | Jason Friedman <jason@powerpull.net> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2012-10-01 08:12 -0600 |
| Last post | 2012-10-02 09:16 -0700 |
| Articles | 5 — 4 participants |
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Re: parse an environment file Jason Friedman <jason@powerpull.net> - 2012-10-01 08:12 -0600
Re: parse an environment file Hans Mulder <hansmu@xs4all.nl> - 2012-10-01 17:35 +0200
Re: parse an environment file xDog Walker <thudfoo@gmail.com> - 2012-10-02 09:03 -0700
Re: parse an environment file Ramchandra Apte <maniandram01@gmail.com> - 2012-10-02 09:16 -0700
Re: parse an environment file Ramchandra Apte <maniandram01@gmail.com> - 2012-10-02 09:16 -0700
| From | Jason Friedman <jason@powerpull.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-10-01 08:12 -0600 |
| Subject | Re: parse an environment file |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1703.1349100773.27098.python-list@python.org> |
> I want my python 3.2.2 script, called via cron, to know what those
> additional variables are. How?
Thank you for the feedback. A crontab line of
* * * * * . /path/to/export_file && /path/to/script.py
does indeed work, but for various reasons this approach will not
always be available to me.
Let me restate my question. I have a file that looks like this:
export VAR1=foo
export VAR2=bar
# Comment
export VAR3=${VAR1}${VAR2}
I want this:
my_dict = {'VAR1': 'foo', 'VAR2': 'bar', 'VAR3': 'foobar'}
I can roll my own, but I'm thinking there is a module or existing code
that does this. I looked at the os and sys and configparse modules
but did not see it.
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| From | Hans Mulder <hansmu@xs4all.nl> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-10-01 17:35 +0200 |
| Message-ID | <5069b829$0$6949$e4fe514c@news2.news.xs4all.nl> |
| In reply to | #30604 |
On 1/10/12 16:12:50, Jason Friedman wrote:
>> I want my python 3.2.2 script, called via cron, to know what those
>> additional variables are. How?
>
> Thank you for the feedback. A crontab line of
>
> * * * * * . /path/to/export_file && /path/to/script.py
>
> does indeed work, but for various reasons this approach will not
> always be available to me.
>
> Let me restate my question. I have a file that looks like this:
> export VAR1=foo
> export VAR2=bar
> # Comment
> export VAR3=${VAR1}${VAR2}
>
> I want this:
> my_dict = {'VAR1': 'foo', 'VAR2': 'bar', 'VAR3': 'foobar'}
>
> I can roll my own, but I'm thinking there is a module or existing code
> that does this. I looked at the os and sys and configparse modules
> but did not see it.
One tactic is to write a wrapper script in shellese that sets the
variables and then runs your script. Something like:
#/bin/bash
export VAR1=foo
export VAR2=bar
# Comment
export VAR3=${VAR1}${VAR2}
# Read some more settings from a file
. /path/to/file/with/more/exports
# Drum roll .....
/path/to/your/script.py
This allows you to copy-and-paste all sorts of weird and wonderful
shell syntax into your wrapper script.
AFAIK, there is no Python module that can read shell syntax.
You could translate all that shell syntax manually to Python,
but that may not be worth the effort.
Hope this helps,
-- HansM
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| From | xDog Walker <thudfoo@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-10-02 09:03 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1729.1349193842.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #30612 |
On Monday 2012 October 01 08:35, Hans Mulder wrote: > AFAIK, there is no Python module that can read shell syntax. The stdlib's shlex might be that module. -- Yonder nor sorghum stenches shut ladle gulls stopper torque wet strainers.
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| From | Ramchandra Apte <maniandram01@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-10-02 09:16 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <e6ae0308-ea4e-4efd-b409-52708548f4be@googlegroups.com> |
| In reply to | #30638 |
On Tuesday, 2 October 2012 21:34:04 UTC+5:30, xDog Walker wrote: > On Monday 2012 October 01 08:35, Hans Mulder wrote: > > > AFAIK, there is no Python module that can read shell syntax. > > > > The stdlib's shlex might be that module. > > > > -- > > Yonder nor sorghum stenches shut ladle gulls stopper torque wet > > strainers. shlex can only split shell code into tokens.
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| From | Ramchandra Apte <maniandram01@gmail.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2012-10-02 09:16 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <mailman.1731.1349194573.27098.python-list@python.org> |
| In reply to | #30638 |
On Tuesday, 2 October 2012 21:34:04 UTC+5:30, xDog Walker wrote: > On Monday 2012 October 01 08:35, Hans Mulder wrote: > > > AFAIK, there is no Python module that can read shell syntax. > > > > The stdlib's shlex might be that module. > > > > -- > > Yonder nor sorghum stenches shut ladle gulls stopper torque wet > > strainers. shlex can only split shell code into tokens.
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