> I've been trying to do something that I thought was going to be > relatively straight-forward, but so far I haven't found a good > solution. > > What I'm trying to do is discover a pid on a process and kill it. The > way that I thought that I could do it is something along the lines of: > > import commands > > program = "someprogram" > > a = commands.getoutput('ps ax|grep %s ' % (program)) > > Then, I'd parse the returned info get the pid and kill it, probably > via > another command. > > However, what happens is that the "ps ax" portion truncates the > listing > at 158 characters. It just so happens that the unique name that I > need > in the list comes after that. So, works from the bash shell, but > doesn't work using getoutput.
What's the result of getoutput(); ie, what is a? Note that bash and commands.getoutput() are not the same, since the latter executes 'sh -c', which is slightly different. I don't expect that'll solve your problem. Does the -w option help? I'm guessing it won't, since the truncation seem to be due to some odd character causing an EOF or something (I tried myself here, both on Linux & OS X, without problems). Evert _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor