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python - prevent IOError: [Errno 5] Input/output error when running without stdout

I have a script that runs automatically on server through cronjob and it import and run several other scripts.

Some of them use prints, which naturally creates IOError: [Errno 5] Input/output error because the script runs without any SSH / terminal connected, so there's no proper stdout setup.

There are lots of questions about this subject but I couldn't find anyone that actually solve it, assuming I can't remove the print or change the executed scripts.

I tried several things, including:

class StdOut(object):
    def __init__(self):
        pass
    def write(self, string):
        pass
sys.stdout = StdOut()
sys.stderr = StdOut()

and

from __future__ import print_function
import __builtin__

def print(*args, **kwargs):
        pass
    __builtin__.print = print

But none of it works. I assume it only affect the module itself and not the modules I import / run later.

So how can I create a stub stdout that will affect all modules in the process? Like I said, I don't want to change the scripts that are executed from the main module, but I can change everything inside the importing module. And just to clearify - everything is imported, no new processes are spawned etc.

Thanks,

Modifying the builtin or changing sys.stdout should work (except for subprocesses—but you ruled those out) as long as you do it early enough. If not, though, there's a lower level trick that's much easier:

  • run your python scripts with I/O redirection that discards output:

     python foo.py >/dev/null 2>&1 

    (assuming Unix-y scripts, as implied by "cron" in the question)

  • or, redirect file descriptors 1 and 2 (same idea as above, but done within your Python startup rather than as part of the cron-invoked command):

     import os fd = os.open(os.devnull, os.O_RDWR) # NB: even if stdin is closed, fd >= 0 os.dup2(fd, 1) os.dup2(fd, 2) if fd > 2: os.close(fd) 

    (this particular bit of code has the side effect of making /dev/null act as stdin, if all descriptors were closed). [ Edit : I started with with open(...) and then switched to os.open and did not test the final version. Fixed now.]

All that said, a good cron really should have stdout and stderr connected somewhere, and should email the output/error-output to you. Not all cron versions are this nice though.

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