The pty module defines operations for handling the pseudo-terminal concept: starting another process and being able to write to and read from its controlling terminal programmatically.
Because pseudo-terminal handling is highly platform dependent, there is code to do it only for Linux. (The Linux code is supposed to work on other platforms, but hasnβt been tested yet.)
The pty module defines the following functions:
Fork. Connect the childβs controlling terminal to a pseudo-terminal. Return value is (pid, fd). Note that the child gets pid 0, and the fd is invalid. The parentβs return value is the pid of the child, and fd is a file descriptor connected to the childβs controlling terminal (and also to the childβs standard input and output).
Open a new pseudo-terminal pair, using os.openpty() if possible, or emulation code for generic Unix systems. Return a pair of file descriptors (master, slave), for the master and the slave end, respectively.
Spawn a process, and connect its controlling terminal with the current processβs standard io. This is often used to baffle programs which insist on reading from the controlling terminal.
The functions master_read and stdin_read should be functions which read from a file descriptor. The defaults try to read 1024 bytes each time they are called.
Changed in version 3.4: spawn() now returns the status value from os.waitpid() on the child process.
The following program acts like the Unix command script(1), using a pseudo-terminal to record all input and output of a terminal session in a βtypescriptβ.
import argparse
import os
import pty
import sys
import time
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('-a', dest='append', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('-p', dest='use_python', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('filename', nargs='?', default='typescript')
options = parser.parse_args()
shell = sys.executable if options.use_python else os.environ.get('SHELL', 'sh')
filename = options.filename
mode = 'ab' if options.append else 'wb'
with open(filename, mode) as script:
def read(fd):
data = os.read(fd, 1024)
script.write(data)
return data
print('Script started, file is', filename)
script.write(('Script started on %s\n' % time.asctime()).encode())
pty.spawn(shell, read)
script.write(('Script done on %s\n' % time.asctime()).encode())
print('Script done, file is', filename)