so i want to run this python program but i am unsure how to run it, when i insert in the arguments it get a token error.
First i "import cw2" which is the file name in the terminal after typing python and then i type in the argument to run a individual task but i get and error. Heres the code, can you tell me how to run the individual parts.
Heres what i typed as the argument cw2 -u user_745409913574d4c6 -d doc_140228202800-6ef39a241f35301a9a42cd0ed21e5fb0 -t task_2, But that doesnt work. Heres the code below showing what the argument is.
def main(argv):
user_uuid = ''
doc_uuid = ''
task_id = 0
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(argv, "hu:d:t:", ["user_uuid=", "doc_uuid=", "task_id="])
except getopt.GetoptError:
print 'cw2 -u <user_uuid> -d <doc_uuid> -t <task_id>'
sys.exit(2)
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt == '-h':
print 'cw2.py -u <user_uuid> -d <doc_uuid> -t <task_id>'
sys.exit()
elif opt in ("-u", "--user_uuid"):
user_uuid = arg
elif opt in ("-d", "--doc_uuid"):
doc_uuid = arg
elif opt in ("-t", "--task_id"):
task_id = arg
if(int(task_id) == 1):
with open("../requirements.txt", 'r') as fin:
print("Requirments.txt file content")
print fin.read()
if(int(task_id) == 2):
if(doc_uuid == ''):
print(" No doc_uuid supplied")
else:
task_2(doc_uuid)
print("Histograms for per country beed saved in : static/results/countries_to_book_UUID.png")
print("Histograms for per continent beed saved in : static/results/continent_to_book_UUI.png")
elif(int(task_id) == 3):
task_3()
print("Histograms of browser usage has been seaved in 'static/results/simple_browser_usage.png' ")
print("Histograms of generalised browser usage has been seaved in 'static/results/general_browser_usage.png")
elif(int(task_id) == 4):
print("Data of 10 most active readers")
task_4(10)
elif(int(task_id) == 5):
if((user_uuid == '') | (doc_uuid == '')):
print("Provide user_uuid or/and doc_uuid")
# 938601f24509a9f1 , 110727005030-000000009cca70787e5fba1fda005c85
else:
task_5(user_uuid, doc_uuid)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main(sys.argv[1:])
Don't run it from the Python shell, this is set up to run as a normal program from your terminal.
cd <wherever this script is>
chmod a+x ./cw.py
./cw.py -u user_745409913574d4c6 -d doc_140228202800-6ef39a241f35301a9a42cd0ed21e5fb0 -t task_2
Also, the indentation is all wrong on the script in your question, but I assume that that's a copy-and-paste error.
Related
I'm new to python and having some issues with blocking. I have a script that I'm calling with options. I'm able to see the arguments come in, however, I have been unable to get the program to work correctly. In the code sample below, I'm trying to grab the arguments and then run the piece of code after the "#if ip address is not defined qpid-route will not work" comment. If I change the indentation after the comment, I get expected indentation or unexpected indentation errors.
The problem is that the way the code currently is it will run the elif opt in ("-i", "--ipaddress"): code and then will continue and run the code through to the bottom and then come back and run the -s loop code and then rerun the code to the bottom.
To fix this, I tried a break or continue command and all I get is indentation errors on this no matter which level I align it with. Can someone help me format this correctly such that I can pull the ipaddress and scac values that I'm grabbing from the arguments and then run the code after the "#if ip address is not defined qpid-route will not work" comment as a separate block.
import re
import os
import sys
import getopt
import pdb
ipaddress = ""
scac = ''
def main(argv):
#print argv
ipaddress = ""
scac = ''
pdb.set_trace()
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(argv,"hi:s:",["ipaddress=","scac="])
if not opts: # if no option given
print 'usage test.py -i <ipaddress> -s <scac>'
sys.exit(2)
except getopt.GetoptError:
print 'test.py -i <ipaddress> -s <scac>'
sys.exit(2)
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt == '-h':
print 'FedConnectStatus.py -i <iobipaddress> -s <scac>'
sys.exit() # it should be on level of if
elif opt in ("-i", "--ipaddress"):
ipaddress = arg
#break
#continue
elif opt in ("-s", "--scac"):
scac = arg
#if ip address is not defined qpid-route will not work
if not ipaddress:
print 'ip address needed'
else:
print(os.getcwd())
#If no scac is given grab every federated connection and report
if not scac:
# open file to read
f = file('qpid.txt', 'r')
nameList = []
statusList = []
#skip first 4 lines
for i in range(3): f.next() # skip first four lines
# iterate over the lines in the file
for line in f:
# split the line into a list of column values
columns = line.split(None, 5)
# clean any whitespace off the items
columns = [col.strip() for col in columns]
# ensure the column has at least one value before printing
if columns:
#print "Name", columns[0] # print the first column
#print "Status", columns[4] # print the last column
nameList.append(columns[0])
statusList.append(columns[4])
#print name
#print status
#else:
print nameList
print statusList
#if __name__ == "__main__":
main(sys.argv[1:])
This statement if not scac: on line 40 and below has indentation different to that of the rest of the code.
You'll see line 38 also doesn't match the indenting of the above if.
It could be I'm completely misunderstanding the getopt module
I am trying to parse [--magic-m] to my program, but it does not set the correct field.
Part of Encrypt Function
def encrypt(filename, text, magic):
if not magic is None:
hash = pbkdf2_sha256.encrypt(magic, rounds=10000, salt_size=16)
print pbkdf2_sha256.verify(magic, hash)
try:
d = load_image( filename )
except Exception,e:
print str(e)
Part of Load function
def load_image( filename ) :
img = Image.open( os.path.join(__location__, filename) )
img.load()
data = np.asarray( img, dtype="int32" )
return data
Main
if __name__ == "__main__":
if not len(sys.argv[1:]):
usage()
try:
opts,args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:],"hedm:",["help", "encrypt", "decrypt", "magic="])
except getopt.GetoptError as err:
print str(err)
usage()
magic = None
for o,a in opts:
if o in ("-h","--help"):
usage()
elif o in ("-e","--encrypt"):
to_encrypt = True
elif o in ("-d","--decrypt"):
to_encrypt = False
elif o in ("-m", "--magic"):
magic = a
else:
assert False,"Unhandled Option"
print magic
if not to_encrypt:
filename = sys.argv[2]
decrypt(filename, magic)
else:
filename = sys.argv[2]
text = sys.argv[3]
encrypt(filename, text, magic)
I tried calling the program above like this:
[1] python stego.py -e test.jpeg lol -m h
or like this:
[2] python stego.py -e -m h test.jpeg lol
Output becomes:
[1] None
[2] lol
[2] True
[2] [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'C:\\Users\\Educontract\\Steganography\\-m'
Whitout the option -m everything works fine
The colon should come after m to indicate that it requires an argument. You should also include an equals sign after the long option magic to indicate that it requires an argument.
getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:],"hedm:",["help", "encrypt", "decrypt", "magic="])
You should put all your options before the arguments, as in your second example.
python stego.py -e -m h test.jpeg lol
If you print sys.argv, I think you'll find that sys.argv[2] and sys.argv[3] are not what you expect. I would fetch the arguments from args, rather than sys.argv.
filename = args[0]
text = args[1]
Note that you may find it easier to use the argparse library instead of getopt. It isn't as strict about requiring options before arguments.
I'm trying to run a python script that is optimized to work with python 2.7:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys,getopt,os
SplitInput_string = """#!/bin/bash
#BSUB -J SplitInput[1-%numSamples%]
#BSUB -o Logs/SplitInput-Out-%I.out
#BSUB -e Logs/SplitInput-Err-%I.err
#BSUB -q week
#BSUB -W 23:58
echo Date: `date`
t1=`date +%s`
sleep ${LSB_JOBINDEX}
python LSFScripts/array_merge.py -r ${LSB_JOBINDEX} -i %input% -o original_reads/
[ $? -eq 0 ] || echo 'JOB FAILURE: $?'
echo Date: `date`
t2=`date +%s`
tdiff=`echo 'scale=3;('$t2'-'$t1')/3600' | bc`
echo 'Total time: '$tdiff' hours'
"""
help_message = "usage example: python setupDirs.py -i /path/to/reads/ -n numberOfSamples"
if __name__ == "__main__":
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'hi:n:', ["inputdir="])
except:
print help_message
sys.exit(2)
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt in ('-h', '--help'):
print help_message
sys.exit()
elif opt in ('-i', '--inputdir'):
inputdir = arg
if inputdir[-1] != '/':
inputdir += '/'
elif opt in ('-n'):
n = arg
for dir in ['Logs', 'original_reads', 'hashed_reads', 'cluster_vectors', 'read_partitions']:
os.system('mkdir %s' % (dir))
f = open('LSFScripts/SplitInput_ArrayJob.q', 'w')
f.write(SplitInput_string.replace('%numSamples%', n).replace('%input%', inputdir))
f.close()
But I keep getting this error message:
line 42, in <module>
f.write(SplitInput_string.replace('%numSamples%', n).replace('%input%', inputdir))
NameError: name 'n' is not defined
Any advice would be appreciated!
You must assign a value to n before entering the loop.
if __name__ == "__main__":
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:],'hi:n:',["inputdir="])
except:
print help_message
sys.exit(2)
n = ""
for opt, arg in opts:
etc...
n is not defined in all code paths. It is only defined if you follow the path:
elif opt in ('-n'):
Define m at a higher scope (i.e. before the for loop) with a default value if you want to use it afterwards.
n = #default value
for opt, arg in opts:
# ...
If you want to parse arguments, I highly recommend using the argparse package. There is a little bit of a learning curve, but you can very robustly generate the necessary usage.
How can I compare the values of input parmeters with a file in such a way that the sequence of the lines in file are "respected". For example:
file sequence.txt has following enteries
aaa
bbb
ccc
ddd
and the input is coming like this (with comas):
./run.py -c migrate -s ddd,bbb
then output is like this:
bbb
ddd
Here is the script I have worked so far
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
import getopt
import time
import os
def main(argv):
cmd = ''
schemas = ''
script_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
seq_file = "system/sequence.txt"
abs_file_path = os.path.join(script_dir, seq_file)
try:
opts, args = getopt.getopt(argv,"h:c:s",["cmd=","schemas="])
except getopt.GetoptError:
print './run.py -c=<command> -s=<schemas> '
sys.exit(2)
for opt, arg in opts:
if opt == '-h':
print './run.py -c=<command> -s=<schemas>'
sys.exit()
elif opt in ("-c", "--cmd"):
cmd = arg
elif opt in ("-s", "--schemas"):
schemas = arg
if cmd == "migrate" :
with open(abs_file_path) as z:
for line in z:
print line.rstrip('\n')
if __name__ == "__main__":
main(sys.argv[1:])
I know that I have to do comparisons at position print line.rstrip('\n') but I can't figure out how to do it. Any suggestions?
Also, how can I make -s switch mandatory if -c has "migrate" value?
Thanks in advance.
You need to check whether the current line of the sequence is specified with the -s flag. So you need to modify the schemas value, so that it is a list that contains all schemas and then you can check if the current line is equal to one of the schemas. As for your second question, I'm not familiar with getopt, but you could simply check whether schemas is not empty when -c is migrate and do the approriate error handling.
[...]
schemas = []
[...]
elif opt in ("-s", "--schemas"):
schemas = arg.split(',')
[...]
if cmd == 'migrate':
if not schemas: # list is empty
# do error handling
for line in z:
if line in schemas:
print line
I have a script that runs a few external commands and returns their values. I am able to run the script within IDLE just fine, and I get the expected results.
When I execute the script in a Linux shell (Bash), it runs, but with no output.
The exit status is 0.
#!/usr/bin/python
import array,os,subprocess
def vsdIndex(vmVsd):
index = subprocess.call(["/root/indeces.sh", vmVsd], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=TRUE).communicate()[0]
print index
return (firstSerial,lastSerial)
def main():
vsdArray = []
vsdProc = subprocess.Popen(["sc vsd show | tail -n +2 | grep -Ev 'iso|ISO|vfd' | awk '{{print $1}}'"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
while True:
line = vsdProc.stdout.readline()
if line != '':
vsdIndex(line)
print "VSD:", line.rstrip()
print firstSerial
print lastSerial
else:
break
If I simplify it, and run without the function, I have the same behaviour:
def main():
vsdArray = []
vsdProc = subprocess.Popen(["sc vsd show | tail -n +2 | grep -Ev 'iso|ISO|vfd' | awk '{{print $1}}'"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
while True:
line = vsdProc.stdout.readline()
if line != '':
print "VSD:", line.rstrip()
else:
break
You need to call your main() function. Here is a common way of doing that automatically when you run on the command line:
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()