Passing double quote shell commands in python to subprocess.Popen()?

Either use single quotes 'around the "whole pattern"' to automatically escape the doubles or explicitly "escape the \"double quotes\"". Your problem has nothing to do with Popen as such.

Just for the record, I had a problem particularly with a list-based command passed to Popen that would not preserve proper double quotes around a glob pattern (i.e. what was suggested in the accepted answer) under Windows. Joining the list into a string with ' '.join(cmd) before passing it to Popen solved the problem.


This works with python 2.7.3 The command to pipe stderr to stdout has changed since older versions of python:

Put this in a file called test.py:

#!/usr/bin/python
import subprocess

command = 'php -r "echo gethostname();"'
p = subprocess.Popen(command, universal_newlines=True, shell=True, 
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT)
text = p.stdout.read()
retcode = p.wait()
print text

Invoke it:

python test.py

It prints my hostname, which is apollo:

apollo

Read up on the manual for subprocess: http://docs.python.org/2/library/subprocess.html


I'd suggest using the list form of invocation rather than the quoted string version:

command = ["ffmpeg", "-i", "concat:1.ts|2.ts", "-vcodec", "copy",
           "-acodec", "copy", "temp.mp4"]
output,error  = subprocess.Popen(
                    command, universal_newlines=True,
                    stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()

This more accurately represents the exact set of parameters that are going to be passed to the end process and eliminates the need to mess around with shell quoting.

That said, if you absolutely want to use the plain string version, just use different quotes (and shell=True):

command = 'ffmpeg -i "concat:1.ts|2.ts" -vcodec copy -acodec copy temp.mp4'
output,error  = subprocess.Popen(
                    command, universal_newlines=True, shell=True,
                    stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()