为什么 `subprocess.check_call(..., stderr=sys.stdout)` 在 Python 2.6 中失败?

Why does `subprocess.check_call(..., stderr=sys.stdout)` fail in Python 2.6?

Python 2.6.9 (unknown, Mar  7 2016, 11:15:18) 
[GCC 5.3.0] on linux2
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>>> import sys
>>> import subprocess
>>> subprocess.check_call(['echo', 'hi'], stderr=sys.stdout)
echo: write error: Bad file descriptor
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/subprocess.py", line 488, in check_call
    raise CalledProcessError(retcode, cmd)
subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['echo', 'hi']' returned non-zero exit status 1

此命令 subprocess.check_call(['echo', 'hi'], stderr=sys.stdout) 在 Python 2.7 和 Python 中运行良好 3. Python 2.6 有何不同之处?

讨论了错误 here:

Transcript to reproduce in Python 2.6.5:

>>> import subprocess, sys
>>> subprocess.call(('echo', 'foo'), stderr=sys.stdout)
echo: write: Bad file descriptor
1
>>> 

Expected behavior:

>>> import subprocess, sys
>>> subprocess.call(('echo', 'foo'), stderr=sys.stdout)
foo
0
>>> 

This happens because we've asked the child's stderr to be redirected, but not its stdout. So in _execute_child, errwrite is 1 while c2pwrite is None. So fd 1 (errwrite) correctly gets duped to 2. But then, since errwrite is not None and it's not in (p2cread, c2pwrite, 2), the child closes fd 1.

The equivalent thing happens if you supply stdout=sys.stderr and the child attempts to write to its stderr.

I've attached a patch to fix this. It simply adds 2 and 2 to the list of fds not to close for c2pwrite and errwrite, respectively.

This patch is against the 2.6.5 release.

There is also a workaround, in case anyone else is affected by this bug before a fix has been released:

>>> import os, subprocess, sys
>>> subprocess.call(('echo', 'foo'), stderr=os.dup(sys.stdout.fileno()))
foo
0
>>> 

它已在 2.7 中用这个 patch on a related issue 修复。