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A Rust-backed subprocess wrapper with split stdout/stderr streaming

Project description

running-process

Linux x86 Linux ARM Windows x86 Windows ARM macOS x86 macOS ARM

running-process is a Rust-backed subprocess runtime with a thin Python API.

The pipe-backed API keeps stdout and stderr separate, preserves raw bytes until decode time, and defaults to UTF-8 with errors="replace" when you ask for text. The PTY API is separate because terminal sessions are chunk-oriented and should not be forced through line normalization.

PTY Support Matrix

PTY support is a guaranteed part of the package contract on:

  • Windows
  • Linux
  • macOS

On those platforms, RunningProcess.pseudo_terminal(...), wait_for_expect(...), and wait_for_idle(...) are core functionality rather than optional extras.

Pty.is_available() remains as a compatibility shim and only reports False on unsupported platforms.

Pipe-backed API

from running_process import RunningProcess

process = RunningProcess(
    ["python", "-c", "import sys; print('out'); print('err', file=sys.stderr)"]
)

process.wait()

print(process.stdout)          # stdout only
print(process.stderr)          # stderr only
print(process.combined_output) # combined compatibility view

Captured data values stay plain str | bytes. Live stream handles are exposed separately:

if process.stdout_stream.available():
    print(process.stdout_stream.drain())

Process priority is a first-class launch option:

from running_process import CpuPriority, RunningProcess

process = RunningProcess(
    ["python", "-c", "import time; time.sleep(1)"],
    nice=CpuPriority.LOW,
)

nice= behavior:

  • accepts either a raw int niceness or a platform-neutral CpuPriority
  • on Unix, it maps directly to process niceness
  • on Windows, positive values map to below-normal or idle priority classes and negative values map to above-normal or high priority classes
  • 0 leaves the default scheduler priority unchanged
  • positive values are the portable default; negative values may require elevated privileges
  • the enum intentionally stops at HIGH; there is no realtime tier

Available helpers:

  • get_next_stdout_line(timeout)
  • get_next_stderr_line(timeout)
  • get_next_line(timeout) for combined compatibility reads
  • stream_iter(timeout) or for stdout, stderr, exit_code in process
  • drain_stdout()
  • drain_stderr()
  • drain_combined()
  • stdout_stream.available()
  • stderr_stream.available()
  • combined_stream.available()

stream_iter(...) yields tuple-like ProcessOutputEvent(stdout, stderr, exit_code) records. Only one stream payload is populated per nonterminal item. When both pipes are drained, it yields (EOS, EOS, exit_code) if the child has already exited, or (EOS, EOS, None) followed by a final (EOS, EOS, exit_code) if the child closed both pipes before it exited.

RunningProcess.run(...) supports common subprocess.run(...) style cases including:

  • capture_output=True
  • text=True
  • encoding=...
  • errors=...
  • shell=True
  • env=...
  • nice=...
  • stdin=subprocess.DEVNULL
  • input=... in text or bytes form

Unsupported subprocess.run(...) kwargs now fail loudly instead of being silently ignored.

Expect API

expect(...) is available on both the pipe-backed and PTY-backed process APIs.

import re
import subprocess
from running_process import RunningProcess

process = RunningProcess(
    ["python", "-c", "print('prompt>'); import sys; print('echo:' + sys.stdin.readline().strip())"],
    stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
)

process.expect("prompt>", timeout=5, action="hello\n")
match = process.expect(re.compile(r"echo:(.+)"), timeout=5)
print(match.groups)

Supported action= forms:

  • str or bytes: write to stdin
  • "interrupt": send Ctrl-C style interrupt when supported
  • "terminate"
  • "kill"

Pipe-backed expect(...) matches line-delimited output. If the child writes prompts without trailing newlines, use the PTY API instead.

PTY API

Use RunningProcess.pseudo_terminal(...) for interactive terminal sessions. It is chunk-oriented by design and preserves carriage returns and terminal control flow instead of normalizing it away.

from running_process import ExpectRule, RunningProcess

pty = RunningProcess.pseudo_terminal(
    ["python", "-c", "import sys; sys.stdout.write('name?'); sys.stdout.flush(); print('hello ' + sys.stdin.readline().strip())"],
    text=True,
    expect=[ExpectRule("name?", "world\n")],
    expect_timeout=5,
)

print(pty.output)

PTY behavior:

  • accepts str and list[str] commands
  • auto-splits simple string commands into argv when shell syntax is not present
  • uses shell mode automatically when shell metacharacters are present
  • is guaranteed on supported Windows, Linux, and macOS builds
  • keeps output chunk-buffered by default
  • preserves \r for redraw-style terminal output
  • supports write(...), read(...), drain(), available(), expect(...), resize(...), and send_interrupt()
  • supports nice=... at launch
  • supports interrupt_and_wait(...) for staged interrupt escalation
  • supports wait_for_idle(...) with activity filtering
  • exposes exit_reason, interrupt_count, interrupted_by_caller, and exit_status

wait_for_idle(...) has two modes:

  • default fast path: built-in PTY activity rules and optional process metrics
  • slow path: IdleDetection(idle_reached=...), where your Python callback receives an IdleInfoDiff delta and returns IdleDecision.DEFAULT, IdleDecision.ACTIVE, IdleDecision.BEGIN_IDLE, or IdleDecision.IS_IDLE

There is also a compatibility alias: RunningProcess.psuedo_terminal(...).

You can also inspect the intended interactive launch semantics without launching a child:

from running_process import RunningProcess

spec = RunningProcess.interactive_launch_spec("console_isolated")
print(spec.ctrl_c_owner)
print(spec.creationflags)

Supported launch specs:

  • pseudo_terminal
  • console_shared
  • console_isolated

For an actual launch, use RunningProcess.interactive(...):

process = RunningProcess.interactive(
    ["python", "-c", "print('hello from interactive mode')"],
    mode="console_shared",
    nice=5,
)
process.wait()

Abnormal Exits

By default, nonzero exits stay subprocess-like: you get a return code and can inspect exit_status.

process = RunningProcess(["python", "-c", "import sys; sys.exit(3)"])
process.wait()
print(process.exit_status)

If you want abnormal exits to raise, opt in:

from running_process import ProcessAbnormalExit, RunningProcess

try:
    RunningProcess.run(
        ["python", "-c", "import sys; sys.exit(3)"],
        capture_output=True,
        raise_on_abnormal_exit=True,
    )
except ProcessAbnormalExit as exc:
    print(exc.status.summary)

Notes:

  • keyboard interrupts still raise KeyboardInterrupt
  • kill -9 / SIGKILL is classified as an abnormal signal exit
  • possible OOM conditions are exposed as a hint on exit_status.possible_oom
  • OOM cannot be identified perfectly across platforms from exit status alone, so it is best-effort rather than guaranteed

Text and bytes

Pipe mode is byte-safe internally:

  • invalid UTF-8 does not break capture
  • text mode decodes with UTF-8 and errors="replace" by default
  • binary mode returns bytes unchanged
  • \r\n is normalized as a line break in pipe mode
  • bare \r is preserved

PTY mode is intentionally more conservative:

  • output is handled as chunks, not lines
  • redraw-oriented \r is preserved
  • no automatic terminal-output normalization is applied

Development

./install
./lint
./test

./install bootstraps rustup into the shared user locations (~/.cargo and ~/.rustup, or CARGO_HOME / RUSTUP_HOME if you override them), then installs the exact toolchain pinned in rust-toolchain.toml. Toolchain installs are serialized with a lock so concurrent repo bootstraps do not race the same shared version.

./lint applies cargo fmt and Ruff autofixes before running the remaining lint checks, so fixable issues are rewritten in place.

./test runs the Rust tests, rebuilds the native extension with the unoptimized dev profile, runs the non-live Python tests, and then runs the @pytest.mark.live coverage that exercises real OS process and signal behavior.

On local developer machines, ./test also runs the Linux Docker preflight so Windows and macOS development catches Linux wheel, lint, and non-live pytest regressions before push. GitHub-hosted Actions skip that Docker-only preflight and run the native platform suite directly.

If you want to invoke pytest directly, set RUNNING_PROCESS_LIVE_TESTS=1 and run uv run pytest -m live.

For direct Rust commands, prefer the repo trampolines, which prepend the shared rustup proxy location:

./_cargo check --workspace
./_cargo fmt --all --check
./_cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets -- -D warnings

On Windows, native rebuilds that compile bundled C code should run from a Visual Studio developer shell. When the environment is ambiguous, point maturin at the MSVC toolchain binaries directly rather than relying on the generic cargo proxy.

For local extension rebuilds, prefer:

uv run build.py

That defaults to building a dev-profile wheel and reinstalling it into the repo's uv environment, which keeps the native extension in site-packages instead of copying it into src/. For publish-grade artifacts, use:

uv run build.py --release

Tracked PID Cleanup

RunningProcess, InteractiveProcess, and PTY-backed launches register their live PIDs in a SQLite database. The default location is:

  • Windows: %LOCALAPPDATA%\\running-process\\tracked-pids.sqlite3
  • Override: RUNNING_PROCESS_PID_DB=/custom/path/tracked-pids.sqlite3

If a bad run leaves child processes behind, terminate everything still tracked in the database:

python scripts/terminate_tracked_processes.py

Notes

  • stdout and stderr are no longer merged by default.
  • combined_output exists for compatibility when you need the merged view.
  • RunningProcess(..., use_pty=True) is no longer the preferred path; use RunningProcess.pseudo_terminal(...) for PTY sessions.
  • On supported Windows builds, PTY support is provided by the native Rust extension rather than a Python winpty fallback.
  • The test suite checks that running_process.__version__, package metadata, and manifest versions stay in sync.

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