Skip to main content

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

Project description

running-process

PyPI Crates.io codecov

running-process is what you wished python's subprocess was. Blazing fast, highly concurrent, huge feature list, dead process tracking, pty support. Built in Rust with a thin python api.

v1 Broker Docs

The v1 broker work is documented as a stable spec alongside the implementation:

Platform Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
Linux x86 Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
Linux ARM Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
Windows x86 Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
Windows ARM Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
macOS x86 Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test
macOS ARM Build Lint Unit Test Integration Test

Why?

This project started off as a fix for python's sub process module. It was in python originally, but then moved to OS specific rust. Now it's blazing fast: using OS threads, atomics and proper signaling back to the python api. This library also allows stderr and stdout stream reading in parallel, something subprocess lacks. It also has cross platform process tracking, pty generation. It has zombie process tracking. It also has builtin expect for keyword event triggers, idle tracking (great for agent CLI's that dont' notifiy when they are done, they just stop sending data).

This libary is design for speed and correctness and portability. Usually terminal utilities are for windows or linux/mac. This is designed to run everywhere.

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.

Terminal Graphics Capabilities

Rust callers can inspect terminal graphics support with running_process::current_terminal_capabilities() or the pure running_process::detect_terminal_capabilities(...) helper. The result reports Sixel, Kitty graphics, and iTerm2 File= image support as structured capability records with status, evidence, source, and risks metadata.

The detector intentionally distinguishes terminal hosts from shells. cmd.exe, PowerShell, Git Bash, bash, zsh, and fish are command interpreters; they do not prove graphics support. The terminal host or multiplexer does: Windows Terminal, xterm, foot, Konsole, WezTerm, Kitty, iTerm2, tmux, GNU screen, and similar programs provide the relevant evidence. Weak aliases such as TERM=xterm-256color are reported as unknown unless a live probe or stronger host signal confirms support.

CLI Helpers

The package installs a running-process wrapper CLI for supervised command execution:

running-process --timeout 30 -- python -m pytest tests/test_cli.py
running-process --find-leaks -- python worker.py

--find-leaks tags the wrapped process tree with a unique originator marker and reports any descendants still alive after the direct child exits.

Cleanup Manifests

The running-process-cleanup binary reads v1 broker CacheManifest files without requiring a broker or daemon to be running. Manifests are written in two places:

  • each daemon cache root: .running-process-manifest.pb
  • the central registry: $XDG_DATA_HOME/running-process/manifests/ on Linux, ~/Library/Application Support/running-process/manifests/ on macOS, and %APPDATA%\running-process\manifests\ on Windows

Destructive commands are dry-run by default. Add --confirm to delete selected roots:

running-process-cleanup list --json
running-process-cleanup verify --json
running-process-cleanup prune --dormant-after 30d
running-process-cleanup prune --dormant-after 30d --confirm
running-process-cleanup prune --keep-current --keep-last 2
running-process-cleanup uninstall zccache --keep-config
running-process-cleanup instances --json

For GitHub Actions cache restores, run verification after actions/cache@v4 restores daemon state. Manifests from a prior runner boot are reported as stale:

- uses: actions/cache@v4
  with:
    path: ~/.local/share/running-process
    key: running-process-${{ runner.os }}-${{ hashFiles('**/Cargo.lock') }}

- name: Verify restored running-process manifests
  run: running-process-cleanup verify --json

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(...).

Rust consumers should make the same transport choice explicitly: use NativeProcess for one-shot noninteractive work and InteractivePtySession / NativePtyProcess only for real terminal sessions. See Rust PTY guidance.

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. Rust build commands run through uvx soldr, so there is no separate soldr install step to maintain.

./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.

For a live-only test run with the timeout crash watchdog and automatic thread dumps still enabled, use:

uv run -m ci.test --live-only

For a narrower live-only selection, pass pytest targets and selectors through the same entrypoint:

uv run -m ci.test --live-only tests/test_pty_support.py interrupt

For direct Cargo build commands, use uvx soldr directly:

uvx soldr cargo check --workspace
uvx soldr cargo test --workspace
uvx soldr cargo package -p running-process --no-verify

Keep maturin, cargo fmt, and cargo clippy on their normal entrypoints. This repo's high-level scripts already choose the compatible path for those tools.

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

Release

Releases are cut by the Auto Release GitHub Actions workflow. Bump project.version in pyproject.toml (and match workspace.package.version in Cargo.toml), push the commit to main, and the workflow will:

  • Build wheels for linux x86/arm, macOS x86/arm, and Windows x86/arm and publish them to PyPI via trusted publishing.
  • Publish running-process-{proto, core, client, py} to crates.io in dependency order (requires the repo secret CARGO_REGISTRY_TOKEN).
  • Build standalone runpm and running-process-daemon binaries for each target and attach them — alongside the wheels, install.sh, install.ps1, and SHA256SUMS — to a new GitHub Release.

You can also fire the workflow manually with gh workflow run auto-release.yml, or by pushing a vX.Y.Z tag.

The standalone binaries can be installed without pip:

curl -LsSf https://github.com/zackees/running-process/releases/latest/download/install.sh | sh
powershell -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -c "irm https://github.com/zackees/running-process/releases/latest/download/install.ps1 | iex"

Process Containment

ContainedProcessGroup ensures all child processes are killed when the group is dropped, using OS-level mechanisms (Job Objects on Windows, process groups + SIGKILL on Unix).

from running_process import ContainedProcessGroup

with ContainedProcessGroup() as group:
    proc = group.spawn(["sleep", "3600"])
# all children killed on exit, even on crash

Crash-resilient orphan discovery

When a parent crashes, its in-process registry is lost. ContainedProcessGroup can stamp every child with an environment variable that survives parent death:

from running_process import ContainedProcessGroup, find_processes_by_originator

# At launch: tag children with your tool name
with ContainedProcessGroup(originator="MYTOOL") as group:
    proc = group.spawn(["long-running-worker"])

# Later (from any process, any session): find orphans
stale = find_processes_by_originator("MYTOOL")
for info in stale:
    if not info.parent_alive:
        print(f"Orphaned PID {info.pid} from dead parent {info.parent_pid}")

The env var RUNNING_PROCESS_ORIGINATOR=TOOL:PID is inherited by all descendants. The scanner uses process start times to guard against PID reuse.

Detached Launches

Use launch_detached(...) when a caller needs to start a daemon-tracked shell command and return immediately:

from running_process import launch_detached

handle = launch_detached(
    "python worker.py",
    cwd=".",
    env={"WORKER_MODE": "background"},
    originator="mytool:session-1",
)
print(handle.pid)

This path uses the running-process daemon for launch/tracking. It is separate from running_process.daemon.spawn_daemon(...), which keeps the trampoline-based process-name behavior.

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.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

running_process-4.3.0.tar.gz (718.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_arm64.whl (1.3 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+Windows ARM64

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl (1.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+Windows x86-64

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl (2.7 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+manylinux: glibc 2.17+ x86-64

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl (2.7 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARM64

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl (1.4 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+macOS 11.0+ ARM64

running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl (1.5 MB view details)

Uploaded CPython 3.10+macOS 10.12+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: running_process-4.3.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 718.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.12

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 216ab58b61701afa8e66bb6afc3de17f12e3887a060c50be63abf8f5b3e4cb5c
MD5 477f24c2353cd4faea825e83f8ceb430
BLAKE2b-256 b76cea89b8a5d9763368954245862b71679d9ed010ddaeba8852103429e354fc

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0.tar.gz:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3c70a3a0d894956bc2d15fed2afd3e6a9de6011ce5740e48a2a6a0fa34ec2c5f
MD5 fe6f810c94a1f6d5c187cb590e1a6547
BLAKE2b-256 bcdcc313bf95f0d0c5e5382caad4327e7bf0f552bb71c3ba11b2c4005d5c0082

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_arm64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7cb83844c2cb6f192f8fe324f840aa599698d49bd745ee034579dd2518d8e78e
MD5 019b6620dd1031333b0b4af5ae157a53
BLAKE2b-256 809b37ae3f06d399c96ee4fc05d980f4f55c3289229127079d5c310ef028e37c

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-win_amd64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e5054bc935623f7092fa411b48a349459fb868a1d26c599b7080cd00350d4a65
MD5 9f0e513623ac242343983423f8dd8c64
BLAKE2b-256 3457bcc6abaf34c9c725bc4c2a2efef48cbe886c9bd7cb1c2f56bb1f76346958

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c9b0d1224c2efcfccc56baae3b3c435831ce6d25971b186297d8a1d5d8baf004
MD5 70c84aae83efe2aebf9bd8e2d0dd4311
BLAKE2b-256 084eac940f79be5280f4f3af588ba2ede9ba495020c439f66df2bcd66c9542de

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9017a7c960c1845074e7fc4f67ffbc7337cf03558ed30c16db603c393d0cb9d2
MD5 10f5fd438345d710433cb92e87dd1c44
BLAKE2b-256 7796bda26fe08607229dba26bbc2c860b778df30a0fc6285ff6713846184e91e

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

File details

Details for the file running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a2fe72f25608f33846f029cce348e7646c1665b850f1bd8c9b5d58d4f54b4df6
MD5 b4520662fdb3f703d6594a7f235a9f74
BLAKE2b-256 666d2fd099ee23e80385ad38f06e1884c0affaa61f3661b24be771adc679c65a

See more details on using hashes here.

Provenance

The following attestation bundles were made for running_process-4.3.0-cp310-abi3-macosx_10_12_x86_64.whl:

Publisher: auto-release.yml on zackees/running-process

Attestations: Values shown here reflect the state when the release was signed and may no longer be current.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page