Skip to main content

A simple Python utility to simplify the writing of Shell-like scripts.

Project description

Introduction

shell-lib is designed to simplify the writing of Shell-like scripts.

This module was co-created with Google Gemini.

Changelog

Why shell-lib?

  • Clean and readable syntax: Write scripts in readable Python, freeing from complex shell command syntax.
  • Reliable error handling: Use Python's exception to manage command failure. If a command fails, by default, it raises a subprocess.CalledProcessError exception. For commands that may fail, user can also only check the exit-code.
  • Unified file system operations: Provide a consistent and intuitive file system operations API, that clearly distinguish between file and directory operations.
  • Cross-platform compatibility: Write a single script that works across Linux, macOS, and Windows platforms.
  • Rich ecosystem integration: Easily integrate with both the CLI tool and Python library ecosystems.
  • Lightweight and portable: Only use Python standard library.
  • Well tested: Consistent behavior on different platforms and Python versions.

Usage

#!/usr/bin/python3
from shell_lib import sh

PROJECT_PATH = "my_project"
FILE = "hello.txt"

# `with sh:` is a *top-level* context manager.
# Its main purpose is, if `sh()` or `sh.safe_run()` fails, return the error
# exit-code from the command. If you don't need this, don't use it.
with sh:
    sh.create_dir(PROJECT_PATH)
    # sh.cd() context manager restores the previous working directory when
    # exiting the code block, even if an exception raised within the code block.
    with sh.cd(PROJECT_PATH):
        sh(f"echo 'Hello, World!' > {FILE}")
        print(f"File size: {sh.get_path_info(FILE).size} bytes")
    sh.remove_dir(PROJECT_PATH)

API Reference

File and Directory Operations

Path parameters can be str, bytes or pathlib.Path object.

  • sh.home_dir() -> Path: Gets the current user's home directory, a pathlib.Path object.

  • sh.path(path) -> Path: Converts a str/bytes path to a pathlib.Path object. Can utilize the rich features of pathlib module.

  • sh.create_dir(path, *, exist_ok=False): Creates a directory.

  • sh.remove_file(path, *, ignore_missing=False): Removes a file.

  • sh.remove_dir(path, *, ignore_missing=False): Recursively removes a directory.

  • sh.clear_dir(path) -> None: Clear the contents of a directory.

  • sh.copy_file(src, dst, *, remove_existing_dst=False): Copies a file.

  • sh.copy_dir(src, dst, *, remove_existing_dst=False): Copies a directory.

  • sh.move_file(src, dst, *, remove_existing_dst=False): Moves a file.

  • sh.move_dir(src, dst, *, remove_existing_dst=False): Moves a directory.

  • sh.rename_file(src, dst): Renames a file.

  • sh.rename_dir(src, dst): Renames a directory.

  • sh.list_dir(path): Lists all entry names within a directory.

  • sh.walk_dir(path, top_down=True): A generator that traverses a directory tree, yield a tuple(directory_path, file_name).

  • sh.cd(path: str|bytes|Path|None): Changing the working directory. Can be used as a context manager.

  • sh.split_path(path): os.path.split() alias.

  • sh.join_path(*paths): os.path.join() alias.

  • sh.path_exists(path) -> bool: Checks if a path exists.

  • sh.is_file(path) -> bool: Checks if a path is a file.

  • sh.is_dir(path) -> bool: Checks if a path is a directory.

  • sh.get_path_info(path) -> PathInfo: Retrieves detailed information about an existing file or directory:

>>> sh.get_path_info('/usr/bin/')  # directory
PathInfo(path=/usr/bin/, size=69632, ctime=2025-09-13 09:05:36.561248,
mtime=2025-09-13 09:05:36.561248, atime=2025-09-14 09:31:12.406677,
is_dir=True, is_file=False, is_link=False, permissions=755)

>>> sh.get_path_info('/usr/bin/python3')  # file
PathInfo(path=/usr/bin/python3, size=8021824, ctime=2025-08-29 13:12:47.657879,
mtime=2025-08-15 01:47:21, atime=2025-09-13 13:40:22.696961,
is_dir=False, is_file=True, is_link=True, permissions=755)

# `permissions` is a str object.
# On Windows, it looks like "7" (only one character), which only represents
# the current user is readable, writable, executable.

Shell Command Execution

Executes a command with shell=True. Allows shell features like pipes (|) or redirection (>).

sh(command: str, *,
   text: bool = True,
   input: str|bytes|None = None,
   timeout: int|float|None = None,
   alternative_title: str|None = None,
   print_output: bool = True,
   fail_on_error: bool = True) -> subprocess.CompletedProcess

# alternative_title:
#     Print this title instead of the command, "" means no printing.
#     Used for commands containing sensitive information.
# print_output:
#     True: streams stdout and stderr to the console.
#     False: stdout and stderr are saved in return value's `stdout`/`stderr` attributes.
# fail_on_error:
#     True: raises a subprocess.CalledProcessError on failure.
#     False: doesn't raise exception, need to check return value's `returncode` attribute
#            to see if it has failed.

Compared with sh() above, it runs with shell=False. It only accepts a list of strings to prevent Shell injection. Use this method when the command contains external input.

sh.safe_run(command: list[str], *,
            text: bool = True,
            input: str|bytes|None = None,
            timeout: int|float|None = None,
            alternative_title: str|None = None,
            print_output: bool = True,
            fail_on_error: bool = True) -> subprocess.CompletedProcess

# On Windows, need to use this to run complex PowerShell command:
cmd = "pip freeze | foreach-object { pip install --upgrade $_.split('==')[0] }"
sh.safe_run(['powershell', '-Command', cmd])

Script Control

  • sh.pause(msg: str|None = None) -> None: Prompts the user to press any key to continue.
  • sh.ask_choice(title: str, *choices: str) -> int: Displays a menu and gets a 1-based index from the user's choice.
  • sh.ask_yes_no(title: str) -> bool: Asks user to answer yes or no.
  • sh.ask_regex_input(title: str, pattern: str, *, print_pattern: bool = False) -> re.Match: Ask user to input a string, and verify it with a regex pattern.
  • sh.ask_password(title: str = "Please input password") -> str: Ask user to input a password, not echo on screen. No need to add : at the end of title.
  • sh.exit(exit_code: int = 0): Exits the script with a specified exit code.

Get system information

  • sh.get_preferred_encoding() -> str: Get the preferred encoding for the current locale.
  • sh.get_filesystem_encoding() -> str: Get the encoding used by the OS for filenames.
  • sh.get_username() -> str: Get the current username. On Linux, if running a script with sudo -E ./script.py, return root. To get the username in this case, use: sh.home_dir().name
  • sh.is_elevated() -> bool: If the script is running with elevated (admin/root) privilege.
  • sh.is_os(os_mask: int) -> bool: Test whether it's the OS specified by the parameter.
# os_mask can be:
sh.OS_Windows
sh.OS_Cygwin
sh.OS_Linux
sh.OS_macOS
sh.OS_Unix
sh.OS_Unix_like  # It's (OS_Cygwin | OS_Linux | OS_macOS | OS_Unix)

# Support bit OR (|) combination:
if sh.is_os(sh.OS_Linux | sh.OS_macOS):
    ...
elif sh.is_os(sh.OS_Windows):
    ...

Demo script

#!/usr/bin/python3
import os
from shell_lib import sh
# shell-lib demo script: Build and install cpython on Linux
# Need to install build dependencies first:
# https://devguide.python.org/getting-started/setup-building/#install-dependencies

# Input Python version
m = sh.ask_regex_input('Please input Python version to install (such as 3.13.7)',
                       r'\s*(((\d+)\.(\d+))\.\d+)\s*')
ver = m.group(1)
ver_2 = m.group(2)
ver_info = int(m.group(3)), int(m.group(4))

# Variables
work_dir = sh.home_dir() / 'build_python'
xz_filename = sh.path(f'Python-{ver}.tar.xz')
compile_dir = f'Python-{ver}'
install_dir = sh.path(f'/opt/python{ver_2}')
url = f'https://www.python.org/ftp/python/{ver}/Python-{ver}.tar.xz'

# Check existing installed Python
msg = (f'Install path `{install_dir}` is exsiting, '
       f'overwrite install(yes) or exit(no)?')
if install_dir.is_dir() and not sh.ask_yes_no(msg):
    sh.exit()

# Build options
config = f'OPT="-O2" ./configure --prefix={install_dir}'
optimize = sh.ask_choice('Please choose build options',
                         'PGO + LTO (very slow)',
                         'LTO (slow)',
                         'No optimization',
                         'Debug build')
if optimize == 1:
    config += ' --enable-optimizations --with-lto'
elif optimize == 2:
    config += ' --with-lto'
elif optimize == 3:
    pass
elif optimize == 4:
    config += ' --with-pydebug'

if ver_info >= (3, 13) and sh.ask_yes_no("Build Free-threaded build?"):
    config += ' --disable-gil'

sh.create_dir(work_dir, exist_ok=True)
with sh.cd(work_dir):
    if not xz_filename.is_file() or sh.get_path_info(xz_filename).size == 0:
        sh(f'wget --no-proxy -O {xz_filename} {url}')

    password = sh.ask_password('Please input sudo password')
    sh(f'echo {password} | sudo -S rm -rf {compile_dir}', alternative_title='')
    sh(f'tar -xvf {xz_filename}', print_output=False)

    with sh.cd(compile_dir):
        # Compile
        sh(config, print_output=False)
        sh('make clean')
        sh(f'make -j{os.cpu_count()}')
        sh.pause('Please check for missing modules')

        # Install
        sh(f'echo {password} | sudo -S rm -rf {install_dir}',
           alternative_title='Remove existing install directory')
        sh(f'echo {password} | sudo -S make install',
           alternative_title='Install Compiled Python')

    if sh.ask_yes_no('Run unit-tests? (very slow)'):
        sh(f'{install_dir}/bin/python{ver_2} -m test', fail_on_error=False)

    if sh.ask_yes_no('Remove building directory?'):
        sh(f'echo {password} | sudo -S rm -rf {compile_dir}',
           alternative_title='Remove building directory')

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

shell_lib-1.0.1.tar.gz (19.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

shell_lib-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl (11.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file shell_lib-1.0.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: shell_lib-1.0.1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 19.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for shell_lib-1.0.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 766683964cb85f3400ce9595ce880db09ad82f5af90bd2c280c73414a11ff22b
MD5 b02e9400ef0fd0209a8f8eb51c52d443
BLAKE2b-256 d1b9e7c077f6de0268f154274df2c18e754302249de800101a364bf494455749

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file shell_lib-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: shell_lib-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 11.6 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.2.0 CPython/3.13.7

File hashes

Hashes for shell_lib-1.0.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9aba8d83830bcb72323f15abf5ed6c2a37743f03e94b00be55e6b0dafa9c786e
MD5 b4bfe31c66dce576255b02699a0bc028
BLAKE2b-256 6a39723bb49c9c7df73748837d33eb83e2b88635b8bca50b55527bbc995a615b

See more details on using hashes here.

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