escape a string for shell commands in Python [duplicate]

主宰稳场 提交于 2019-11-30 22:05:22

In Python 3.3 you can use shlex.quote to return a shell-escaped version of a string. It is the successor of pipes.quote, which was deprecated since Python 1.6. Note that the documentation recommends this for cases where you cannot use a list, as suggested in another answer. Also according to the documentation, the quoting is compatible with UNIX shells. I can't guarantee that it will work for your case, but a quick test with rm, using pipes because I don't have Python 3.3:

$ touch \(a\ b\)
$ ls
(a b)

>>> import subprocess, pipes
>>> filename = pipes.quote("(a b)")
>>> command = 'rm {}'.format(filename)
>>> subprocess.Popen(command, shell=True)

$ ls
$

Doing it correctly means not having to worry about this. The shell has to worry about spaces and quotes and parens; Python does not.

proc = subprocess.Popen([..., "-DSOME_MACRO(a, b)=some expression", ...], ...)
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