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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T07:59:49+00:00 2026-05-20T07:59:49+00:00

I need to run those three commands for profiling/code coverage reporting on Win32. vsperfcmd

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I need to run those three commands for profiling/code coverage reporting on Win32.

vsperfcmd /start:coverage /output:run.coverage
helloclass
vsperfcmd /shutdown

I can’t run one command by one because the helloclass executable should be profiled in the same process of vsperfcmd.

What I think of is to make a batch file to run those three commands, and run the batch file in Python. However, I think python should have a way to do the equivalent action of launching a shell and run commands.

  • Q : How can I run the commands in the same process in Python?
  • Q : Or, how can I launch command shell and run commands in Python?

SOLVED

import subprocess
cmdline = ["cmd", "/q", "/k", "echo off"]
cmd = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell=True)
batch = b"""\
rem vsinstr -coverage helloclass.exe /exclude:std::*
vsperfcmd /start:coverage /output:run.coverage
helloclass
vsperfcmd /shutdown
exit
"""
cmd.stdin.write(batch)
cmd.stdin.flush() # Must include this to ensure data is passed to child process
result = cmd.stdout.read()
print(result)
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T07:59:50+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 7:59 am

    Interesting question.

    One approach that works is to run a command shell and then pipe commands to it via stdin (example uses Python 3, for Python 2 you can skip the decode() call). Note that the command shell invocation is set up to suppress everything except explicit output written to stdout.

    >>> import subprocess
    >>> cmdline = ["cmd", "/q", "/k", "echo off"]
    >>> cmd = subprocess.Popen(cmdline, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
    >>> batch = b"""\
    ... set TEST_VAR=Hello World
    ... set TEST_VAR
    ... echo %TEST_VAR%
    ... exit
    ... """
    >>> cmd.stdin.write(batch)
    59
    >>> cmd.stdin.flush() # Must include this to ensure data is passed to child process
    >>> result = cmd.stdout.read()
    >>> print(result.decode())
    TEST_VAR=Hello World
    Hello World
    

    Compare that to the result of separate invocations of subprocess.call:

    >>> subprocess.call(["set", "TEST_VAR=Hello World"], shell=True)
    0
    >>> subprocess.call(["set", "TEST_VAR"], shell=True)
    Environment variable TEST_VAR not defined
    1
    >>> subprocess.call(["echo", "%TEST_VAR%"], shell=True)
    %TEST_VAR%
    0
    

    The latter two invocations can’t see the environment set up by the first one, as all 3 are distinct child processes.

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