Servicing Python Matlab API queries
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Hello All,
I am dabbling into the python matlab api. I'd like to use the API to enable a python program that is spawned indirectly as a result of a system call from matlab, and allow that python program to interact with the parent matlab session using the API. Something like this:
function call_external_program
matlab.engine.shareEngine; % share this engine so that we can connect to it from python script.
%launch the program in the background
if ispc
%windows
[status , result] = system('START wrapper_program.exe') %<-- note that wrapper_program.exe spawns a python program that connects back to this session...
else
%linux
[status , result] = system('wrapper_program &') %<-- note that wrapper_program.exe spawns a python program that connects back to this session...
end
% wait until we detect termination of the wrapper_program. during this time, we expect to be servicing calls to python_api_entrypoint coming from
% a python program that was spawned by wrapper_program...
while 1
%Hmm.. how can I pause here in such a way that Matlab can service the Python API?
% It only works if I put a breakpoint here!
pause(0.1)
if detected_wrapper_program_completion || timeout %don't ask how we really do this...
break;
end
end
end
function dataOut = python_api_entrypoint(dataIn)
%example algorithm that we use matlab for...
dataOut = sum(dataIn);
end
Unfortunately, the above scheme only works if I put a breakpoint at the 'pause(0.1)' line, presumably because matlab control returns to the command line. Otherwise, matlab will not service a call from the python program unless we quickly breakout of the parent function and return matlab control to the command line. This smells like something drawnow() could help with, but no such luck. Any ideas?
3 commentaires
Joseph Owen
le 17 Oct 2024
I have this same issue. The sharedEngine calls in Python will hang unless you're at a prompt in Matlab (i.e. debugger breakpoint). It makes the sharedEngine useless for any sort of automatic python/Matlab interaction.
Réponses (2)
Mohammad Sami
le 18 Oct 2024
Modifié(e) : Mohammad Sami
le 18 Oct 2024
I would suggest use .NET or Java to run the external process. This would return you a .NET or java object which have functions to check the external process you started has completed. You can then add an event listener to the process object which then calls your code to do stuff once the wrapper has exited. Ideally .NET will raise the "Exited" event which Matlab can capture using event listener and run the rest of your code.
Alternatively you can combine this what Jesse suggest on using either timers or starting a second matlab session in shared mode using startup arguments. So you create two process i.e shared matlab instance and your wrapper and you can monitor these two processes on your intial session.
% .net example
process = System.Diagnostics.Process();
process.StartInfo.FileName = 'matlab.exe';
process.StartInfo.Arguments = '-r "matlab.engine.shareEngine"';
% additional parameter you may want to specify
process.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
process.StartInfo.RedirectStandardInput = false;
process.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
% start the process
process.Start();
% listen for the exit event and run some other code
% you may need to try if the event listeners work for you
addlistener(process,'Exited',@do_exit_callback);
% check process has exited
process.HasExited
% if you want to force quit the process
process.Kill();
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Joseph Owen
le 18 Oct 2024
In my case I have a Matlab application and a Python application and they need to pass data back and forth synchronously in a single-threaded loop. The sharedEngine process seemed ideal for this, but it turns out it doesn't work in a loop (which is silly - it should work, but it doesn't). Instead, I implemented a simple tcp link based on this suggestion:
This worked like a charm, and is really simple if all you're doing is passing semaphore flags back and forth.
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