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gh-87512: Fix subprocess using timeout= on Windows blocking with …
…a large `input=` (GH-142058)

On Windows, Popen._communicate() previously wrote to stdin synchronously, which could block indefinitely if the subprocess didn't consume input= quickly and the pipe buffer filled up. The timeout= parameter was only checked when joining the reader threads, not during the stdin write.

This change moves the Windows stdin writing to a background thread (similar to how stdout/stderr are read in threads), allowing the timeout to be properly enforced. If timeout expires, TimeoutExpired is raised promptly and the writer thread continues in the background. Subsequent calls to communicate() will join the existing writer thread.

Adds test_communicate_timeout_large_input to verify that TimeoutExpired is raised promptly when communicate() is called with large input and a timeout, even when the subprocess doesn't consume stdin quickly.

This test already passed on POSIX (where select() is used) but failed on Windows where the stdin write blocks without checking the timeout.
(cherry picked from commit 5b1862b)

Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <[email protected]>
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2 people authored and miss-islington committed Nov 29, 2025
commit 63c23adec5a290df374bbcbaaf3bd5045c621d73
23 changes: 21 additions & 2 deletions Lib/subprocess.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -1616,6 +1616,10 @@ def _readerthread(self, fh, buffer):
fh.close()


def _writerthread(self, input):
self._stdin_write(input)


def _communicate(self, input, endtime, orig_timeout):
# Start reader threads feeding into a list hanging off of this
# object, unless they've already been started.
Expand All @@ -1634,8 +1638,23 @@ def _communicate(self, input, endtime, orig_timeout):
self.stderr_thread.daemon = True
self.stderr_thread.start()

if self.stdin:
self._stdin_write(input)
# Start writer thread to send input to stdin, unless already
# started. The thread writes input and closes stdin when done,
# or continues in the background on timeout.
if self.stdin and not hasattr(self, "_stdin_thread"):
self._stdin_thread = \
threading.Thread(target=self._writerthread,
args=(input,))
self._stdin_thread.daemon = True
self._stdin_thread.start()

# Wait for the writer thread, or time out. If we time out, the
# thread remains writing and the fd left open in case the user
# calls communicate again.
if hasattr(self, "_stdin_thread"):
self._stdin_thread.join(self._remaining_time(endtime))
if self._stdin_thread.is_alive():
raise TimeoutExpired(self.args, orig_timeout)

# Wait for the reader threads, or time out. If we time out, the
# threads remain reading and the fds left open in case the user
Expand Down
56 changes: 56 additions & 0 deletions Lib/test/test_subprocess.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -991,6 +991,62 @@ def test_communicate_timeout_large_output(self):
(stdout, _) = p.communicate()
self.assertEqual(len(stdout), 4 * 64 * 1024)

def test_communicate_timeout_large_input(self):
# Test that timeout is enforced when writing large input to a
# slow-to-read subprocess, and that partial input is preserved
# for continuation after timeout (gh-141473).
#
# This is a regression test for Windows matching POSIX behavior.
# On POSIX, select() is used to multiplex I/O with timeout checking.
# On Windows, stdin writing must also honor the timeout rather than
# blocking indefinitely when the pipe buffer fills.

# Input larger than typical pipe buffer (4-64KB on Windows)
input_data = b"x" * (128 * 1024)

p = subprocess.Popen(
[sys.executable, "-c",
"import sys, time; "
"time.sleep(30); " # Don't read stdin for a long time
"sys.stdout.buffer.write(sys.stdin.buffer.read())"],
stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE)

try:
timeout = 0.2
start = time.monotonic()
try:
p.communicate(input_data, timeout=timeout)
# If we get here without TimeoutExpired, the timeout was ignored
elapsed = time.monotonic() - start
self.fail(
f"TimeoutExpired not raised. communicate() completed in "
f"{elapsed:.2f}s, but subprocess sleeps for 30s. "
"Stdin writing blocked without enforcing timeout.")
except subprocess.TimeoutExpired:
elapsed = time.monotonic() - start

# Timeout should occur close to the specified timeout value,
# not after waiting for the subprocess to finish sleeping.
# Allow generous margin for slow CI, but must be well under
# the subprocess sleep time.
self.assertLess(elapsed, 5.0,
f"TimeoutExpired raised after {elapsed:.2f}s; expected ~{timeout}s. "
"Stdin writing blocked without checking timeout.")

# After timeout, continue communication. The remaining input
# should be sent and we should receive all data back.
stdout, stderr = p.communicate()

# Verify all input was eventually received by the subprocess
self.assertEqual(len(stdout), len(input_data),
f"Expected {len(input_data)} bytes output but got {len(stdout)}")
self.assertEqual(stdout, input_data)
finally:
p.kill()
p.wait()

# Test for the fd leak reported in http://bugs.python.org/issue2791.
def test_communicate_pipe_fd_leak(self):
for stdin_pipe in (False, True):
Expand Down
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
Fix :func:`subprocess.Popen.communicate` timeout handling on Windows
when writing large input. Previously, the timeout was ignored during
stdin writing, causing the method to block indefinitely if the child
process did not consume input quickly. The stdin write is now performed
in a background thread, allowing the timeout to be properly enforced.
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