290
votes

I would like to know how to I exit from Python without having an traceback dump on the output.

I still want want to be able to return an error code but I do not want to display the traceback log.

I want to be able to exit using exit(number) without trace but in case of an Exception (not an exit) I want the trace.

10
sys.exit() stops execution without printing a backtrace, raising an Exception does... your question describes exactly what the default behavior is, so don't change anything. - Luper Rouch
@Luper It is very easy to check that sys.exit() throws SystemExit! - Val
I said it doesn't print a traceback, not that it doesn't raise an exception. - Luper Rouch
I think that this really answers the question you asked: stackoverflow.com/questions/173278/… - Stefan
Is this question specifically for Jython 2.4 or something like that? Because for modern versions of Python (even in 2009, when that meant CPython 2.6 and 3.1, Jython 2.5, and IronPython 2.6), the question makes no sense, and the top answers are wrong. - abarnert

10 Answers

308
votes

You are presumably encountering an exception and the program is exiting because of this (with a traceback). The first thing to do therefore is to catch that exception, before exiting cleanly (maybe with a message, example given).

Try something like this in your main routine:

import sys, traceback

def main():
    try:
        do main program stuff here
        ....
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        print "Shutdown requested...exiting"
    except Exception:
        traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stdout)
    sys.exit(0)

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main()
83
votes

Perhaps you're trying to catch all exceptions and this is catching the SystemExit exception raised by sys.exit()?

import sys

try:
    sys.exit(1) # Or something that calls sys.exit()
except SystemExit as e:
    sys.exit(e)
except:
    # Cleanup and reraise. This will print a backtrace.
    # (Insert your cleanup code here.)
    raise

In general, using except: without naming an exception is a bad idea. You'll catch all kinds of stuff you don't want to catch -- like SystemExit -- and it can also mask your own programming errors. My example above is silly, unless you're doing something in terms of cleanup. You could replace it with:

import sys
sys.exit(1) # Or something that calls sys.exit().

If you need to exit without raising SystemExit:

import os
os._exit(1)

I do this, in code that runs under unittest and calls fork(). Unittest gets when the forked process raises SystemExit. This is definitely a corner case!

47
votes
14
votes

The following code will not raise an exception and will exit without a traceback:

import os
os._exit(1)

See this question and related answers for more details. Surprised why all other answers are so overcomplicated.

9
votes

something like import sys; sys.exit(0) ?

4
votes

It's much better practise to avoid using sys.exit() and instead raise/handle exceptions to allow the program to finish cleanly. If you want to turn off traceback, simply use:

sys.trackbacklimit=0

You can set this at the top of your script to squash all traceback output, but I prefer to use it more sparingly, for example "known errors" where I want the output to be clean, e.g. in the file foo.py:

import sys
from subprocess import *

try:
  check_call([ 'uptime', '--help' ])
except CalledProcessError:
  sys.tracebacklimit=0
  print "Process failed"
  raise

print "This message should never follow an error."

If CalledProcessError is caught, the output will look like this:

[me@test01 dev]$ ./foo.py
usage: uptime [-V]
    -V    display version
Process failed
subprocess.CalledProcessError: Command '['uptime', '--help']' returned non-zero exit status 1

If any other error occurs, we still get the full traceback output.

4
votes

Use the built-in python function quit() and that's it. No need to import any library. I'm using python 3.4

2
votes

I would do it this way:

import sys

def do_my_stuff():
    pass

if __name__ == "__main__":
    try:
        do_my_stuff()
    except SystemExit, e:
        print(e)
0
votes

What about

import sys
....
....
....
sys.exit("I am getting the heck out of here!")

No traceback and somehow more explicit.

-9
votes
# Pygame Example  

import pygame, sys  
from pygame.locals import *

pygame.init()  
DISPLAYSURF = pygame.display.set_mode((400, 300))  
pygame.display.set_caption('IBM Emulator')

BLACK = (0, 0, 0)  
GREEN = (0, 255, 0)

fontObj = pygame.font.Font('freesansbold.ttf', 32)  
textSurfaceObj = fontObj.render('IBM PC Emulator', True, GREEN,BLACK)  
textRectObj = textSurfaceObj.get_rect()  
textRectObj = (10, 10)

try:  
    while True: # main loop  
        DISPLAYSURF.fill(BLACK)  
        DISPLAYSURF.blit(textSurfaceObj, textRectObj)  
        for event in pygame.event.get():  
            if event.type == QUIT:  
                pygame.quit()  
                sys.exit()  
        pygame.display.update()  
except SystemExit:  
    pass