May-04-2019, 08:00 PM
(This post was last modified: May-04-2019, 08:00 PM by kennethdean2010.)
Is there a way I could just add a counter to loop through the following code X amount of times:
def display_prompt(): """Displays prompt to allow user to schedule update installation Args: None Returns: (int) defer_seconds: Number of seconds user wishes to defer policy OR None if an error occurs """ cmd = [JAMFHELPER, '-windowType', 'hud', '-title', GUI_WINDOW_TITLE, '-heading', GUI_HEADING, '-icon', GUI_ICON, '-description', GUI_MESSAGE, '-button1', GUI_BUTTON, '-showDelayOptions', ' '.join(GUI_DEFER_OPTIONS), '- '] error_values = ['2', '3', '239', '243', '250', '255'] # Instead of returning an error code to stderr, jamfHelper always returns 0 # and possibly returns an 'error value' to stdout. This makes it somewhat # spotty to check for some deferrment values including 0 for 'Start Now'. # The return value is an integer, so leading zeroes are dropped. Selecting # 'Start Now' should technically return '01'; instead, only '1' is returned # which matches the 'error value' for 'The Jamf Helper was unable to launch' # All we can do is make sure the subprocess doesn't raise an error, then # assume (yikes!) a return value of '1' equates to 'Start Now' try: proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) out, err = proc.communicate() # Check that the return value does not represent an 'error value' if not out in error_values: # Special case for 'Start Now' which returns '1' if out == '1': return 0 else: return int(out[:-1]) else: return None except: # Catch possible CalledProcessError and OSError print "An error occurred when displaying the user prompt." return NoneBut at the specified intervals:
GUI_DEFER_OPTIONS = ["300", "0", "7200", "14400", "28000"]