That's what 'Pending' means, yes! It's pending, as in, not yet done. You
already noted the only obvious workaround, which is to display the output
after the fact yourself via the result object. It's very non-ideal which is
why I listed it as "Pending" (wants somebody to work on it) and not
"Removed" (not worth having in core because users can work around it).

PS - your other query to the list can be answered the same way - execute()
is also "Pending". Both are high profile missing features right now and I
expect some basic, if not complete, solutions for them to appear in feature
releases soon.

On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 9:38 AM, Abhijeet Rastogi <abhijeet.1...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi Jeff,
>
> Thanks for the details. So, it is something that's yet to be worked upon
> (I see it as Pending). That means, for now, we don't have a way of doing so?
>
> On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 5:32 PM Jeff Forcier <j...@bitprophet.org> wrote:
>
>> Hi Abhijeet,
>>
>> Please check out the upgrading page for all details like this! It is very
>> thorough (both a blessing and a curse). Specifically, search it for
>> 'output_prefix' which was the name of the old setting controlling that
>> behavior.
>>
>>     http://docs.fabfile.org/en/latest/upgrading.html
>>
>> Spoiler: this is one of the larger missing pieces that we'll be working
>> to figure out in the near term. It may end up being line-by-line prefixes
>> again, possibly via a logging module; or we might come up with something
>> else. Suggestions welcome!
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Jeff
>>
>> On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 1:14 AM, Abhijeet Rastogi <
>> abhijeet.1...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi everyone,
>>>
>>> I have a use-case where I can't use the Fabric command directly. I run
>>> my tasks as:-
>>>
>>> from fabric import ThreadingGroup as Group
>>> from fabric.exceptions import GroupException
>>>
>>> hosts = ['web1', 'web2', 'web3']
>>> g = Group(*hosts)
>>>
>>> results = g.run('date')
>>>
>>> Now, as I don't use "hide=both" with the "g.run" function call, the
>>> stdout of the command is printed in the terminal directly.
>>>
>>> How do I prepend the output with the "fabric.connection.Connection" it's
>>> associated with, in a streaming way. I know, I can collect the output with
>>> the "results" that is returned but I want to do that in a streaming way and
>>> not after all commands are finished executing. (just like it happened with
>>> the older fabric.api.execute 1.0 version API)
>>>
>>> --
>>> Cheers,
>>> Abhijeet Rastogi (shadyabhi)
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Fab-user mailing list
>>> Fab-user@nongnu.org
>>> https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fab-user
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Jeff Forcier
>> Unix sysadmin; Python engineer
>> http://bitprophet.org
>>
>
>
> --
> Cheers,
> Abhijeet Rastogi (shadyabhi)
>



-- 
Jeff Forcier
Unix sysadmin; Python engineer
http://bitprophet.org
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