| """Common operations on Posix pathnames. |
| |
| Instead of importing this module directly, import os and refer to |
| this module as os.path. The "os.path" name is an alias for this |
| module on Posix systems; on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows), |
| os.path provides the same operations in a manner specific to that |
| platform, and is an alias to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath). |
| |
| Some of this can actually be useful on non-Posix systems too, e.g. |
| for manipulation of the pathname component of URLs. |
| """ |
| |
| import os |
| import sys |
| import stat |
| import genericpath |
| import warnings |
| from genericpath import * |
| |
| try: |
| _unicode = unicode |
| except NameError: |
| # If Python is built without Unicode support, the unicode type |
| # will not exist. Fake one. |
| class _unicode(object): |
| pass |
| |
| __all__ = ["normcase","isabs","join","splitdrive","split","splitext", |
| "basename","dirname","commonprefix","getsize","getmtime", |
| "getatime","getctime","islink","exists","lexists","isdir","isfile", |
| "ismount","walk","expanduser","expandvars","normpath","abspath", |
| "samefile","sameopenfile","samestat", |
| "curdir","pardir","sep","pathsep","defpath","altsep","extsep", |
| "devnull","realpath","supports_unicode_filenames","relpath"] |
| |
| # strings representing various path-related bits and pieces |
| curdir = '.' |
| pardir = '..' |
| extsep = '.' |
| sep = '/' |
| pathsep = ':' |
| defpath = ':/bin:/usr/bin' |
| altsep = None |
| devnull = '/dev/null' |
| |
| # Normalize the case of a pathname. Trivial in Posix, string.lower on Mac. |
| # On MS-DOS this may also turn slashes into backslashes; however, other |
| # normalizations (such as optimizing '../' away) are not allowed |
| # (another function should be defined to do that). |
| |
| def normcase(s): |
| """Normalize case of pathname. Has no effect under Posix""" |
| return s |
| |
| |
| # Return whether a path is absolute. |
| # Trivial in Posix, harder on the Mac or MS-DOS. |
| |
| def isabs(s): |
| """Test whether a path is absolute""" |
| return s.startswith('/') |
| |
| |
| # Join pathnames. |
| # Ignore the previous parts if a part is absolute. |
| # Insert a '/' unless the first part is empty or already ends in '/'. |
| |
| def join(a, *p): |
| """Join two or more pathname components, inserting '/' as needed. |
| If any component is an absolute path, all previous path components |
| will be discarded. An empty last part will result in a path that |
| ends with a separator.""" |
| path = a |
| for b in p: |
| if b.startswith('/'): |
| path = b |
| elif path == '' or path.endswith('/'): |
| path += b |
| else: |
| path += '/' + b |
| return path |
| |
| |
| # Split a path in head (everything up to the last '/') and tail (the |
| # rest). If the path ends in '/', tail will be empty. If there is no |
| # '/' in the path, head will be empty. |
| # Trailing '/'es are stripped from head unless it is the root. |
| |
| def split(p): |
| """Split a pathname. Returns tuple "(head, tail)" where "tail" is |
| everything after the final slash. Either part may be empty.""" |
| i = p.rfind('/') + 1 |
| head, tail = p[:i], p[i:] |
| if head and head != '/'*len(head): |
| head = head.rstrip('/') |
| return head, tail |
| |
| |
| # Split a path in root and extension. |
| # The extension is everything starting at the last dot in the last |
| # pathname component; the root is everything before that. |
| # It is always true that root + ext == p. |
| |
| def splitext(p): |
| return genericpath._splitext(p, sep, altsep, extsep) |
| splitext.__doc__ = genericpath._splitext.__doc__ |
| |
| # Split a pathname into a drive specification and the rest of the |
| # path. Useful on DOS/Windows/NT; on Unix, the drive is always empty. |
| |
| def splitdrive(p): |
| """Split a pathname into drive and path. On Posix, drive is always |
| empty.""" |
| return '', p |
| |
| |
| # Return the tail (basename) part of a path, same as split(path)[1]. |
| |
| def basename(p): |
| """Returns the final component of a pathname""" |
| i = p.rfind('/') + 1 |
| return p[i:] |
| |
| |
| # Return the head (dirname) part of a path, same as split(path)[0]. |
| |
| def dirname(p): |
| """Returns the directory component of a pathname""" |
| i = p.rfind('/') + 1 |
| head = p[:i] |
| if head and head != '/'*len(head): |
| head = head.rstrip('/') |
| return head |
| |
| |
| # Is a path a symbolic link? |
| # This will always return false on systems where os.lstat doesn't exist. |
| |
| def islink(path): |
| """Test whether a path is a symbolic link""" |
| try: |
| st = os.lstat(path) |
| except (os.error, AttributeError): |
| return False |
| return stat.S_ISLNK(st.st_mode) |
| |
| # Being true for dangling symbolic links is also useful. |
| |
| def lexists(path): |
| """Test whether a path exists. Returns True for broken symbolic links""" |
| try: |
| os.lstat(path) |
| except os.error: |
| return False |
| return True |
| |
| |
| # Are two filenames really pointing to the same file? |
| |
| def samefile(f1, f2): |
| """Test whether two pathnames reference the same actual file""" |
| s1 = os.stat(f1) |
| s2 = os.stat(f2) |
| return samestat(s1, s2) |
| |
| |
| # Are two open files really referencing the same file? |
| # (Not necessarily the same file descriptor!) |
| |
| def sameopenfile(fp1, fp2): |
| """Test whether two open file objects reference the same file""" |
| s1 = os.fstat(fp1) |
| s2 = os.fstat(fp2) |
| return samestat(s1, s2) |
| |
| |
| # Are two stat buffers (obtained from stat, fstat or lstat) |
| # describing the same file? |
| |
| def samestat(s1, s2): |
| """Test whether two stat buffers reference the same file""" |
| return s1.st_ino == s2.st_ino and \ |
| s1.st_dev == s2.st_dev |
| |
| |
| # Is a path a mount point? |
| # (Does this work for all UNIXes? Is it even guaranteed to work by Posix?) |
| |
| def ismount(path): |
| """Test whether a path is a mount point""" |
| if islink(path): |
| # A symlink can never be a mount point |
| return False |
| try: |
| s1 = os.lstat(path) |
| s2 = os.lstat(join(path, '..')) |
| except os.error: |
| return False # It doesn't exist -- so not a mount point :-) |
| dev1 = s1.st_dev |
| dev2 = s2.st_dev |
| if dev1 != dev2: |
| return True # path/.. on a different device as path |
| ino1 = s1.st_ino |
| ino2 = s2.st_ino |
| if ino1 == ino2: |
| return True # path/.. is the same i-node as path |
| return False |
| |
| |
| # Directory tree walk. |
| # For each directory under top (including top itself, but excluding |
| # '.' and '..'), func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where |
| # dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list |
| # of files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. |
| # The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, |
| # or to impose a different order of visiting. |
| |
| def walk(top, func, arg): |
| """Directory tree walk with callback function. |
| |
| For each directory in the directory tree rooted at top (including top |
| itself, but excluding '.' and '..'), call func(arg, dirname, fnames). |
| dirname is the name of the directory, and fnames a list of the names of |
| the files and subdirectories in dirname (excluding '.' and '..'). func |
| may modify the fnames list in-place (e.g. via del or slice assignment), |
| and walk will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names remain in |
| fnames; this can be used to implement a filter, or to impose a specific |
| order of visiting. No semantics are defined for, or required of, arg, |
| beyond that arg is always passed to func. It can be used, e.g., to pass |
| a filename pattern, or a mutable object designed to accumulate |
| statistics. Passing None for arg is common.""" |
| warnings.warnpy3k("In 3.x, os.path.walk is removed in favor of os.walk.", |
| stacklevel=2) |
| try: |
| names = os.listdir(top) |
| except os.error: |
| return |
| func(arg, top, names) |
| for name in names: |
| name = join(top, name) |
| try: |
| st = os.lstat(name) |
| except os.error: |
| continue |
| if stat.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode): |
| walk(name, func, arg) |
| |
| |
| # Expand paths beginning with '~' or '~user'. |
| # '~' means $HOME; '~user' means that user's home directory. |
| # If the path doesn't begin with '~', or if the user or $HOME is unknown, |
| # the path is returned unchanged (leaving error reporting to whatever |
| # function is called with the expanded path as argument). |
| # See also module 'glob' for expansion of *, ? and [...] in pathnames. |
| # (A function should also be defined to do full *sh-style environment |
| # variable expansion.) |
| |
| def expanduser(path): |
| """Expand ~ and ~user constructions. If user or $HOME is unknown, |
| do nothing.""" |
| if not path.startswith('~'): |
| return path |
| i = path.find('/', 1) |
| if i < 0: |
| i = len(path) |
| if i == 1: |
| if 'HOME' not in os.environ: |
| import pwd |
| userhome = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid()).pw_dir |
| else: |
| userhome = os.environ['HOME'] |
| else: |
| import pwd |
| try: |
| pwent = pwd.getpwnam(path[1:i]) |
| except KeyError: |
| return path |
| userhome = pwent.pw_dir |
| userhome = userhome.rstrip('/') |
| return (userhome + path[i:]) or '/' |
| |
| |
| # Expand paths containing shell variable substitutions. |
| # This expands the forms $variable and ${variable} only. |
| # Non-existent variables are left unchanged. |
| |
| _varprog = None |
| |
| def expandvars(path): |
| """Expand shell variables of form $var and ${var}. Unknown variables |
| are left unchanged.""" |
| global _varprog |
| if '$' not in path: |
| return path |
| if not _varprog: |
| import re |
| _varprog = re.compile(r'\$(\w+|\{[^}]*\})') |
| i = 0 |
| while True: |
| m = _varprog.search(path, i) |
| if not m: |
| break |
| i, j = m.span(0) |
| name = m.group(1) |
| if name.startswith('{') and name.endswith('}'): |
| name = name[1:-1] |
| if name in os.environ: |
| tail = path[j:] |
| path = path[:i] + os.environ[name] |
| i = len(path) |
| path += tail |
| else: |
| i = j |
| return path |
| |
| |
| # Normalize a path, e.g. A//B, A/./B and A/foo/../B all become A/B. |
| # It should be understood that this may change the meaning of the path |
| # if it contains symbolic links! |
| |
| def normpath(path): |
| """Normalize path, eliminating double slashes, etc.""" |
| # Preserve unicode (if path is unicode) |
| slash, dot = (u'/', u'.') if isinstance(path, _unicode) else ('/', '.') |
| if path == '': |
| return dot |
| initial_slashes = path.startswith('/') |
| # POSIX allows one or two initial slashes, but treats three or more |
| # as single slash. |
| if (initial_slashes and |
| path.startswith('//') and not path.startswith('///')): |
| initial_slashes = 2 |
| comps = path.split('/') |
| new_comps = [] |
| for comp in comps: |
| if comp in ('', '.'): |
| continue |
| if (comp != '..' or (not initial_slashes and not new_comps) or |
| (new_comps and new_comps[-1] == '..')): |
| new_comps.append(comp) |
| elif new_comps: |
| new_comps.pop() |
| comps = new_comps |
| path = slash.join(comps) |
| if initial_slashes: |
| path = slash*initial_slashes + path |
| return path or dot |
| |
| |
| def abspath(path): |
| """Return an absolute path.""" |
| if not isabs(path): |
| if isinstance(path, _unicode): |
| cwd = os.getcwdu() |
| else: |
| cwd = os.getcwd() |
| path = join(cwd, path) |
| return normpath(path) |
| |
| |
| # Return a canonical path (i.e. the absolute location of a file on the |
| # filesystem). |
| |
| def realpath(filename): |
| """Return the canonical path of the specified filename, eliminating any |
| symbolic links encountered in the path.""" |
| path, ok = _joinrealpath('', filename, {}) |
| return abspath(path) |
| |
| # Join two paths, normalizing ang eliminating any symbolic links |
| # encountered in the second path. |
| def _joinrealpath(path, rest, seen): |
| if isabs(rest): |
| rest = rest[1:] |
| path = sep |
| |
| while rest: |
| name, _, rest = rest.partition(sep) |
| if not name or name == curdir: |
| # current dir |
| continue |
| if name == pardir: |
| # parent dir |
| if path: |
| path, name = split(path) |
| if name == pardir: |
| path = join(path, pardir, pardir) |
| else: |
| path = pardir |
| continue |
| newpath = join(path, name) |
| if not islink(newpath): |
| path = newpath |
| continue |
| # Resolve the symbolic link |
| if newpath in seen: |
| # Already seen this path |
| path = seen[newpath] |
| if path is not None: |
| # use cached value |
| continue |
| # The symlink is not resolved, so we must have a symlink loop. |
| # Return already resolved part + rest of the path unchanged. |
| return join(newpath, rest), False |
| seen[newpath] = None # not resolved symlink |
| path, ok = _joinrealpath(path, os.readlink(newpath), seen) |
| if not ok: |
| return join(path, rest), False |
| seen[newpath] = path # resolved symlink |
| |
| return path, True |
| |
| |
| supports_unicode_filenames = (sys.platform == 'darwin') |
| |
| def relpath(path, start=curdir): |
| """Return a relative version of a path""" |
| |
| if not path: |
| raise ValueError("no path specified") |
| |
| start_list = [x for x in abspath(start).split(sep) if x] |
| path_list = [x for x in abspath(path).split(sep) if x] |
| |
| # Work out how much of the filepath is shared by start and path. |
| i = len(commonprefix([start_list, path_list])) |
| |
| rel_list = [pardir] * (len(start_list)-i) + path_list[i:] |
| if not rel_list: |
| return curdir |
| return join(*rel_list) |