1 """Common operations on Posix pathnames. 2 3 Instead of importing this module directly, import os and refer to 4 this module as os.path. The "os.path" name is an alias for this 5 module on Posix systems; on other systems (e.g. Mac, Windows), 6 os.path provides the same operations in a manner specific to that 7 platform, and is an alias to another module (e.g. macpath, ntpath). 8 9 Some of this can actually be useful on non-Posix systems too, e.g. 10 for manipulation of the pathname component of URLs. 11 """ 12 13 import os 14 import sys 15 import stat 16 import genericpath 17 import warnings 18 from genericpath import * 19 20 try: 21 _unicode = unicode 22 except NameError: 23 # If Python is built without Unicode support, the unicode type 24 # will not exist. Fake one. 25 class _unicode(object): 26 pass 27 28 __all__ = ["normcase","isabs","join","splitdrive","split","splitext", 29 "basename","dirname","commonprefix","getsize","getmtime", 30 "getatime","getctime","islink","exists","lexists","isdir","isfile", 31 "ismount","walk","expanduser","expandvars","normpath","abspath", 32 "samefile","sameopenfile","samestat", 33 "curdir","pardir","sep","pathsep","defpath","altsep","extsep", 34 "devnull","realpath","supports_unicode_filenames","relpath"] 35 36 # strings representing various path-related bits and pieces 37 curdir = '.' 38 pardir = '..' 39 extsep = '.' 40 sep = '/' 41 pathsep = ':' 42 defpath = ':/bin:/usr/bin' 43 altsep = None 44 devnull = '/dev/null' 45 46 # Normalize the case of a pathname. Trivial in Posix, string.lower on Mac. 47 # On MS-DOS this may also turn slashes into backslashes; however, other 48 # normalizations (such as optimizing '../' away) are not allowed 49 # (another function should be defined to do that). 50 51 def normcase(s): 52 """Normalize case of pathname. Has no effect under Posix""" 53 return s 54 55 56 # Return whether a path is absolute. 57 # Trivial in Posix, harder on the Mac or MS-DOS. 58 59 def isabs(s): 60 """Test whether a path is absolute""" 61 return s.startswith('/') 62 63 64 # Join pathnames. 65 # Ignore the previous parts if a part is absolute. 66 # Insert a '/' unless the first part is empty or already ends in '/'. 67 68 def join(a, *p): 69 """Join two or more pathname components, inserting '/' as needed. 70 If any component is an absolute path, all previous path components 71 will be discarded. An empty last part will result in a path that 72 ends with a separator.""" 73 path = a 74 for b in p: 75 if b.startswith('/'): 76 path = b 77 elif path == '' or path.endswith('/'): 78 path += b 79 else: 80 path += '/' + b 81 return path 82 83 84 # Split a path in head (everything up to the last '/') and tail (the 85 # rest). If the path ends in '/', tail will be empty. If there is no 86 # '/' in the path, head will be empty. 87 # Trailing '/'es are stripped from head unless it is the root. 88 89 def split(p): 90 """Split a pathname. Returns tuple "(head, tail)" where "tail" is 91 everything after the final slash. Either part may be empty.""" 92 i = p.rfind('/') + 1 93 head, tail = p[:i], p[i:] 94 if head and head != '/'*len(head): 95 head = head.rstrip('/') 96 return head, tail 97 98 99 # Split a path in root and extension. 100 # The extension is everything starting at the last dot in the last 101 # pathname component; the root is everything before that. 102 # It is always true that root + ext == p. 103 104 def splitext(p): 105 return genericpath._splitext(p, sep, altsep, extsep) 106 splitext.__doc__ = genericpath._splitext.__doc__ 107 108 # Split a pathname into a drive specification and the rest of the 109 # path. Useful on DOS/Windows/NT; on Unix, the drive is always empty. 110 111 def splitdrive(p): 112 """Split a pathname into drive and path. On Posix, drive is always 113 empty.""" 114 return '', p 115 116 117 # Return the tail (basename) part of a path, same as split(path)[1]. 118 119 def basename(p): 120 """Returns the final component of a pathname""" 121 i = p.rfind('/') + 1 122 return p[i:] 123 124 125 # Return the head (dirname) part of a path, same as split(path)[0]. 126 127 def dirname(p): 128 """Returns the directory component of a pathname""" 129 i = p.rfind('/') + 1 130 head = p[:i] 131 if head and head != '/'*len(head): 132 head = head.rstrip('/') 133 return head 134 135 136 # Is a path a symbolic link? 137 # This will always return false on systems where os.lstat doesn't exist. 138 139 def islink(path): 140 """Test whether a path is a symbolic link""" 141 try: 142 st = os.lstat(path) 143 except (os.error, AttributeError): 144 return False 145 return stat.S_ISLNK(st.st_mode) 146 147 # Being true for dangling symbolic links is also useful. 148 149 def lexists(path): 150 """Test whether a path exists. Returns True for broken symbolic links""" 151 try: 152 os.lstat(path) 153 except os.error: 154 return False 155 return True 156 157 158 # Are two filenames really pointing to the same file? 159 160 def samefile(f1, f2): 161 """Test whether two pathnames reference the same actual file""" 162 s1 = os.stat(f1) 163 s2 = os.stat(f2) 164 return samestat(s1, s2) 165 166 167 # Are two open files really referencing the same file? 168 # (Not necessarily the same file descriptor!) 169 170 def sameopenfile(fp1, fp2): 171 """Test whether two open file objects reference the same file""" 172 s1 = os.fstat(fp1) 173 s2 = os.fstat(fp2) 174 return samestat(s1, s2) 175 176 177 # Are two stat buffers (obtained from stat, fstat or lstat) 178 # describing the same file? 179 180 def samestat(s1, s2): 181 """Test whether two stat buffers reference the same file""" 182 return s1.st_ino == s2.st_ino and \ 183 s1.st_dev == s2.st_dev 184 185 186 # Is a path a mount point? 187 # (Does this work for all UNIXes? Is it even guaranteed to work by Posix?) 188 189 def ismount(path): 190 """Test whether a path is a mount point""" 191 if islink(path): 192 # A symlink can never be a mount point 193 return False 194 try: 195 s1 = os.lstat(path) 196 s2 = os.lstat(join(path, '..')) 197 except os.error: 198 return False # It doesn't exist -- so not a mount point :-) 199 dev1 = s1.st_dev 200 dev2 = s2.st_dev 201 if dev1 != dev2: 202 return True # path/.. on a different device as path 203 ino1 = s1.st_ino 204 ino2 = s2.st_ino 205 if ino1 == ino2: 206 return True # path/.. is the same i-node as path 207 return False 208 209 210 # Directory tree walk. 211 # For each directory under top (including top itself, but excluding 212 # '.' and '..'), func(arg, dirname, filenames) is called, where 213 # dirname is the name of the directory and filenames is the list 214 # of files (and subdirectories etc.) in the directory. 215 # The func may modify the filenames list, to implement a filter, 216 # or to impose a different order of visiting. 217 218 def walk(top, func, arg): 219 """Directory tree walk with callback function. 220 221 For each directory in the directory tree rooted at top (including top 222 itself, but excluding '.' and '..'), call func(arg, dirname, fnames). 223 dirname is the name of the directory, and fnames a list of the names of 224 the files and subdirectories in dirname (excluding '.' and '..'). func 225 may modify the fnames list in-place (e.g. via del or slice assignment), 226 and walk will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names remain in 227 fnames; this can be used to implement a filter, or to impose a specific 228 order of visiting. No semantics are defined for, or required of, arg, 229 beyond that arg is always passed to func. It can be used, e.g., to pass 230 a filename pattern, or a mutable object designed to accumulate 231 statistics. Passing None for arg is common.""" 232 warnings.warnpy3k("In 3.x, os.path.walk is removed in favor of os.walk.", 233 stacklevel=2) 234 try: 235 names = os.listdir(top) 236 except os.error: 237 return 238 func(arg, top, names) 239 for name in names: 240 name = join(top, name) 241 try: 242 st = os.lstat(name) 243 except os.error: 244 continue 245 if stat.S_ISDIR(st.st_mode): 246 walk(name, func, arg) 247 248 249 # Expand paths beginning with '~' or '~user'. 250 # '~' means $HOME; '~user' means that user's home directory. 251 # If the path doesn't begin with '~', or if the user or $HOME is unknown, 252 # the path is returned unchanged (leaving error reporting to whatever 253 # function is called with the expanded path as argument). 254 # See also module 'glob' for expansion of *, ? and [...] in pathnames. 255 # (A function should also be defined to do full *sh-style environment 256 # variable expansion.) 257 258 def expanduser(path): 259 """Expand ~ and ~user constructions. If user or $HOME is unknown, 260 do nothing.""" 261 if not path.startswith('~'): 262 return path 263 i = path.find('/', 1) 264 if i < 0: 265 i = len(path) 266 if i == 1: 267 if 'HOME' not in os.environ: 268 import pwd 269 userhome = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid()).pw_dir 270 else: 271 userhome = os.environ['HOME'] 272 else: 273 import pwd 274 try: 275 pwent = pwd.getpwnam(path[1:i]) 276 except KeyError: 277 return path 278 userhome = pwent.pw_dir 279 userhome = userhome.rstrip('/') 280 return (userhome + path[i:]) or '/' 281 282 283 # Expand paths containing shell variable substitutions. 284 # This expands the forms $variable and ${variable} only. 285 # Non-existent variables are left unchanged. 286 287 _varprog = None 288 289 def expandvars(path): 290 """Expand shell variables of form $var and ${var}. Unknown variables 291 are left unchanged.""" 292 global _varprog 293 if '$' not in path: 294 return path 295 if not _varprog: 296 import re 297 _varprog = re.compile(r'\$(\w+|\{[^}]*\})') 298 i = 0 299 while True: 300 m = _varprog.search(path, i) 301 if not m: 302 break 303 i, j = m.span(0) 304 name = m.group(1) 305 if name.startswith('{') and name.endswith('}'): 306 name = name[1:-1] 307 if name in os.environ: 308 tail = path[j:] 309 path = path[:i] + os.environ[name] 310 i = len(path) 311 path += tail 312 else: 313 i = j 314 return path 315 316 317 # Normalize a path, e.g. A//B, A/./B and A/foo/../B all become A/B. 318 # It should be understood that this may change the meaning of the path 319 # if it contains symbolic links! 320 321 def normpath(path): 322 """Normalize path, eliminating double slashes, etc.""" 323 # Preserve unicode (if path is unicode) 324 slash, dot = (u'/', u'.') if isinstance(path, _unicode) else ('/', '.') 325 if path == '': 326 return dot 327 initial_slashes = path.startswith('/') 328 # POSIX allows one or two initial slashes, but treats three or more 329 # as single slash. 330 if (initial_slashes and 331 path.startswith('//') and not path.startswith('///')): 332 initial_slashes = 2 333 comps = path.split('/') 334 new_comps = [] 335 for comp in comps: 336 if comp in ('', '.'): 337 continue 338 if (comp != '..' or (not initial_slashes and not new_comps) or 339 (new_comps and new_comps[-1] == '..')): 340 new_comps.append(comp) 341 elif new_comps: 342 new_comps.pop() 343 comps = new_comps 344 path = slash.join(comps) 345 if initial_slashes: 346 path = slash*initial_slashes + path 347 return path or dot 348 349 350 def abspath(path): 351 """Return an absolute path.""" 352 if not isabs(path): 353 if isinstance(path, _unicode): 354 cwd = os.getcwdu() 355 else: 356 cwd = os.getcwd() 357 path = join(cwd, path) 358 return normpath(path) 359 360 361 # Return a canonical path (i.e. the absolute location of a file on the 362 # filesystem). 363 364 def realpath(filename): 365 """Return the canonical path of the specified filename, eliminating any 366 symbolic links encountered in the path.""" 367 path, ok = _joinrealpath('', filename, {}) 368 return abspath(path) 369 370 # Join two paths, normalizing ang eliminating any symbolic links 371 # encountered in the second path. 372 def _joinrealpath(path, rest, seen): 373 if isabs(rest): 374 rest = rest[1:] 375 path = sep 376 377 while rest: 378 name, _, rest = rest.partition(sep) 379 if not name or name == curdir: 380 # current dir 381 continue 382 if name == pardir: 383 # parent dir 384 if path: 385 path, name = split(path) 386 if name == pardir: 387 path = join(path, pardir, pardir) 388 else: 389 path = pardir 390 continue 391 newpath = join(path, name) 392 if not islink(newpath): 393 path = newpath 394 continue 395 # Resolve the symbolic link 396 if newpath in seen: 397 # Already seen this path 398 path = seen[newpath] 399 if path is not None: 400 # use cached value 401 continue 402 # The symlink is not resolved, so we must have a symlink loop. 403 # Return already resolved part + rest of the path unchanged. 404 return join(newpath, rest), False 405 seen[newpath] = None # not resolved symlink 406 path, ok = _joinrealpath(path, os.readlink(newpath), seen) 407 if not ok: 408 return join(path, rest), False 409 seen[newpath] = path # resolved symlink 410 411 return path, True 412 413 414 supports_unicode_filenames = (sys.platform == 'darwin') 415 416 def relpath(path, start=curdir): 417 """Return a relative version of a path""" 418 419 if not path: 420 raise ValueError("no path specified") 421 422 start_list = [x for x in abspath(start).split(sep) if x] 423 path_list = [x for x in abspath(path).split(sep) if x] 424 425 # Work out how much of the filepath is shared by start and path. 426 i = len(commonprefix([start_list, path_list])) 427 428 rel_list = [pardir] * (len(start_list)-i) + path_list[i:] 429 if not rel_list: 430 return curdir 431 return join(*rel_list) 432