shutil --- Opérations de haut niveau sur les fichiers

Code source : Lib/shutil.py


Le module shutil propose des opérations de haut niveau sur les fichiers et ensembles de fichiers. En particulier, des fonctions pour copier et déplacer les fichiers sont proposées. Pour les opérations individuelles sur les fichiers, reportez-vous au module os.

Avertissement

Même les fonctions de copie haut niveau (shutil.copy(), shutil.copy2()) ne peuvent copier toutes les métadonnées des fichiers.

Sur les plateformes POSIX, cela signifie que le propriétaire et le groupe du fichier sont perdus, ainsi que les ACLs. Sur Mac OS, le clonage de ressource et autres métadonnées ne sont pas utilisés. Cela signifie que les ressources seront perdues et que le type de fichier et les codes créateur ne seront pas corrects. Sur Windows, les propriétaires des fichiers, ACLs et flux de données alternatifs ne sont pas copiés.

Opérations sur les répertoires et les fichiers

shutil.copyfileobj(fsrc, fdst[, length])

Copie le contenu de l'objet fichier fsrc dans l'objet fichier fdst. L'entier length, si spécifié, est la taille du tampon. En particulier, une valeur de length négative signifie la copie des données sans découper la source en morceaux ; par défaut les données sont lues par morceaux pour éviter la consommation mémoire non-contrôlée. À noter que si la position courante dans l'objet fsrc n'est pas 0, seul le contenu depuis la position courante jusqu'à la fin est copié.

shutil.copyfile(src, dst, *, follow_symlinks=True)

Copie le contenu (sans métadonnées) du fichier nommé src dans un fichier nommé dst et renvoie dst. src et dst sont des chemins sous forme de chaînes de caractères. dst doit être le chemin complet de la cible ; voir dans shutil.copy() pour une copie acceptant le chemin du dossier cible. Si src et dst désignent le même fichier SameFileError est levée.

La cible doit être accessible en écriture, sinon l'exception OSError est levée. Si dst existe déjà, il est remplacé. Les fichiers spéciaux comme les périphériques caractères ou bloc ainsi que les tubes (pipes) ne peuvent pas être copiés avec cette fonction.

Si follow_symlinks est faux et src est un lien symbolique, un nouveau lien symbolique est créé au lieu de copier le fichier pointé par src.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: IOError était levée au lieu de OSError. Ajout de l'argument follow_symlinks. Maintenant renvoie dst.

Modifié dans la version 3.4: Lève SameFileError au lieu de Error. Puisque la première est une sous-classe de la seconde, le changement assure la rétrocompatibilité.

exception shutil.SameFileError

Cette exception est levée si la source et la destination dans copyfile() sont le même fichier.

Nouveau dans la version 3.4.

shutil.copymode(src, dst, *, follow_symlinks=True)

Copie les octets de permission de src vers dst. Le contenu du fichier, le propriétaire et le groupe ne sont pas modifiés. src et dst sont des chaînes spécifiant les chemins. Si follow_symlinks est faux, et src et dst sont des liens symboliques, copymode() tente de modifier le mode de dst (au lieu du fichier vers lequel il pointe). Cette fonctionnalité n'est pas disponible sur toutes les plateformes ; voir copystat() pour plus d'informations. Si copymode() ne peut pas modifier les liens symboliques sur la plateforme cible alors que c'est demandé, il ne fait rien.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: L'argument follow_symlinks a été ajouté.

shutil.copystat(src, dst, *, follow_symlinks=True)

Copie les bits définissant les droits d'accès, la date du dernier accès, de la dernière modification et les drapeaux (flags en anglais) de src vers dst. Sur Linux, copystat() copie également, si possible, les "extended attributes". Le contenu du fichier, le propriétaire et le groupe ne sont pas affectés. src et dst sont des chaînes spécifiant les chemins.

Si follow_symlinks est faux et src et dst représentent des liens symboliques, copystat() agit sur les liens symboliques au lieu des fichiers cibles — elle lit les informations du lien symbolique de src et les écrit vers la destination pointée par dst.

Note

Toutes les plateformes n'offrent pas la possibilité d'examiner et modifier les liens symboliques. Python peut vous informer des fonctionnalités effectivement disponibles.

  • Si os.chmod in os.supports_follow_symlinks est True, copystat() peut modifier les octets de droits d'accès du lien symbolique.

  • If os.utime in os.supports_follow_symlinks is True, copystat() can modify the last access and modification times of a symbolic link.

  • If os.chflags in os.supports_follow_symlinks is True, copystat() can modify the flags of a symbolic link. (os.chflags is not available on all platforms.)

On platforms where some or all of this functionality is unavailable, when asked to modify a symbolic link, copystat() will copy everything it can. copystat() never returns failure.

Please see os.supports_follow_symlinks for more information.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Added follow_symlinks argument and support for Linux extended attributes.

shutil.copy(src, dst, *, follow_symlinks=True)

Copies the file src to the file or directory dst. src and dst should be strings. If dst specifies a directory, the file will be copied into dst using the base filename from src. Returns the path to the newly created file.

If follow_symlinks is false, and src is a symbolic link, dst will be created as a symbolic link. If follow_symlinks is true and src is a symbolic link, dst will be a copy of the file src refers to.

copy() copies the file data and the file's permission mode (see os.chmod()). Other metadata, like the file's creation and modification times, is not preserved. To preserve all file metadata from the original, use copy2() instead.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Added follow_symlinks argument. Now returns path to the newly created file.

shutil.copy2(src, dst, *, follow_symlinks=True)

Identical to copy() except that copy2() also attempts to preserve file metadata.

When follow_symlinks is false, and src is a symbolic link, copy2() attempts to copy all metadata from the src symbolic link to the newly-created dst symbolic link. However, this functionality is not available on all platforms. On platforms where some or all of this functionality is unavailable, copy2() will preserve all the metadata it can; copy2() never returns failure.

copy2() uses copystat() to copy the file metadata. Please see copystat() for more information about platform support for modifying symbolic link metadata.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Added follow_symlinks argument, try to copy extended file system attributes too (currently Linux only). Now returns path to the newly created file.

shutil.ignore_patterns(*patterns)

This factory function creates a function that can be used as a callable for copytree()'s ignore argument, ignoring files and directories that match one of the glob-style patterns provided. See the example below.

shutil.copytree(src, dst, symlinks=False, ignore=None, copy_function=copy2, ignore_dangling_symlinks=False)

Recursively copy an entire directory tree rooted at src, returning the destination directory. The destination directory, named by dst, must not already exist; it will be created as well as missing parent directories. Permissions and times of directories are copied with copystat(), individual files are copied using shutil.copy2().

If symlinks is true, symbolic links in the source tree are represented as symbolic links in the new tree and the metadata of the original links will be copied as far as the platform allows; if false or omitted, the contents and metadata of the linked files are copied to the new tree.

When symlinks is false, if the file pointed by the symlink doesn't exist, an exception will be added in the list of errors raised in an Error exception at the end of the copy process. You can set the optional ignore_dangling_symlinks flag to true if you want to silence this exception. Notice that this option has no effect on platforms that don't support os.symlink().

If ignore is given, it must be a callable that will receive as its arguments the directory being visited by copytree(), and a list of its contents, as returned by os.listdir(). Since copytree() is called recursively, the ignore callable will be called once for each directory that is copied. The callable must return a sequence of directory and file names relative to the current directory (i.e. a subset of the items in its second argument); these names will then be ignored in the copy process. ignore_patterns() can be used to create such a callable that ignores names based on glob-style patterns.

If exception(s) occur, an Error is raised with a list of reasons.

If copy_function is given, it must be a callable that will be used to copy each file. It will be called with the source path and the destination path as arguments. By default, shutil.copy2() is used, but any function that supports the same signature (like shutil.copy()) can be used.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Copy metadata when symlinks is false. Now returns dst.

Modifié dans la version 3.2: Added the copy_function argument to be able to provide a custom copy function. Added the ignore_dangling_symlinks argument to silent dangling symlinks errors when symlinks is false.

shutil.rmtree(path, ignore_errors=False, onerror=None)

Delete an entire directory tree; path must point to a directory (but not a symbolic link to a directory). If ignore_errors is true, errors resulting from failed removals will be ignored; if false or omitted, such errors are handled by calling a handler specified by onerror or, if that is omitted, they raise an exception.

Note

On platforms that support the necessary fd-based functions a symlink attack resistant version of rmtree() is used by default. On other platforms, the rmtree() implementation is susceptible to a symlink attack: given proper timing and circumstances, attackers can manipulate symlinks on the filesystem to delete files they wouldn't be able to access otherwise. Applications can use the rmtree.avoids_symlink_attacks function attribute to determine which case applies.

If onerror is provided, it must be a callable that accepts three parameters: function, path, and excinfo.

The first parameter, function, is the function which raised the exception; it depends on the platform and implementation. The second parameter, path, will be the path name passed to function. The third parameter, excinfo, will be the exception information returned by sys.exc_info(). Exceptions raised by onerror will not be caught.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Added a symlink attack resistant version that is used automatically if platform supports fd-based functions.

Indicates whether the current platform and implementation provides a symlink attack resistant version of rmtree(). Currently this is only true for platforms supporting fd-based directory access functions.

Nouveau dans la version 3.3.

shutil.move(src, dst, copy_function=copy2)

Recursively move a file or directory (src) to another location (dst) and return the destination.

If the destination is an existing directory, then src is moved inside that directory. If the destination already exists but is not a directory, it may be overwritten depending on os.rename() semantics.

If the destination is on the current filesystem, then os.rename() is used. Otherwise, src is copied to dst using copy_function and then removed. In case of symlinks, a new symlink pointing to the target of src will be created in or as dst and src will be removed.

If copy_function is given, it must be a callable that takes two arguments src and dst, and will be used to copy src to dest if os.rename() cannot be used. If the source is a directory, copytree() is called, passing it the copy_function(). The default copy_function is copy2(). Using copy() as the copy_function allows the move to succeed when it is not possible to also copy the metadata, at the expense of not copying any of the metadata.

Modifié dans la version 3.3: Added explicit symlink handling for foreign filesystems, thus adapting it to the behavior of GNU's mv. Now returns dst.

Modifié dans la version 3.5: Added the copy_function keyword argument.

shutil.disk_usage(path)

Return disk usage statistics about the given path as a named tuple with the attributes total, used and free, which are the amount of total, used and free space, in bytes. On Windows, path must be a directory; on Unix, it can be a file or directory.

Nouveau dans la version 3.3.

Disponibilité : Unix, Windows.

shutil.chown(path, user=None, group=None)

Change owner user and/or group of the given path.

user can be a system user name or a uid; the same applies to group. At least one argument is required.

See also os.chown(), the underlying function.

Disponibilité : Unix.

Nouveau dans la version 3.3.

shutil.which(cmd, mode=os.F_OK | os.X_OK, path=None)

Return the path to an executable which would be run if the given cmd was called. If no cmd would be called, return None.

mode is a permission mask passed to os.access(), by default determining if the file exists and executable.

When no path is specified, the results of os.environ() are used, returning either the "PATH" value or a fallback of os.defpath.

On Windows, the current directory is always prepended to the path whether or not you use the default or provide your own, which is the behavior the command shell uses when finding executables. Additionally, when finding the cmd in the path, the PATHEXT environment variable is checked. For example, if you call shutil.which("python"), which() will search PATHEXT to know that it should look for python.exe within the path directories. For example, on Windows:

>>> shutil.which("python")
'C:\\Python33\\python.EXE'

Nouveau dans la version 3.3.

exception shutil.Error

This exception collects exceptions that are raised during a multi-file operation. For copytree(), the exception argument is a list of 3-tuples (srcname, dstname, exception).

copytree example

This example is the implementation of the copytree() function, described above, with the docstring omitted. It demonstrates many of the other functions provided by this module.

def copytree(src, dst, symlinks=False):
    names = os.listdir(src)
    os.makedirs(dst)
    errors = []
    for name in names:
        srcname = os.path.join(src, name)
        dstname = os.path.join(dst, name)
        try:
            if symlinks and os.path.islink(srcname):
                linkto = os.readlink(srcname)
                os.symlink(linkto, dstname)
            elif os.path.isdir(srcname):
                copytree(srcname, dstname, symlinks)
            else:
                copy2(srcname, dstname)
            # XXX What about devices, sockets etc.?
        except OSError as why:
            errors.append((srcname, dstname, str(why)))
        # catch the Error from the recursive copytree so that we can
        # continue with other files
        except Error as err:
            errors.extend(err.args[0])
    try:
        copystat(src, dst)
    except OSError as why:
        # can't copy file access times on Windows
        if why.winerror is None:
            errors.extend((src, dst, str(why)))
    if errors:
        raise Error(errors)

Another example that uses the ignore_patterns() helper:

from shutil import copytree, ignore_patterns

copytree(source, destination, ignore=ignore_patterns('*.pyc', 'tmp*'))

This will copy everything except .pyc files and files or directories whose name starts with tmp.

Another example that uses the ignore argument to add a logging call:

from shutil import copytree
import logging

def _logpath(path, names):
    logging.info('Working in %s', path)
    return []   # nothing will be ignored

copytree(source, destination, ignore=_logpath)

rmtree example

This example shows how to remove a directory tree on Windows where some of the files have their read-only bit set. It uses the onerror callback to clear the readonly bit and reattempt the remove. Any subsequent failure will propagate.

import os, stat
import shutil

def remove_readonly(func, path, _):
    "Clear the readonly bit and reattempt the removal"
    os.chmod(path, stat.S_IWRITE)
    func(path)

shutil.rmtree(directory, onerror=remove_readonly)

Archiving operations

Nouveau dans la version 3.2.

Modifié dans la version 3.5: Added support for the xztar format.

High-level utilities to create and read compressed and archived files are also provided. They rely on the zipfile and tarfile modules.

shutil.make_archive(base_name, format[, root_dir[, base_dir[, verbose[, dry_run[, owner[, group[, logger]]]]]]])

Create an archive file (such as zip or tar) and return its name.

base_name is the name of the file to create, including the path, minus any format-specific extension. format is the archive format: one of "zip" (if the zlib module is available), "tar", "gztar" (if the zlib module is available), "bztar" (if the bz2 module is available), or "xztar" (if the lzma module is available).

root_dir is a directory that will be the root directory of the archive, all paths in the archive will be relative to it; for example, we typically chdir into root_dir before creating the archive.

base_dir is the directory where we start archiving from; i.e. base_dir will be the common prefix of all files and directories in the archive. base_dir must be given relative to root_dir. See Archiving example with base_dir for how to use base_dir and root_dir together.

root_dir and base_dir both default to the current directory.

If dry_run is true, no archive is created, but the operations that would be executed are logged to logger.

owner and group are used when creating a tar archive. By default, uses the current owner and group.

logger must be an object compatible with PEP 282, usually an instance of logging.Logger.

The verbose argument is unused and deprecated.

shutil.get_archive_formats()

Return a list of supported formats for archiving. Each element of the returned sequence is a tuple (name, description).

By default shutil provides these formats:

  • zip: ZIP file (if the zlib module is available).

  • tar: uncompressed tar file.

  • gztar: gzip'ed tar-file (if the zlib module is available).

  • bztar: bzip2'ed tar-file (if the bz2 module is available).

  • xztar: xz'ed tar-file (if the lzma module is available).

You can register new formats or provide your own archiver for any existing formats, by using register_archive_format().

shutil.register_archive_format(name, function[, extra_args[, description]])

Register an archiver for the format name.

function is the callable that will be used to unpack archives. The callable will receive the base_name of the file to create, followed by the base_dir (which defaults to os.curdir) to start archiving from. Further arguments are passed as keyword arguments: owner, group, dry_run and logger (as passed in make_archive()).

If given, extra_args is a sequence of (name, value) pairs that will be used as extra keywords arguments when the archiver callable is used.

description is used by get_archive_formats() which returns the list of archivers. Defaults to an empty string.

shutil.unregister_archive_format(name)

Remove the archive format name from the list of supported formats.

shutil.unpack_archive(filename[, extract_dir[, format]])

Unpack an archive. filename is the full path of the archive.

extract_dir is the name of the target directory where the archive is unpacked. If not provided, the current working directory is used.

format is the archive format: one of "zip", "tar", "gztar", "bztar", or "xztar". Or any other format registered with register_unpack_format(). If not provided, unpack_archive() will use the archive file name extension and see if an unpacker was registered for that extension. In case none is found, a ValueError is raised.

Modifié dans la version 3.7: Accepts a path-like object for filename and extract_dir.

shutil.register_unpack_format(name, extensions, function[, extra_args[, description]])

Registers an unpack format. name is the name of the format and extensions is a list of extensions corresponding to the format, like .zip for Zip files.

function is the callable that will be used to unpack archives. The callable will receive the path of the archive, followed by the directory the archive must be extracted to.

When provided, extra_args is a sequence of (name, value) tuples that will be passed as keywords arguments to the callable.

description can be provided to describe the format, and will be returned by the get_unpack_formats() function.

shutil.unregister_unpack_format(name)

Unregister an unpack format. name is the name of the format.

shutil.get_unpack_formats()

Return a list of all registered formats for unpacking. Each element of the returned sequence is a tuple (name, extensions, description).

By default shutil provides these formats:

  • zip: ZIP file (unpacking compressed files works only if the corresponding module is available).

  • tar: uncompressed tar file.

  • gztar: gzip'ed tar-file (if the zlib module is available).

  • bztar: bzip2'ed tar-file (if the bz2 module is available).

  • xztar: xz'ed tar-file (if the lzma module is available).

You can register new formats or provide your own unpacker for any existing formats, by using register_unpack_format().

Archiving example

In this example, we create a gzip'ed tar-file archive containing all files found in the .ssh directory of the user:

>>> from shutil import make_archive
>>> import os
>>> archive_name = os.path.expanduser(os.path.join('~', 'myarchive'))
>>> root_dir = os.path.expanduser(os.path.join('~', '.ssh'))
>>> make_archive(archive_name, 'gztar', root_dir)
'/Users/tarek/myarchive.tar.gz'

The resulting archive contains:

$ tar -tzvf /Users/tarek/myarchive.tar.gz
drwx------ tarek/staff       0 2010-02-01 16:23:40 ./
-rw-r--r-- tarek/staff     609 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./authorized_keys
-rwxr-xr-x tarek/staff      65 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./config
-rwx------ tarek/staff     668 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./id_dsa
-rwxr-xr-x tarek/staff     609 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./id_dsa.pub
-rw------- tarek/staff    1675 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./id_rsa
-rw-r--r-- tarek/staff     397 2008-06-09 13:26:54 ./id_rsa.pub
-rw-r--r-- tarek/staff   37192 2010-02-06 18:23:10 ./known_hosts

Archiving example with base_dir

In this example, similar to the one above, we show how to use make_archive(), but this time with the usage of base_dir. We now have the following directory structure:

$ tree tmp
tmp
└── root
    └── structure
        ├── content
            └── please_add.txt
        └── do_not_add.txt

In the final archive, please_add.txt should be included, but do_not_add.txt should not. Therefore we use the following:

>>> from shutil import make_archive
>>> import os
>>> archive_name = os.path.expanduser(os.path.join('~', 'myarchive'))
>>> make_archive(
...     archive_name,
...     'tar',
...     root_dir='tmp/root',
...     base_dir='structure/content',
... )
'/Users/tarek/my_archive.tar'

Listing the files in the resulting archive gives us:

$ python -m tarfile -l /Users/tarek/myarchive.tar
structure/content/
structure/content/please_add.txt

Querying the size of the output terminal

shutil.get_terminal_size(fallback=(columns, lines))

Get the size of the terminal window.

For each of the two dimensions, the environment variable, COLUMNS and LINES respectively, is checked. If the variable is defined and the value is a positive integer, it is used.

When COLUMNS or LINES is not defined, which is the common case, the terminal connected to sys.__stdout__ is queried by invoking os.get_terminal_size().

If the terminal size cannot be successfully queried, either because the system doesn't support querying, or because we are not connected to a terminal, the value given in fallback parameter is used. fallback defaults to (80, 24) which is the default size used by many terminal emulators.

The value returned is a named tuple of type os.terminal_size.

See also: The Single UNIX Specification, Version 2, Other Environment Variables.

Nouveau dans la version 3.3.