| |
|
Back to Index
|
|
New in version 2.3.
The tarfile module makes it possible to read and create tar
archives. Some facts and figures:
- reads and writes gzip and bzip2
compressed archives.
- creates POSIX 1003.1-1990 compliant or GNU tar compatible archives.
- reads GNU tar extensions longname, longlink and sparse.
- stores pathnames of unlimited length using GNU tar extensions.
- handles directories, regular files, hardlinks, symbolic links, fifos, character devices
and block devices and is able to acquire and restore file information like timestamp,
access permissions and owner.
- can handle tape devices.
-
| open( |
[name[, mode [, fileobj[,
bufsize]]]]) |
- Return a TarFile object for the pathname name. For
detailed information on TarFile objects, see TarFile
Objects (section 7.19.1).
mode has to be a string of the form 'filemode[:compression]',
it defaults to 'r'. Here is a full list of mode combinations:
'r' |
Open for reading with transparent compression (recommended). |
'r:' |
Open for reading exclusively without compression. |
'r:gz' |
Open for reading with gzip compression. |
'r:bz2' |
Open for reading with bzip2 compression. |
'a' or 'a:' |
Open for appending with no compression. |
'w' or 'w:' |
Open for uncompressed writing. |
'w:gz' |
Open for gzip compressed writing. |
'w:bz2' |
Open for bzip2 compressed writing. |
Note that 'a:gz' or 'a:bz2' is not possible. If mode
is not suitable to open a certain (compressed) file for reading, ReadError
is raised. Use mode 'r' to avoid this. If a compression method is
not supported, CompressionError is raised.
If fileobj is specified, it is used as an alternative to a file object
opened for name.
For special purposes, there is a second format for mode: 'filemode|[compression]'.
open will return a TarFile object that processes its
data as a stream of blocks. No random seeking will be done on the file. If given, fileobj
may be any object that has a read() resp. write() method. bufsize
specifies the blocksize and defaults to 20 * 512 bytes. Use this variant in
combination with e.g. sys.stdin, a socket file object or a tape device.
However, such a TarFile object is limited in that it does not allow
to be accessed randomly, see Examples (section 7.19.3). The currently possible modes:
'r|' |
Open a stream of uncompressed tar blocks for reading. |
'r|gz' |
Open a gzip compressed stream for reading. |
'r|bz2' |
Open a bzip2 compressed stream for reading. |
'w|' |
Open an uncompressed stream for writing. |
'w|gz' |
Open an gzip compressed stream for writing. |
'w|bz2' |
Open an bzip2 compressed stream for writing. |
- class TarFile
- Class for reading and writing tar archives. Do not use this class directly, better use open() instead. See TarFile Objects
(section 7.19.1).
-
- Return
True if name is a tar archive file, that the tarfile module can read.
-
| class TarFileCompat( |
filename[, mode[, compression]]) |
-
Class for limited access to tar archives with a zipfile-like interface.
Please consult the documentation of zipfile for more details. compression
must be one of the following constants:
- TAR_PLAIN
- Constant for an uncompressed tar archive.
- TAR_GZIPPED
- Constant for a
gzip compressed tar archive.
- exception TarError
- Base class for all tarfile exceptions.
- exception ReadError
- Is raised when a tar archive is opened, that either cannot be handled by the tarfile module or is somehow invalid.
- exception CompressionError
- Is raised when a compression method is not supported or when the data cannot be decoded
properly.
- exception StreamError
- Is raised for the limitations that are typical for stream-like TarFile
objects.
- exception ExtractError
- Is raised for non-fatal errors when using extract(), but
only if TarFile.errorlevel
== 2.
|
|
|
|
|
|
© 2002-2004 Active-Venture.com
Webhosting
Service
|
| |
|
Disclaimer: This
documentation is provided only for the benefits of our hosting customers.
For authoritative source of the documentation, please refer to http://python.org/doc/
|
|
|