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-\section{\module{tarfile} --- Read and write tar archive files}
-
-\declaremodule{standard}{tarfile}
-\modulesynopsis{Read and write tar-format archive files.}
-\versionadded{2.3}
-
-\moduleauthor{Lars Gust\"abel}{lars@gustaebel.de}
-\sectionauthor{Lars Gust\"abel}{lars@gustaebel.de}
-
-The \module{tarfile} module makes it possible to read and create tar archives.
-Some facts and figures:
-
-\begin{itemize}
-\item reads and writes \module{gzip} and \module{bzip2} compressed archives.
-\item creates \POSIX{} 1003.1-1990 compliant or GNU tar compatible archives.
-\item reads GNU tar extensions \emph{longname}, \emph{longlink} and
- \emph{sparse}.
-\item stores pathnames of unlimited length using GNU tar extensions.
-\item 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.
-\item can handle tape devices.
-\end{itemize}
-
-\begin{funcdesc}{open}{\optional{name\optional{, mode
- \optional{, fileobj\optional{, bufsize}}}}}
- Return a \class{TarFile} object for the pathname \var{name}.
- For detailed information on \class{TarFile} objects,
- see \citetitle{TarFile Objects} (section \ref{tarfile-objects}).
-
- \var{mode} has to be a string of the form \code{'filemode[:compression]'},
- it defaults to \code{'r'}. Here is a full list of mode combinations:
-
- \begin{tableii}{c|l}{code}{mode}{action}
- \lineii{'r' or 'r:*'}{Open for reading with transparent compression (recommended).}
- \lineii{'r:'}{Open for reading exclusively without compression.}
- \lineii{'r:gz'}{Open for reading with gzip compression.}
- \lineii{'r:bz2'}{Open for reading with bzip2 compression.}
- \lineii{'a' or 'a:'}{Open for appending with no compression.}
- \lineii{'w' or 'w:'}{Open for uncompressed writing.}
- \lineii{'w:gz'}{Open for gzip compressed writing.}
- \lineii{'w:bz2'}{Open for bzip2 compressed writing.}
- \end{tableii}
-
- Note that \code{'a:gz'} or \code{'a:bz2'} is not possible.
- If \var{mode} is not suitable to open a certain (compressed) file for
- reading, \exception{ReadError} is raised. Use \var{mode} \code{'r'} to
- avoid this. If a compression method is not supported,
- \exception{CompressionError} is raised.
-
- If \var{fileobj} is specified, it is used as an alternative to a file
- object opened for \var{name}. It is supposed to be at position 0.
-
- For special purposes, there is a second format for \var{mode}:
- \code{'filemode|[compression]'}. \function{open()} will return a
- \class{TarFile} object that processes its data as a stream of
- blocks. No random seeking will be done on the file. If given,
- \var{fileobj} may be any object that has a \method{read()} or
- \method{write()} method (depending on the \var{mode}).
- \var{bufsize} specifies the blocksize and defaults to \code{20 *
- 512} bytes. Use this variant in combination with
- e.g. \code{sys.stdin}, a socket file object or a tape device.
- However, such a \class{TarFile} object is limited in that it does
- not allow to be accessed randomly, see ``Examples''
- (section~\ref{tar-examples}). The currently possible modes:
-
- \begin{tableii}{c|l}{code}{Mode}{Action}
- \lineii{'r|*'}{Open a \emph{stream} of tar blocks for reading with transparent compression.}
- \lineii{'r|'}{Open a \emph{stream} of uncompressed tar blocks for reading.}
- \lineii{'r|gz'}{Open a gzip compressed \emph{stream} for reading.}
- \lineii{'r|bz2'}{Open a bzip2 compressed \emph{stream} for reading.}
- \lineii{'w|'}{Open an uncompressed \emph{stream} for writing.}
- \lineii{'w|gz'}{Open an gzip compressed \emph{stream} for writing.}
- \lineii{'w|bz2'}{Open an bzip2 compressed \emph{stream} for writing.}
- \end{tableii}
-\end{funcdesc}
-
-\begin{classdesc*}{TarFile}
- Class for reading and writing tar archives. Do not use this
- class directly, better use \function{open()} instead.
- See ``TarFile Objects'' (section~\ref{tarfile-objects}).
-\end{classdesc*}
-
-\begin{funcdesc}{is_tarfile}{name}
- Return \constant{True} if \var{name} is a tar archive file, that
- the \module{tarfile} module can read.
-\end{funcdesc}
-
-\begin{classdesc}{TarFileCompat}{filename\optional{, mode\optional{,
- compression}}}
- Class for limited access to tar archives with a
- \refmodule{zipfile}-like interface. Please consult the
- documentation of the \refmodule{zipfile} module for more details.
- \var{compression} must be one of the following constants:
- \begin{datadesc}{TAR_PLAIN}
- Constant for an uncompressed tar archive.
- \end{datadesc}
- \begin{datadesc}{TAR_GZIPPED}
- Constant for a \refmodule{gzip} compressed tar archive.
- \end{datadesc}
-\end{classdesc}
-
-\begin{excdesc}{TarError}
- Base class for all \module{tarfile} exceptions.
-\end{excdesc}
-
-\begin{excdesc}{ReadError}
- Is raised when a tar archive is opened, that either cannot be handled by
- the \module{tarfile} module or is somehow invalid.
-\end{excdesc}
-
-\begin{excdesc}{CompressionError}
- Is raised when a compression method is not supported or when the data
- cannot be decoded properly.
-\end{excdesc}
-
-\begin{excdesc}{StreamError}
- Is raised for the limitations that are typical for stream-like
- \class{TarFile} objects.
-\end{excdesc}
-
-\begin{excdesc}{ExtractError}
- Is raised for \emph{non-fatal} errors when using \method{extract()}, but
- only if \member{TarFile.errorlevel}\code{ == 2}.
-\end{excdesc}
-
-\begin{seealso}
- \seemodule{zipfile}{Documentation of the \refmodule{zipfile}
- standard module.}
-
- \seetitle[http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/html_node/tar_134.html\#SEC134]
- {GNU tar manual, Basic Tar Format}{Documentation for tar archive files,
- including GNU tar extensions.}
-\end{seealso}
-
-%-----------------
-% TarFile Objects
-%-----------------
-
-\subsection{TarFile Objects \label{tarfile-objects}}
-
-The \class{TarFile} object provides an interface to a tar archive. A tar
-archive is a sequence of blocks. An archive member (a stored file) is made up
-of a header block followed by data blocks. It is possible, to store a file in a
-tar archive several times. Each archive member is represented by a
-\class{TarInfo} object, see \citetitle{TarInfo Objects} (section
-\ref{tarinfo-objects}) for details.
-
-\begin{classdesc}{TarFile}{\optional{name
- \optional{, mode\optional{, fileobj}}}}
- Open an \emph{(uncompressed)} tar archive \var{name}.
- \var{mode} is either \code{'r'} to read from an existing archive,
- \code{'a'} to append data to an existing file or \code{'w'} to create a new
- file overwriting an existing one. \var{mode} defaults to \code{'r'}.
-
- If \var{fileobj} is given, it is used for reading or writing data.
- If it can be determined, \var{mode} is overridden by \var{fileobj}'s mode.
- \var{fileobj} will be used from position 0.
- \begin{notice}
- \var{fileobj} is not closed, when \class{TarFile} is closed.
- \end{notice}
-\end{classdesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{open}{...}
- Alternative constructor. The \function{open()} function on module level is
- actually a shortcut to this classmethod. See section~\ref{module-tarfile}
- for details.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{getmember}{name}
- Return a \class{TarInfo} object for member \var{name}. If \var{name} can
- not be found in the archive, \exception{KeyError} is raised.
- \begin{notice}
- If a member occurs more than once in the archive, its last
- occurrence is assumed to be the most up-to-date version.
- \end{notice}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{getmembers}{}
- Return the members of the archive as a list of \class{TarInfo} objects.
- The list has the same order as the members in the archive.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{getnames}{}
- Return the members as a list of their names. It has the same order as
- the list returned by \method{getmembers()}.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{list}{verbose=True}
- Print a table of contents to \code{sys.stdout}. If \var{verbose} is
- \constant{False}, only the names of the members are printed. If it is
- \constant{True}, output similar to that of \program{ls -l} is produced.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{next}{}
- Return the next member of the archive as a \class{TarInfo} object, when
- \class{TarFile} is opened for reading. Return \code{None} if there is no
- more available.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{extractall}{\optional{path\optional{, members}}}
- Extract all members from the archive to the current working directory
- or directory \var{path}. If optional \var{members} is given, it must be
- a subset of the list returned by \method{getmembers()}.
- Directory informations like owner, modification time and permissions are
- set after all members have been extracted. This is done to work around two
- problems: A directory's modification time is reset each time a file is
- created in it. And, if a directory's permissions do not allow writing,
- extracting files to it will fail.
- \versionadded{2.5}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{extract}{member\optional{, path}}
- Extract a member from the archive to the current working directory,
- using its full name. Its file information is extracted as accurately as
- possible.
- \var{member} may be a filename or a \class{TarInfo} object.
- You can specify a different directory using \var{path}.
- \begin{notice}
- Because the \method{extract()} method allows random access to a tar
- archive there are some issues you must take care of yourself. See the
- description for \method{extractall()} above.
- \end{notice}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{extractfile}{member}
- Extract a member from the archive as a file object.
- \var{member} may be a filename or a \class{TarInfo} object.
- If \var{member} is a regular file, a file-like object is returned.
- If \var{member} is a link, a file-like object is constructed from the
- link's target.
- If \var{member} is none of the above, \code{None} is returned.
- \begin{notice}
- The file-like object is read-only and provides the following methods:
- \method{read()}, \method{readline()}, \method{readlines()},
- \method{seek()}, \method{tell()}.
- \end{notice}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{add}{name\optional{, arcname\optional{, recursive}}}
- Add the file \var{name} to the archive. \var{name} may be any type
- of file (directory, fifo, symbolic link, etc.).
- If given, \var{arcname} specifies an alternative name for the file in the
- archive. Directories are added recursively by default.
- This can be avoided by setting \var{recursive} to \constant{False};
- the default is \constant{True}.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{addfile}{tarinfo\optional{, fileobj}}
- Add the \class{TarInfo} object \var{tarinfo} to the archive.
- If \var{fileobj} is given, \code{\var{tarinfo}.size} bytes are read
- from it and added to the archive. You can create \class{TarInfo} objects
- using \method{gettarinfo()}.
- \begin{notice}
- On Windows platforms, \var{fileobj} should always be opened with mode
- \code{'rb'} to avoid irritation about the file size.
- \end{notice}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{gettarinfo}{\optional{name\optional{,
- arcname\optional{, fileobj}}}}
- Create a \class{TarInfo} object for either the file \var{name} or
- the file object \var{fileobj} (using \function{os.fstat()} on its
- file descriptor). You can modify some of the \class{TarInfo}'s
- attributes before you add it using \method{addfile()}. If given,
- \var{arcname} specifies an alternative name for the file in the
- archive.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{close}{}
- Close the \class{TarFile}. In write mode, two finishing zero
- blocks are appended to the archive.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{posix}
- If true, create a \POSIX{} 1003.1-1990 compliant archive. GNU
- extensions are not used, because they are not part of the \POSIX{}
- standard. This limits the length of filenames to at most 256,
- link names to 100 characters and the maximum file size to 8
- gigabytes. A \exception{ValueError} is raised if a file exceeds
- this limit. If false, create a GNU tar compatible archive. It
- will not be \POSIX{} compliant, but can store files without any
- of the above restrictions.
- \versionchanged[\var{posix} defaults to \constant{False}]{2.4}
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{dereference}
- If false, add symbolic and hard links to archive. If true, add the
- content of the target files to the archive. This has no effect on
- systems that do not support symbolic links.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{ignore_zeros}
- If false, treat an empty block as the end of the archive. If true,
- skip empty (and invalid) blocks and try to get as many members as
- possible. This is only useful for concatenated or damaged
- archives.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{debug=0}
- To be set from \code{0} (no debug messages; the default) up to
- \code{3} (all debug messages). The messages are written to
- \code{sys.stderr}.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{errorlevel}
- If \code{0} (the default), all errors are ignored when using
- \method{extract()}. Nevertheless, they appear as error messages
- in the debug output, when debugging is enabled. If \code{1}, all
- \emph{fatal} errors are raised as \exception{OSError} or
- \exception{IOError} exceptions. If \code{2}, all \emph{non-fatal}
- errors are raised as \exception{TarError} exceptions as well.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-%-----------------
-% TarInfo Objects
-%-----------------
-
-\subsection{TarInfo Objects \label{tarinfo-objects}}
-
-A \class{TarInfo} object represents one member in a
-\class{TarFile}. Aside from storing all required attributes of a file
-(like file type, size, time, permissions, owner etc.), it provides
-some useful methods to determine its type. It does \emph{not} contain
-the file's data itself.
-
-\class{TarInfo} objects are returned by \class{TarFile}'s methods
-\method{getmember()}, \method{getmembers()} and \method{gettarinfo()}.
-
-\begin{classdesc}{TarInfo}{\optional{name}}
- Create a \class{TarInfo} object.
-\end{classdesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{frombuf}{}
- Create and return a \class{TarInfo} object from a string buffer.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{tobuf}{posix}
- Create a string buffer from a \class{TarInfo} object.
- See \class{TarFile}'s \member{posix} attribute for information
- on the \var{posix} argument. It defaults to \constant{False}.
-
- \versionadded[The \var{posix} parameter]{2.5}
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-A \code{TarInfo} object has the following public data attributes:
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{name}
- Name of the archive member.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{size}
- Size in bytes.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{mtime}
- Time of last modification.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{mode}
- Permission bits.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{type}
- File type. \var{type} is usually one of these constants:
- \constant{REGTYPE}, \constant{AREGTYPE}, \constant{LNKTYPE},
- \constant{SYMTYPE}, \constant{DIRTYPE}, \constant{FIFOTYPE},
- \constant{CONTTYPE}, \constant{CHRTYPE}, \constant{BLKTYPE},
- \constant{GNUTYPE_SPARSE}. To determine the type of a
- \class{TarInfo} object more conveniently, use the \code{is_*()}
- methods below.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{linkname}
- Name of the target file name, which is only present in
- \class{TarInfo} objects of type \constant{LNKTYPE} and
- \constant{SYMTYPE}.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{uid}
- User ID of the user who originally stored this member.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{gid}
- Group ID of the user who originally stored this member.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{uname}
- User name.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-\begin{memberdesc}{gname}
- Group name.
-\end{memberdesc}
-
-A \class{TarInfo} object also provides some convenient query methods:
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isfile}{}
- Return \constant{True} if the \class{Tarinfo} object is a regular
- file.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isreg}{}
- Same as \method{isfile()}.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isdir}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a directory.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{issym}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a symbolic link.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{islnk}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a hard link.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{ischr}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a character device.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isblk}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a block device.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isfifo}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is a FIFO.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-\begin{methoddesc}{isdev}{}
- Return \constant{True} if it is one of character device, block
- device or FIFO.
-\end{methoddesc}
-
-%------------------------
-% Examples
-%------------------------
-
-\subsection{Examples \label{tar-examples}}
-
-How to extract an entire tar archive to the current working directory:
-\begin{verbatim}
-import tarfile
-tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz")
-tar.extractall()
-tar.close()
-\end{verbatim}
-
-How to create an uncompressed tar archive from a list of filenames:
-\begin{verbatim}
-import tarfile
-tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar", "w")
-for name in ["foo", "bar", "quux"]:
- tar.add(name)
-tar.close()
-\end{verbatim}
-
-How to read a gzip compressed tar archive and display some member information:
-\begin{verbatim}
-import tarfile
-tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz", "r:gz")
-for tarinfo in tar:
- print tarinfo.name, "is", tarinfo.size, "bytes in size and is",
- if tarinfo.isreg():
- print "a regular file."
- elif tarinfo.isdir():
- print "a directory."
- else:
- print "something else."
-tar.close()
-\end{verbatim}
-
-How to create a tar archive with faked information:
-\begin{verbatim}
-import tarfile
-tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz", "w:gz")
-for name in namelist:
- tarinfo = tar.gettarinfo(name, "fakeproj-1.0/" + name)
- tarinfo.uid = 123
- tarinfo.gid = 456
- tarinfo.uname = "johndoe"
- tarinfo.gname = "fake"
- tar.addfile(tarinfo, file(name))
-tar.close()
-\end{verbatim}
-
-The \emph{only} way to extract an uncompressed tar stream from
-\code{sys.stdin}:
-\begin{verbatim}
-import sys
-import tarfile
-tar = tarfile.open(mode="r|", fileobj=sys.stdin)
-for tarinfo in tar:
- tar.extract(tarinfo)
-tar.close()
-\end{verbatim}