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Fred Drake295da241998-08-10 19:42:37 +00001\section{\module{os} ---
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00002 Miscellaneous operating system interfaces}
Fred Drakeb91e9341998-07-23 17:59:49 +00003
Fred Drakeec6baaf1999-04-21 18:13:31 +00004\declaremodule{standard}{os}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00005\modulesynopsis{Miscellaneous operating system interfaces.}
Fred Drakeb91e9341998-07-23 17:59:49 +00006
Fred Drakec4f15af1998-03-10 03:17:26 +00007
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00008This module provides a more portable way of using operating system
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00009dependent functionality than importing a operating system dependent
10built-in module like \refmodule{posix} or \module{nt}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000011
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000012This module searches for an operating system dependent built-in module like
Fred Drake2f979011999-06-11 18:28:37 +000013\module{mac} or \refmodule{posix} and exports the same functions and data
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000014as found there. The design of all Python's built-in operating system dependent
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000015modules is such that as long as the same functionality is available,
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +000016it uses the same interface; for example, the function
Fred Drakeec6baaf1999-04-21 18:13:31 +000017\code{os.stat(\var{path})} returns stat information about \var{path} in
18the same format (which happens to have originated with the
19\POSIX{} interface).
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000020
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000021Extensions peculiar to a particular operating system are also
22available through the \module{os} module, but using them is of course a
23threat to portability!
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000024
Fred Drakec4f15af1998-03-10 03:17:26 +000025Note that after the first time \module{os} is imported, there is
26\emph{no} performance penalty in using functions from \module{os}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000027instead of directly from the operating system dependent built-in module,
28so there should be \emph{no} reason not to use \module{os}!
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000029
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000030
Fred Drake859dc531999-07-01 13:54:40 +000031% Frank Stajano <fstajano@uk.research.att.com> complained that it
32% wasn't clear that the entries described in the subsections were all
33% available at the module level (most uses of subsections are
34% different); I think this is only a problem for the HTML version,
35% where the relationship may not be as clear.
36%
37\ifhtml
38The \module{os} module contains many functions and data values.
39The items below and in the following sub-sections are all available
40directly from the \module{os} module.
41\fi
42
43
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000044\begin{excdesc}{error}
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +000045This exception is raised when a function returns a system-related
46error (not for illegal argument types or other incidental errors).
47This is also known as the built-in exception \exception{OSError}. The
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000048accompanying value is a pair containing the numeric error code from
49\cdata{errno} and the corresponding string, as would be printed by the
50C function \cfunction{perror()}. See the module
51\refmodule{errno}\refbimodindex{errno}, which contains names for the
52error codes defined by the underlying operating system.
53
54When exceptions are classes, this exception carries two attributes,
55\member{errno} and \member{strerror}. The first holds the value of
56the C \cdata{errno} variable, and the latter holds the corresponding
57error message from \cfunction{strerror()}. For exceptions that
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +000058involve a file system path (such as \function{chdir()} or
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000059\function{unlink()}), the exception instance will contain a third
60attribute, \member{filename}, which is the file name passed to the
61function.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000062\end{excdesc}
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +000063
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000064\begin{datadesc}{name}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000065The name of the operating system dependent module imported. The
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +000066following names have currently been registered: \code{'posix'},
Martin v. Löwis36a4d8c2002-10-10 18:24:54 +000067\code{'nt'}, \code{'mac'}, \code{'os2'}, \code{'ce'},
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +000068\code{'java'}, \code{'riscos'}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000069\end{datadesc}
70
71\begin{datadesc}{path}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +000072The corresponding operating system dependent standard module for pathname
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +000073operations, such as \module{posixpath} or \module{macpath}. Thus,
74given the proper imports, \code{os.path.split(\var{file})} is
75equivalent to but more portable than
76\code{posixpath.split(\var{file})}. Note that this is also an
77importable module: it may be imported directly as
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000078\refmodule{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +000079\end{datadesc}
80
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000081
82
83\subsection{Process Parameters \label{os-procinfo}}
84
85These functions and data items provide information and operate on the
86current process and user.
87
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000088\begin{datadesc}{environ}
Fred Drake0e1de8b1999-04-29 12:57:32 +000089A mapping object representing the string environment. For example,
90\code{environ['HOME']} is the pathname of your home directory (on some
91platforms), and is equivalent to \code{getenv("HOME")} in C.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000092
Tim Petersd6ef1932004-07-26 00:42:41 +000093This mapping is captured the first time the \module{os} module is
94imported, typically during Python startup as part of processing
95\file{site.py}. Changes to the environment made after this time are
96not reflected in \code{os.environ}, except for changes made by modifying
97\code{os.environ} directly.
98
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +000099If the platform supports the \function{putenv()} function, this
100mapping may be used to modify the environment as well as query the
101environment. \function{putenv()} will be called automatically when
Tim Petersd6ef1932004-07-26 00:42:41 +0000102the mapping is modified.
103\note{Calling \function{putenv()} directly does not change
104\code{os.environ}, so it's better to modify \code{os.environ}.}
105\note{On some platforms, including FreeBSD and Mac OS X, setting
106\code{environ} may cause memory leaks. Refer to the system documentation
107for \cfunction{putenv()}.}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000108
Georg Brandl837a9762005-06-25 18:44:49 +0000109If \function{putenv()} is not provided, a modified copy of this mapping
110may be passed to the appropriate process-creation functions to cause
111child processes to use a modified environment.
112
113If the platform supports the \function{unsetenv()} function, you can
114delete items in this mapping to unset environment variables.
115\function{unsetenv()} will be called automatically when an item is
116deleted from \code{os.environ}.
117
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000118\end{datadesc}
119
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000120\begin{funcdescni}{chdir}{path}
Fred Drakee19a5bc2002-04-15 19:46:40 +0000121\funclineni{fchdir}{fd}
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000122\funclineni{getcwd}{}
123These functions are described in ``Files and Directories'' (section
124\ref{os-file-dir}).
125\end{funcdescni}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000126
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +0000127\begin{funcdesc}{ctermid}{}
128Return the filename corresponding to the controlling terminal of the
129process.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000130Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +0000131\end{funcdesc}
132
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000133\begin{funcdesc}{getegid}{}
Fred Draked3e66782002-04-26 20:59:40 +0000134Return the effective group id of the current process. This
135corresponds to the `set id' bit on the file being executed in the
136current process.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000137Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000138\end{funcdesc}
139
140\begin{funcdesc}{geteuid}{}
Fred Drake6b330ba81999-05-25 13:42:26 +0000141\index{user!effective id}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000142Return the current process' effective user id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000143Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000144\end{funcdesc}
145
146\begin{funcdesc}{getgid}{}
Fred Drake6b330ba81999-05-25 13:42:26 +0000147\index{process!group}
Fred Draked3e66782002-04-26 20:59:40 +0000148Return the real group id of the current process.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000149Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000150\end{funcdesc}
151
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000152\begin{funcdesc}{getgroups}{}
153Return list of supplemental group ids associated with the current
154process.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000155Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000156\end{funcdesc}
157
158\begin{funcdesc}{getlogin}{}
Jeremy Hylton403e3512002-07-24 15:32:25 +0000159Return the name of the user logged in on the controlling terminal of
160the process. For most purposes, it is more useful to use the
Andrew M. Kuchling4b373642003-02-03 15:36:26 +0000161environment variable \envvar{LOGNAME} to find out who the user is,
162or \code{pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[0]} to get the login name
163of the currently effective user ID.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000164Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000165\end{funcdesc}
166
Martin v. Löwis606edc12002-06-13 21:09:11 +0000167\begin{funcdesc}{getpgid}{pid}
168Return the process group id of the process with process id \var{pid}.
169If \var{pid} is 0, the process group id of the current process is
170returned. Availability: \UNIX.
Neal Norwitzcc5c6942002-06-13 21:19:25 +0000171\versionadded{2.3}
Martin v. Löwis606edc12002-06-13 21:09:11 +0000172\end{funcdesc}
173
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000174\begin{funcdesc}{getpgrp}{}
175\index{process!group}
Fred Draked3e66782002-04-26 20:59:40 +0000176Return the id of the current process group.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000177Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000178\end{funcdesc}
179
180\begin{funcdesc}{getpid}{}
181\index{process!id}
182Return the current process id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000183Availability: \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000184\end{funcdesc}
185
186\begin{funcdesc}{getppid}{}
187\index{process!id of parent}
188Return the parent's process id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000189Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000190\end{funcdesc}
191
192\begin{funcdesc}{getuid}{}
Fred Drake6b330ba81999-05-25 13:42:26 +0000193\index{user!id}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000194Return the current process' user id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000195Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000196\end{funcdesc}
197
Fred Drake81e142b2001-05-31 20:27:46 +0000198\begin{funcdesc}{getenv}{varname\optional{, value}}
199Return the value of the environment variable \var{varname} if it
200exists, or \var{value} if it doesn't. \var{value} defaults to
201\code{None}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000202Availability: most flavors of \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake81e142b2001-05-31 20:27:46 +0000203\end{funcdesc}
204
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000205\begin{funcdesc}{putenv}{varname, value}
206\index{environment variables!setting}
207Set the environment variable named \var{varname} to the string
208\var{value}. Such changes to the environment affect subprocesses
209started with \function{os.system()}, \function{popen()} or
210\function{fork()} and \function{execv()}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000211Availability: most flavors of \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000212
Neal Norwitz2b09bc42003-02-07 02:27:36 +0000213\note{On some platforms, including FreeBSD and Mac OS X,
214setting \code{environ} may cause memory leaks.
215Refer to the system documentation for putenv.}
216
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000217When \function{putenv()} is
218supported, assignments to items in \code{os.environ} are automatically
219translated into corresponding calls to \function{putenv()}; however,
220calls to \function{putenv()} don't update \code{os.environ}, so it is
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +0000221actually preferable to assign to items of \code{os.environ}.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000222\end{funcdesc}
223
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000224\begin{funcdesc}{setegid}{egid}
225Set the current process's effective group id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000226Availability: \UNIX.
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000227\end{funcdesc}
228
229\begin{funcdesc}{seteuid}{euid}
230Set the current process's effective user id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000231Availability: \UNIX.
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000232\end{funcdesc}
233
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000234\begin{funcdesc}{setgid}{gid}
235Set the current process' group id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000236Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000237\end{funcdesc}
238
Martin v. Löwis61c5edf2001-10-18 04:06:00 +0000239\begin{funcdesc}{setgroups}{groups}
Martin v. Löwisc4051332001-10-18 14:07:12 +0000240Set the list of supplemental group ids associated with the current
241process to \var{groups}. \var{groups} must be a sequence, and each
242element must be an integer identifying a group. This operation is
243typical available only to the superuser.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000244Availability: \UNIX.
Martin v. Löwis61c5edf2001-10-18 04:06:00 +0000245\versionadded{2.2}
246\end{funcdesc}
247
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000248\begin{funcdesc}{setpgrp}{}
249Calls the system call \cfunction{setpgrp()} or \cfunction{setpgrp(0,
2500)} depending on which version is implemented (if any). See the
251\UNIX{} manual for the semantics.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000252Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000253\end{funcdesc}
254
Fred Draked3e66782002-04-26 20:59:40 +0000255\begin{funcdesc}{setpgid}{pid, pgrp} Calls the system call
256\cfunction{setpgid()} to set the process group id of the process with
257id \var{pid} to the process group with id \var{pgrp}. See the \UNIX{}
258manual for the semantics.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000259Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000260\end{funcdesc}
261
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000262\begin{funcdesc}{setreuid}{ruid, euid}
263Set the current process's real and effective user ids.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000264Availability: \UNIX.
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000265\end{funcdesc}
266
267\begin{funcdesc}{setregid}{rgid, egid}
268Set the current process's real and effective group ids.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000269Availability: \UNIX.
Andrew M. Kuchling8d2f2b22000-07-13 01:26:58 +0000270\end{funcdesc}
271
Martin v. Löwis49ee14d2003-11-10 06:35:36 +0000272\begin{funcdesc}{getsid}{pid}
273Calls the system call \cfunction{getsid()}. See the \UNIX{} manual
274for the semantics.
Martin v. Löwis75aa4db2003-11-10 06:46:15 +0000275Availability: \UNIX. \versionadded{2.4}
Martin v. Löwis49ee14d2003-11-10 06:35:36 +0000276\end{funcdesc}
277
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000278\begin{funcdesc}{setsid}{}
279Calls the system call \cfunction{setsid()}. See the \UNIX{} manual
280for the semantics.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000281Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000282\end{funcdesc}
283
284\begin{funcdesc}{setuid}{uid}
Fred Drake6b330ba81999-05-25 13:42:26 +0000285\index{user!id, setting}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000286Set the current process' user id.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000287Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000288\end{funcdesc}
289
Raymond Hettinger9b4dab42003-12-31 18:37:28 +0000290% placed in this section since it relates to errno.... a little weak
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000291\begin{funcdesc}{strerror}{code}
292Return the error message corresponding to the error code in
293\var{code}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000294Availability: \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000295\end{funcdesc}
296
297\begin{funcdesc}{umask}{mask}
298Set the current numeric umask and returns the previous umask.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000299Availability: \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000300\end{funcdesc}
301
302\begin{funcdesc}{uname}{}
303Return a 5-tuple containing information identifying the current
304operating system. The tuple contains 5 strings:
305\code{(\var{sysname}, \var{nodename}, \var{release}, \var{version},
306\var{machine})}. Some systems truncate the nodename to 8
307characters or to the leading component; a better way to get the
308hostname is \function{socket.gethostname()}
309\withsubitem{(in module socket)}{\ttindex{gethostname()}}
310or even
311\withsubitem{(in module socket)}{\ttindex{gethostbyaddr()}}
312\code{socket.gethostbyaddr(socket.gethostname())}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000313Availability: recent flavors of \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000314\end{funcdesc}
315
Georg Brandl837a9762005-06-25 18:44:49 +0000316\begin{funcdesc}{unsetenv}{varname}
317\index{environment variables!deleting}
318Unset (delete) the environment variable named \var{varname}. Such
319changes to the environment affect subprocesses started with
320\function{os.system()}, \function{popen()} or \function{fork()} and
321\function{execv()}. Availability: most flavors of \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000322
Georg Brandl837a9762005-06-25 18:44:49 +0000323When \function{unsetenv()} is
324supported, deletion of items in \code{os.environ} is automatically
325translated into a corresponding call to \function{unsetenv()}; however,
326calls to \function{unsetenv()} don't update \code{os.environ}, so it is
327actually preferable to delete items of \code{os.environ}.
328\end{funcdesc}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000329
330\subsection{File Object Creation \label{os-newstreams}}
331
332These functions create new file objects.
333
334
335\begin{funcdesc}{fdopen}{fd\optional{, mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
336Return an open file object connected to the file descriptor \var{fd}.
Fred Drake8c9fc001999-08-05 13:41:31 +0000337\index{I/O control!buffering}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000338The \var{mode} and \var{bufsize} arguments have the same meaning as
339the corresponding arguments to the built-in \function{open()}
340function.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000341Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Thomas Heller5b470e02002-11-07 16:33:44 +0000342
343\versionchanged[When specified, the \var{mode} argument must now start
Fred Drakeb5f41de2002-11-07 17:13:03 +0000344 with one of the letters \character{r}, \character{w}, or \character{a},
345 otherwise a \exception{ValueError} is raised]{2.3}
Georg Brandl5f284da2006-04-02 21:18:27 +0000346\versionchanged[On \UNIX, when the \var{mode} argument starts with
347 \character{a}, the \var{O_APPEND} flag is set on the file descriptor
348 (which the \cfunction{fdopen()} implementation already does on most
349 platforms)]{2.5}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000350\end{funcdesc}
351
352\begin{funcdesc}{popen}{command\optional{, mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
353Open a pipe to or from \var{command}. The return value is an open
354file object connected to the pipe, which can be read or written
355depending on whether \var{mode} is \code{'r'} (default) or \code{'w'}.
356The \var{bufsize} argument has the same meaning as the corresponding
357argument to the built-in \function{open()} function. The exit status of
358the command (encoded in the format specified for \function{wait()}) is
359available as the return value of the \method{close()} method of the file
360object, except that when the exit status is zero (termination without
Fred Drake1319e3e2000-10-03 17:14:27 +0000361errors), \code{None} is returned.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000362Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drakec71c23e2000-10-04 13:57:27 +0000363
364\versionchanged[This function worked unreliably under Windows in
365 earlier versions of Python. This was due to the use of the
366 \cfunction{_popen()} function from the libraries provided with
367 Windows. Newer versions of Python do not use the broken
368 implementation from the Windows libraries]{2.0}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000369\end{funcdesc}
370
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +0000371\begin{funcdesc}{tmpfile}{}
Guido van Rossumdb9198a2002-06-10 19:23:22 +0000372Return a new file object opened in update mode (\samp{w+b}). The file
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +0000373has no directory entries associated with it and will be automatically
374deleted once there are no file descriptors for the file.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000375Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +0000376\end{funcdesc}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000377
378
Georg Brandldebd3712005-06-10 19:55:35 +0000379For each of the following \function{popen()} variants, if \var{bufsize} is
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000380specified, it specifies the buffer size for the I/O pipes.
381\var{mode}, if provided, should be the string \code{'b'} or
382\code{'t'}; on Windows this is needed to determine whether the file
383objects should be opened in binary or text mode. The default value
384for \var{mode} is \code{'t'}.
385
Johannes Gijsbers9fc97892004-10-11 18:12:20 +0000386Also, for each of these variants, on \UNIX, \var{cmd} may be a sequence, in
387which case arguments will be passed directly to the program without shell
388intervention (as with \function{os.spawnv()}). If \var{cmd} is a string it will
389be passed to the shell (as with \function{os.system()}).
390
Georg Brandldebd3712005-06-10 19:55:35 +0000391These methods do not make it possible to retrieve the exit status from
Fred Drake098d7fa2001-09-11 19:56:51 +0000392the child processes. The only way to control the input and output
393streams and also retrieve the return codes is to use the
394\class{Popen3} and \class{Popen4} classes from the \refmodule{popen2}
395module; these are only available on \UNIX.
396
Fred Drake08d10f92002-12-06 16:45:05 +0000397For a discussion of possible deadlock conditions related to the use
Fred Drake9ea01d42002-06-18 20:30:37 +0000398of these functions, see ``\ulink{Flow Control
399Issues}{popen2-flow-control.html}''
400(section~\ref{popen2-flow-control}).
401
Fred Drake046f4d82001-06-11 15:21:48 +0000402\begin{funcdesc}{popen2}{cmd\optional{, mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000403Executes \var{cmd} as a sub-process. Returns the file objects
404\code{(\var{child_stdin}, \var{child_stdout})}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000405Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000406\versionadded{2.0}
407\end{funcdesc}
408
Fred Drake046f4d82001-06-11 15:21:48 +0000409\begin{funcdesc}{popen3}{cmd\optional{, mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000410Executes \var{cmd} as a sub-process. Returns the file objects
411\code{(\var{child_stdin}, \var{child_stdout}, \var{child_stderr})}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000412Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000413\versionadded{2.0}
414\end{funcdesc}
415
Fred Drake046f4d82001-06-11 15:21:48 +0000416\begin{funcdesc}{popen4}{cmd\optional{, mode\optional{, bufsize}}}
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000417Executes \var{cmd} as a sub-process. Returns the file objects
418\code{(\var{child_stdin}, \var{child_stdout_and_stderr})}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000419Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Johannes Gijsbers9fc97892004-10-11 18:12:20 +0000420\versionadded{2.0}
421\end{funcdesc}
Andrew M. Kuchlinge1ca3552004-06-05 19:25:30 +0000422
423(Note that \code{\var{child_stdin}, \var{child_stdout}, and
424\var{child_stderr}} are named from the point of view of the child
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +0000425process, so \var{child_stdin} is the child's standard input.)
Andrew M. Kuchlinge1ca3552004-06-05 19:25:30 +0000426
Fred Drake8a9db992000-09-28 20:27:51 +0000427This functionality is also available in the \refmodule{popen2} module
428using functions of the same names, but the return values of those
429functions have a different order.
430
431
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000432\subsection{File Descriptor Operations \label{os-fd-ops}}
433
Andrew M. Kuchlinge1a385a2005-08-31 13:50:17 +0000434These functions operate on I/O streams referenced using file
435descriptors.
436
437File descriptors are small integers corresponding to a file that has
438been opened by the current process. For example, standard input is
439usually file descriptor 0, standard output is 1, and standard error is
4402. Further files opened by a process will then be assigned 3, 4, 5,
441and so forth. The name ``file descriptor'' is slightly deceptive; on
442{\UNIX} platforms, sockets and pipes are also referenced by file descriptors.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000443
444
445\begin{funcdesc}{close}{fd}
446Close file descriptor \var{fd}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000447Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000448
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000449\begin{notice}
450This function is intended for low-level I/O and must be applied
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000451to a file descriptor as returned by \function{open()} or
452\function{pipe()}. To close a ``file object'' returned by the
453built-in function \function{open()} or by \function{popen()} or
454\function{fdopen()}, use its \method{close()} method.
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000455\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000456\end{funcdesc}
457
458\begin{funcdesc}{dup}{fd}
459Return a duplicate of file descriptor \var{fd}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000460Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000461\end{funcdesc}
462
463\begin{funcdesc}{dup2}{fd, fd2}
464Duplicate file descriptor \var{fd} to \var{fd2}, closing the latter
465first if necessary.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000466Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000467\end{funcdesc}
468
Raymond Hettinger3cfdc342002-08-07 15:48:17 +0000469\begin{funcdesc}{fdatasync}{fd}
470Force write of file with filedescriptor \var{fd} to disk.
471Does not force update of metadata.
472Availability: \UNIX.
473\end{funcdesc}
474
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000475\begin{funcdesc}{fpathconf}{fd, name}
Thomas Woutersf8316632000-07-16 19:01:10 +0000476Return system configuration information relevant to an open file.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000477\var{name} specifies the configuration value to retrieve; it may be a
478string which is the name of a defined system value; these names are
Raymond Hettingerb67449d2003-09-08 18:52:18 +0000479specified in a number of standards (\POSIX.1, \UNIX{} 95, \UNIX{} 98, and
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000480others). Some platforms define additional names as well. The names
481known to the host operating system are given in the
482\code{pathconf_names} dictionary. For configuration variables not
483included in that mapping, passing an integer for \var{name} is also
484accepted.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000485Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000486
487If \var{name} is a string and is not known, \exception{ValueError} is
488raised. If a specific value for \var{name} is not supported by the
489host system, even if it is included in \code{pathconf_names}, an
490\exception{OSError} is raised with \constant{errno.EINVAL} for the
491error number.
492\end{funcdesc}
493
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000494\begin{funcdesc}{fstat}{fd}
495Return status for file descriptor \var{fd}, like \function{stat()}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000496Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000497\end{funcdesc}
498
499\begin{funcdesc}{fstatvfs}{fd}
500Return information about the filesystem containing the file associated
501with file descriptor \var{fd}, like \function{statvfs()}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000502Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000503\end{funcdesc}
504
Raymond Hettinger3cfdc342002-08-07 15:48:17 +0000505\begin{funcdesc}{fsync}{fd}
Tim Peters2d1c8462003-04-23 19:47:14 +0000506Force write of file with filedescriptor \var{fd} to disk. On \UNIX,
507this calls the native \cfunction{fsync()} function; on Windows, the
508MS \cfunction{_commit()} function.
Tim Peters11b23062003-04-23 02:39:17 +0000509
Tim Peters2d1c8462003-04-23 19:47:14 +0000510If you're starting with a Python file object \var{f}, first do
Raymond Hettinger52136a82003-05-10 03:35:37 +0000511\code{\var{f}.flush()}, and then do \code{os.fsync(\var{f}.fileno())},
Tim Peters11b23062003-04-23 02:39:17 +0000512to ensure that all internal buffers associated with \var{f} are written
513to disk.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000514Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, and Windows starting in 2.2.3.
Raymond Hettinger3cfdc342002-08-07 15:48:17 +0000515\end{funcdesc}
516
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000517\begin{funcdesc}{ftruncate}{fd, length}
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +0000518Truncate the file corresponding to file descriptor \var{fd},
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000519so that it is at most \var{length} bytes in size.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000520Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000521\end{funcdesc}
522
Skip Montanarod3725212000-07-19 17:30:58 +0000523\begin{funcdesc}{isatty}{fd}
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +0000524Return \code{True} if the file descriptor \var{fd} is open and
525connected to a tty(-like) device, else \code{False}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000526Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Skip Montanarod3725212000-07-19 17:30:58 +0000527\end{funcdesc}
528
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000529\begin{funcdesc}{lseek}{fd, pos, how}
530Set the current position of file descriptor \var{fd} to position
531\var{pos}, modified by \var{how}: \code{0} to set the position
532relative to the beginning of the file; \code{1} to set it relative to
533the current position; \code{2} to set it relative to the end of the
534file.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000535Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000536\end{funcdesc}
537
538\begin{funcdesc}{open}{file, flags\optional{, mode}}
539Open the file \var{file} and set various flags according to
540\var{flags} and possibly its mode according to \var{mode}.
541The default \var{mode} is \code{0777} (octal), and the current umask
542value is first masked out. Return the file descriptor for the newly
543opened file.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000544Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000545
546For a description of the flag and mode values, see the C run-time
547documentation; flag constants (like \constant{O_RDONLY} and
548\constant{O_WRONLY}) are defined in this module too (see below).
549
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000550\begin{notice}
551This function is intended for low-level I/O. For normal usage,
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000552use the built-in function \function{open()}, which returns a ``file
553object'' with \method{read()} and \method{write()} methods (and many
Georg Brandlb88e19c2006-03-31 19:20:13 +0000554more). To wrap a file descriptor in a ``file object'', use
555\function{fdopen()}.
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000556\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000557\end{funcdesc}
558
Fred Drakec82634c2000-06-28 17:27:48 +0000559\begin{funcdesc}{openpty}{}
560Open a new pseudo-terminal pair. Return a pair of file descriptors
561\code{(\var{master}, \var{slave})} for the pty and the tty,
562respectively. For a (slightly) more portable approach, use the
563\refmodule{pty}\refstmodindex{pty} module.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000564Availability: Macintosh, Some flavors of \UNIX.
Fred Drakec82634c2000-06-28 17:27:48 +0000565\end{funcdesc}
566
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000567\begin{funcdesc}{pipe}{}
568Create a pipe. Return a pair of file descriptors \code{(\var{r},
569\var{w})} usable for reading and writing, respectively.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000570Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000571\end{funcdesc}
572
573\begin{funcdesc}{read}{fd, n}
574Read at most \var{n} bytes from file descriptor \var{fd}.
Fred Drakea65375c2002-05-01 03:31:42 +0000575Return a string containing the bytes read. If the end of the file
576referred to by \var{fd} has been reached, an empty string is
577returned.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000578Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000579
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000580\begin{notice}
581This function is intended for low-level I/O and must be applied
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000582to a file descriptor as returned by \function{open()} or
583\function{pipe()}. To read a ``file object'' returned by the
584built-in function \function{open()} or by \function{popen()} or
585\function{fdopen()}, or \code{sys.stdin}, use its
586\method{read()} or \method{readline()} methods.
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000587\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000588\end{funcdesc}
589
590\begin{funcdesc}{tcgetpgrp}{fd}
591Return the process group associated with the terminal given by
592\var{fd} (an open file descriptor as returned by \function{open()}).
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000593Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000594\end{funcdesc}
595
596\begin{funcdesc}{tcsetpgrp}{fd, pg}
597Set the process group associated with the terminal given by
598\var{fd} (an open file descriptor as returned by \function{open()})
599to \var{pg}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000600Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000601\end{funcdesc}
602
603\begin{funcdesc}{ttyname}{fd}
604Return a string which specifies the terminal device associated with
605file-descriptor \var{fd}. If \var{fd} is not associated with a terminal
606device, an exception is raised.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000607Availability:Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000608\end{funcdesc}
609
610\begin{funcdesc}{write}{fd, str}
611Write the string \var{str} to file descriptor \var{fd}.
612Return the number of bytes actually written.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000613Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000614
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000615\begin{notice}
616This function is intended for low-level I/O and must be applied
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000617to a file descriptor as returned by \function{open()} or
618\function{pipe()}. To write a ``file object'' returned by the
619built-in function \function{open()} or by \function{popen()} or
620\function{fdopen()}, or \code{sys.stdout} or \code{sys.stderr}, use
621its \method{write()} method.
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000622\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000623\end{funcdesc}
624
625
626The following data items are available for use in constructing the
Skip Montanaro5ff14922005-05-16 02:42:22 +0000627\var{flags} parameter to the \function{open()} function. Some items will
628not be available on all platforms. For descriptions of their availability
629and use, consult \manpage{open}{2}.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000630
631\begin{datadesc}{O_RDONLY}
632\dataline{O_WRONLY}
633\dataline{O_RDWR}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000634\dataline{O_APPEND}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000635\dataline{O_CREAT}
636\dataline{O_EXCL}
637\dataline{O_TRUNC}
638Options for the \var{flag} argument to the \function{open()} function.
639These can be bit-wise OR'd together.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000640Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Tim Petersde833212004-07-15 05:46:37 +0000641\end{datadesc}
642
Neal Norwitz76aa2ef2004-07-19 01:39:54 +0000643\begin{datadesc}{O_DSYNC}
Tim Petersde833212004-07-15 05:46:37 +0000644\dataline{O_RSYNC}
645\dataline{O_SYNC}
646\dataline{O_NDELAY}
647\dataline{O_NONBLOCK}
648\dataline{O_NOCTTY}
Skip Montanaro5ff14922005-05-16 02:42:22 +0000649\dataline{O_SHLOCK}
650\dataline{O_EXLOCK}
Tim Petersde833212004-07-15 05:46:37 +0000651More options for the \var{flag} argument to the \function{open()} function.
652Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000653\end{datadesc}
654
Fred Drake3ac977e2000-08-11 20:19:51 +0000655\begin{datadesc}{O_BINARY}
656Option for the \var{flag} argument to the \function{open()} function.
657This can be bit-wise OR'd together with those listed above.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000658Availability: Windows.
Fred Drake3ac977e2000-08-11 20:19:51 +0000659% XXX need to check on the availability of this one.
660\end{datadesc}
661
Tim Petersc48a3ca2002-01-30 05:49:46 +0000662\begin{datadesc}{O_NOINHERIT}
663\dataline{O_SHORT_LIVED}
664\dataline{O_TEMPORARY}
665\dataline{O_RANDOM}
666\dataline{O_SEQUENTIAL}
667\dataline{O_TEXT}
668Options for the \var{flag} argument to the \function{open()} function.
669These can be bit-wise OR'd together.
670Availability: Windows.
671\end{datadesc}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000672
Martin v. Löwis22b457e2005-01-16 08:40:58 +0000673\begin{datadesc}{SEEK_SET}
674\dataline{SEEK_CUR}
675\dataline{SEEK_END}
Fred Drakeb184ae82005-01-19 03:39:17 +0000676Parameters to the \function{lseek()} function.
Martin v. Löwis22b457e2005-01-16 08:40:58 +0000677Their values are 0, 1, and 2, respectively.
678Availability: Windows, Macintosh, \UNIX.
679\versionadded{2.5}
680\end{datadesc}
681
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000682\subsection{Files and Directories \label{os-file-dir}}
683
684\begin{funcdesc}{access}{path, mode}
Fred Drake7f591242002-06-18 16:15:51 +0000685Use the real uid/gid to test for access to \var{path}. Note that most
686operations will use the effective uid/gid, therefore this routine can
687be used in a suid/sgid environment to test if the invoking user has the
688specified access to \var{path}. \var{mode} should be \constant{F_OK}
689to test the existence of \var{path}, or it can be the inclusive OR of
690one or more of \constant{R_OK}, \constant{W_OK}, and \constant{X_OK} to
Raymond Hettinger9b4dab42003-12-31 18:37:28 +0000691test permissions. Return \constant{True} if access is allowed,
692\constant{False} if not.
Fred Drake38e5d272000-04-03 20:13:55 +0000693See the \UNIX{} man page \manpage{access}{2} for more information.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000694Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Georg Brandlb37b8ec2005-07-17 21:10:11 +0000695
696\note{Using \function{access()} to check if a user is authorized to e.g.
697open a file before actually doing so using \function{open()} creates a
698security hole, because the user might exploit the short time interval
699between checking and opening the file to manipulate it.}
Neal Norwitz92ff6932005-10-03 05:13:46 +0000700
701\note{I/O operations may fail even when \function{access()}
702indicates that they would succeed, particularly for operations
703on network filesystems which may have permissions semantics
704beyond the usual \POSIX{} permission-bit model.}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000705\end{funcdesc}
706
Fred Drake38e5d272000-04-03 20:13:55 +0000707\begin{datadesc}{F_OK}
708 Value to pass as the \var{mode} parameter of \function{access()} to
709 test the existence of \var{path}.
710\end{datadesc}
711
712\begin{datadesc}{R_OK}
713 Value to include in the \var{mode} parameter of \function{access()}
714 to test the readability of \var{path}.
715\end{datadesc}
716
717\begin{datadesc}{W_OK}
718 Value to include in the \var{mode} parameter of \function{access()}
719 to test the writability of \var{path}.
720\end{datadesc}
721
722\begin{datadesc}{X_OK}
723 Value to include in the \var{mode} parameter of \function{access()}
724 to determine if \var{path} can be executed.
725\end{datadesc}
726
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000727\begin{funcdesc}{chdir}{path}
728\index{directory!changing}
729Change the current working directory to \var{path}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000730Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000731\end{funcdesc}
732
Fred Drake15498552002-04-15 19:41:27 +0000733\begin{funcdesc}{fchdir}{fd}
734Change the current working directory to the directory represented by
735the file descriptor \var{fd}. The descriptor must refer to an opened
736directory, not an open file.
737Availability: \UNIX.
738\versionadded{2.3}
739\end{funcdesc}
740
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000741\begin{funcdesc}{getcwd}{}
742Return a string representing the current working directory.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000743Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake6db897c1999-07-12 16:49:30 +0000744\end{funcdesc}
745
Martin v. Löwisa844f2d2002-10-05 09:46:48 +0000746\begin{funcdesc}{getcwdu}{}
747Return a Unicode object representing the current working directory.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000748Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Martin v. Löwisa844f2d2002-10-05 09:46:48 +0000749\versionadded{2.3}
750\end{funcdesc}
751
Martin v. Löwis244edc82001-10-04 22:44:26 +0000752\begin{funcdesc}{chroot}{path}
753Change the root directory of the current process to \var{path}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000754Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Martin v. Löwis244edc82001-10-04 22:44:26 +0000755\versionadded{2.2}
756\end{funcdesc}
757
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000758\begin{funcdesc}{chmod}{path, mode}
759Change the mode of \var{path} to the numeric \var{mode}.
Raymond Hettinger0a6aa282003-08-31 05:09:52 +0000760\var{mode} may take one of the following values
Georg Brandla6ba6022005-11-22 19:15:27 +0000761(as defined in the \module{stat} module) or bitwise or-ed
762combinations of them:
Raymond Hettinger9f5b07d2003-01-06 13:31:26 +0000763\begin{itemize}
764 \item \code{S_ISUID}
765 \item \code{S_ISGID}
766 \item \code{S_ENFMT}
767 \item \code{S_ISVTX}
768 \item \code{S_IREAD}
769 \item \code{S_IWRITE}
770 \item \code{S_IEXEC}
771 \item \code{S_IRWXU}
772 \item \code{S_IRUSR}
773 \item \code{S_IWUSR}
774 \item \code{S_IXUSR}
775 \item \code{S_IRWXG}
776 \item \code{S_IRGRP}
777 \item \code{S_IWGRP}
778 \item \code{S_IXGRP}
779 \item \code{S_IRWXO}
780 \item \code{S_IROTH}
781 \item \code{S_IWOTH}
782 \item \code{S_IXOTH}
783\end{itemize}
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000784Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Georg Brandl2d8cc612005-07-18 08:16:33 +0000785
786\note{Although Windows supports \function{chmod()}, you can only
787set the file's read-only flag with it (via the \code{S_IWRITE}
788and \code{S_IREAD} constants or a corresponding integer value).
789All other bits are ignored.}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000790\end{funcdesc}
791
792\begin{funcdesc}{chown}{path, uid, gid}
793Change the owner and group id of \var{path} to the numeric \var{uid}
Georg Brandl0929b7e2005-06-25 18:52:24 +0000794and \var{gid}. To leave one of the ids unchanged, set it to -1.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000795Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000796\end{funcdesc}
797
Martin v. Löwis0cec0ff2002-07-28 16:33:45 +0000798\begin{funcdesc}{lchown}{path, uid, gid}
799Change the owner and group id of \var{path} to the numeric \var{uid}
800and gid. This function will not follow symbolic links.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000801Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Martin v. Löwis0cec0ff2002-07-28 16:33:45 +0000802\versionadded{2.3}
803\end{funcdesc}
804
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000805\begin{funcdesc}{link}{src, dst}
806Create a hard link pointing to \var{src} named \var{dst}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000807Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000808\end{funcdesc}
809
810\begin{funcdesc}{listdir}{path}
811Return a list containing the names of the entries in the directory.
812The list is in arbitrary order. It does not include the special
813entries \code{'.'} and \code{'..'} even if they are present in the
814directory.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000815Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Martin v. Löwisa844f2d2002-10-05 09:46:48 +0000816
Fred Drake9f3ae3e2005-08-09 15:24:05 +0000817\versionchanged[On Windows NT/2k/XP and \UNIX, if \var{path} is a Unicode
Georg Brandla635fbb2006-01-15 07:55:35 +0000818object, the result will be a list of Unicode objects]{2.3}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000819\end{funcdesc}
820
821\begin{funcdesc}{lstat}{path}
822Like \function{stat()}, but do not follow symbolic links.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000823Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000824\end{funcdesc}
825
826\begin{funcdesc}{mkfifo}{path\optional{, mode}}
827Create a FIFO (a named pipe) named \var{path} with numeric mode
828\var{mode}. The default \var{mode} is \code{0666} (octal). The current
829umask value is first masked out from the mode.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000830Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000831
832FIFOs are pipes that can be accessed like regular files. FIFOs exist
833until they are deleted (for example with \function{os.unlink()}).
834Generally, FIFOs are used as rendezvous between ``client'' and
835``server'' type processes: the server opens the FIFO for reading, and
836the client opens it for writing. Note that \function{mkfifo()}
837doesn't open the FIFO --- it just creates the rendezvous point.
838\end{funcdesc}
839
Georg Brandl6bc6ed82006-01-02 22:07:06 +0000840\begin{funcdesc}{mknod}{filename\optional{, mode=0600, device}}
Martin v. Löwis06a83e92002-04-14 10:19:44 +0000841Create a filesystem node (file, device special file or named pipe)
Georg Brandl6bc6ed82006-01-02 22:07:06 +0000842named \var{filename}. \var{mode} specifies both the permissions to use and
Martin v. Löwisdbe3f762002-10-10 14:27:30 +0000843the type of node to be created, being combined (bitwise OR) with one
844of S_IFREG, S_IFCHR, S_IFBLK, and S_IFIFO (those constants are
845available in \module{stat}). For S_IFCHR and S_IFBLK, \var{device}
846defines the newly created device special file (probably using
847\function{os.makedev()}), otherwise it is ignored.
Martin v. Löwisdbe3f762002-10-10 14:27:30 +0000848\versionadded{2.3}
849\end{funcdesc}
850
851\begin{funcdesc}{major}{device}
Neal Norwitz7ecbc192005-10-03 05:47:38 +0000852Extracts the device major number from a raw device number (usually
853the \member{st_dev} or \member{st_rdev} field from \ctype{stat}).
Martin v. Löwisdbe3f762002-10-10 14:27:30 +0000854\versionadded{2.3}
855\end{funcdesc}
856
857\begin{funcdesc}{minor}{device}
Neal Norwitz7ecbc192005-10-03 05:47:38 +0000858Extracts the device minor number from a raw device number (usually
859the \member{st_dev} or \member{st_rdev} field from \ctype{stat}).
Martin v. Löwisdbe3f762002-10-10 14:27:30 +0000860\versionadded{2.3}
861\end{funcdesc}
862
863\begin{funcdesc}{makedev}{major, minor}
864Composes a raw device number from the major and minor device numbers.
Martin v. Löwis06a83e92002-04-14 10:19:44 +0000865\versionadded{2.3}
866\end{funcdesc}
867
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000868\begin{funcdesc}{mkdir}{path\optional{, mode}}
869Create a directory named \var{path} with numeric mode \var{mode}.
870The default \var{mode} is \code{0777} (octal). On some systems,
871\var{mode} is ignored. Where it is used, the current umask value is
872first masked out.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000873Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000874\end{funcdesc}
875
876\begin{funcdesc}{makedirs}{path\optional{, mode}}
Fred Drake5c7b2482003-03-20 17:39:38 +0000877Recursive directory creation function.\index{directory!creating}
878\index{UNC paths!and \function{os.makedirs()}}
879Like \function{mkdir()},
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000880but makes all intermediate-level directories needed to contain the
881leaf directory. Throws an \exception{error} exception if the leaf
882directory already exists or cannot be created. The default \var{mode}
Georg Brandlc1d2f7b2005-12-17 17:14:12 +0000883is \code{0777} (octal). On some systems, \var{mode} is ignored.
884Where it is used, the current umask value is first masked out.
Georg Brandl852a5422005-12-17 17:47:42 +0000885\note{\function{makedirs()} will become confused if the path elements
886to create include \var{os.pardir}.}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000887\versionadded{1.5.2}
Georg Brandle3faaeb2005-11-22 20:14:29 +0000888\versionchanged[This function now handles UNC paths correctly]{2.3}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000889\end{funcdesc}
890
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000891\begin{funcdesc}{pathconf}{path, name}
Thomas Woutersf8316632000-07-16 19:01:10 +0000892Return system configuration information relevant to a named file.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000893\var{name} specifies the configuration value to retrieve; it may be a
894string which is the name of a defined system value; these names are
Raymond Hettingerb67449d2003-09-08 18:52:18 +0000895specified in a number of standards (\POSIX.1, \UNIX{} 95, \UNIX{} 98, and
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000896others). Some platforms define additional names as well. The names
897known to the host operating system are given in the
898\code{pathconf_names} dictionary. For configuration variables not
899included in that mapping, passing an integer for \var{name} is also
900accepted.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000901Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000902
903If \var{name} is a string and is not known, \exception{ValueError} is
904raised. If a specific value for \var{name} is not supported by the
905host system, even if it is included in \code{pathconf_names}, an
906\exception{OSError} is raised with \constant{errno.EINVAL} for the
907error number.
908\end{funcdesc}
909
910\begin{datadesc}{pathconf_names}
911Dictionary mapping names accepted by \function{pathconf()} and
912\function{fpathconf()} to the integer values defined for those names
913by the host operating system. This can be used to determine the set
914of names known to the system.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000915Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +0000916\end{datadesc}
917
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000918\begin{funcdesc}{readlink}{path}
919Return a string representing the path to which the symbolic link
Fred Drakedc9e7e42001-05-29 18:13:06 +0000920points. The result may be either an absolute or relative pathname; if
921it is relative, it may be converted to an absolute pathname using
922\code{os.path.join(os.path.dirname(\var{path}), \var{result})}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +0000923Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000924\end{funcdesc}
925
926\begin{funcdesc}{remove}{path}
Fred Drakedc9e7e42001-05-29 18:13:06 +0000927Remove the file \var{path}. If \var{path} is a directory,
928\exception{OSError} is raised; see \function{rmdir()} below to remove
929a directory. This is identical to the \function{unlink()} function
930documented below. On Windows, attempting to remove a file that is in
931use causes an exception to be raised; on \UNIX, the directory entry is
932removed but the storage allocated to the file is not made available
933until the original file is no longer in use.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000934Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000935\end{funcdesc}
936
937\begin{funcdesc}{removedirs}{path}
938\index{directory!deleting}
Fred Drake2c22e852002-07-02 21:03:49 +0000939Removes directories recursively. Works like
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000940\function{rmdir()} except that, if the leaf directory is
Georg Brandl69cb3cd2005-12-17 17:31:03 +0000941successfully removed, \function{removedirs()}
942tries to successively remove every parent directory mentioned in
943\var{path} until an error is raised (which is ignored, because
944it generally means that a parent directory is not empty).
945For example, \samp{os.removedirs('foo/bar/baz')} will first remove
946the directory \samp{'foo/bar/baz'}, and then remove \samp{'foo/bar'}
947and \samp{'foo'} if they are empty.
948Raises \exception{OSError} if the leaf directory could not be
949successfully removed.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000950\versionadded{1.5.2}
951\end{funcdesc}
952
953\begin{funcdesc}{rename}{src, dst}
Fred Drakedc9e7e42001-05-29 18:13:06 +0000954Rename the file or directory \var{src} to \var{dst}. If \var{dst} is
955a directory, \exception{OSError} will be raised. On \UNIX, if
956\var{dst} exists and is a file, it will be removed silently if the
957user has permission. The operation may fail on some \UNIX{} flavors
Skip Montanarob9d973d2001-06-04 15:31:17 +0000958if \var{src} and \var{dst} are on different filesystems. If
Fred Drakedc9e7e42001-05-29 18:13:06 +0000959successful, the renaming will be an atomic operation (this is a
960\POSIX{} requirement). On Windows, if \var{dst} already exists,
961\exception{OSError} will be raised even if it is a file; there may be
962no way to implement an atomic rename when \var{dst} names an existing
963file.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000964Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000965\end{funcdesc}
966
967\begin{funcdesc}{renames}{old, new}
968Recursive directory or file renaming function.
969Works like \function{rename()}, except creation of any intermediate
970directories needed to make the new pathname good is attempted first.
971After the rename, directories corresponding to rightmost path segments
972of the old name will be pruned away using \function{removedirs()}.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000973\versionadded{1.5.2}
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +0000974
975\begin{notice}
976This function can fail with the new directory structure made if
977you lack permissions needed to remove the leaf directory or file.
978\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000979\end{funcdesc}
980
981\begin{funcdesc}{rmdir}{path}
982Remove the directory \var{path}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +0000983Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +0000984\end{funcdesc}
985
986\begin{funcdesc}{stat}{path}
987Perform a \cfunction{stat()} system call on the given path. The
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +0000988return value is an object whose attributes correspond to the members of
989the \ctype{stat} structure, namely:
990\member{st_mode} (protection bits),
991\member{st_ino} (inode number),
992\member{st_dev} (device),
Raymond Hettinger52136a82003-05-10 03:35:37 +0000993\member{st_nlink} (number of hard links),
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +0000994\member{st_uid} (user ID of owner),
995\member{st_gid} (group ID of owner),
996\member{st_size} (size of file, in bytes),
997\member{st_atime} (time of most recent access),
998\member{st_mtime} (time of most recent content modification),
999\member{st_ctime}
Fred Drake1cd6e4d2004-05-12 03:51:40 +00001000(platform dependent; time of most recent metadata change on \UNIX, or
Facundo Batistabccc9a92005-01-07 02:50:22 +00001001the time of creation on Windows):
1002
1003\begin{verbatim}
1004>>> import os
1005>>> statinfo = os.stat('somefile.txt')
1006>>> statinfo
1007(33188, 422511L, 769L, 1, 1032, 100, 926L, 1105022698,1105022732, 1105022732)
1008>>> statinfo.st_size
1009926L
1010>>>
1011\end{verbatim}
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001012
Martin v. Löwisf607bda2002-10-16 18:27:39 +00001013\versionchanged [If \function{stat_float_times} returns true, the time
1014values are floats, measuring seconds. Fractions of a second may be
1015reported if the system supports that. On Mac OS, the times are always
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001016floats. See \function{stat_float_times} for further discussion]{2.3}
Martin v. Löwisa32c9942002-09-09 16:17:47 +00001017
Fred Drake9f3ae3e2005-08-09 15:24:05 +00001018On some \UNIX{} systems (such as Linux), the following attributes may
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001019also be available:
1020\member{st_blocks} (number of blocks allocated for file),
1021\member{st_blksize} (filesystem blocksize),
1022\member{st_rdev} (type of device if an inode device).
Hye-Shik Chang5f937a72005-06-02 13:09:30 +00001023\member{st_flags} (user defined flags for file).
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001024
Fred Drake9f3ae3e2005-08-09 15:24:05 +00001025On other \UNIX{} systems (such as FreeBSD), the following attributes
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001026may be available (but may be only filled out if root tries to
1027use them):
Martin v. Löwisebd9d5b2005-08-09 15:00:59 +00001028\member{st_gen} (file generation number),
1029\member{st_birthtime} (time of file creation).
1030
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001031On Mac OS systems, the following attributes may also be available:
1032\member{st_rsize},
1033\member{st_creator},
1034\member{st_type}.
1035
1036On RISCOS systems, the following attributes are also available:
1037\member{st_ftype} (file type),
1038\member{st_attrs} (attributes),
1039\member{st_obtype} (object type).
1040
1041For backward compatibility, the return value of \function{stat()} is
1042also accessible as a tuple of at least 10 integers giving the most
1043important (and portable) members of the \ctype{stat} structure, in the
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001044order
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001045\member{st_mode},
1046\member{st_ino},
1047\member{st_dev},
1048\member{st_nlink},
1049\member{st_uid},
1050\member{st_gid},
1051\member{st_size},
1052\member{st_atime},
1053\member{st_mtime},
1054\member{st_ctime}.
Tim Peters11b23062003-04-23 02:39:17 +00001055More items may be added at the end by some implementations.
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001056The standard module \refmodule{stat}\refstmodindex{stat} defines
1057functions and constants that are useful for extracting information
1058from a \ctype{stat} structure.
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001059(On Windows, some items are filled with dummy values.)
Tim Peters2cf5e192004-11-04 21:27:48 +00001060
1061\note{The exact meaning and resolution of the \member{st_atime},
1062 \member{st_mtime}, and \member{st_ctime} members depends on the
1063 operating system and the file system. For example, on Windows systems
1064 using the FAT or FAT32 file systems, \member{st_mtime} has 2-second
1065 resolution, and \member{st_atime} has only 1-day resolution. See
1066 your operating system documentation for details.}
1067
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001068Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001069
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001070\versionchanged
1071[Added access to values as attributes of the returned object]{2.2}
Martin v. Löwisebd9d5b2005-08-09 15:00:59 +00001072\versionchanged[Added st_gen, st_birthtime]{2.5}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001073\end{funcdesc}
1074
Martin v. Löwisf607bda2002-10-16 18:27:39 +00001075\begin{funcdesc}{stat_float_times}{\optional{newvalue}}
1076Determine whether \class{stat_result} represents time stamps as float
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001077objects. If \var{newvalue} is \code{True}, future calls to \function{stat()}
1078return floats, if it is \code{False}, future calls return ints.
1079If \var{newvalue} is omitted, return the current setting.
Martin v. Löwisf607bda2002-10-16 18:27:39 +00001080
Martin v. Löwis4d394df2005-01-23 09:19:22 +00001081For compatibility with older Python versions, accessing
1082\class{stat_result} as a tuple always returns integers.
1083
Martin v. Löwisfe33d0b2005-01-16 08:57:39 +00001084\versionchanged[Python now returns float values by default. Applications
1085which do not work correctly with floating point time stamps can use
1086this function to restore the old behaviour]{2.5}
Martin v. Löwisf607bda2002-10-16 18:27:39 +00001087
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001088The resolution of the timestamps (that is the smallest possible fraction)
Martin v. Löwisfe33d0b2005-01-16 08:57:39 +00001089depends on the system. Some systems only support second resolution;
1090on these systems, the fraction will always be zero.
Martin v. Löwisf607bda2002-10-16 18:27:39 +00001091
1092It is recommended that this setting is only changed at program startup
1093time in the \var{__main__} module; libraries should never change this
1094setting. If an application uses a library that works incorrectly if
1095floating point time stamps are processed, this application should turn
1096the feature off until the library has been corrected.
1097
1098\end{funcdesc}
1099
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001100\begin{funcdesc}{statvfs}{path}
1101Perform a \cfunction{statvfs()} system call on the given path. The
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001102return value is an object whose attributes describe the filesystem on
1103the given path, and correspond to the members of the
1104\ctype{statvfs} structure, namely:
Neal Norwitz7356dcb2006-03-03 23:11:42 +00001105\member{f_bsize},
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001106\member{f_frsize},
1107\member{f_blocks},
1108\member{f_bfree},
1109\member{f_bavail},
1110\member{f_files},
1111\member{f_ffree},
1112\member{f_favail},
1113\member{f_flag},
1114\member{f_namemax}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001115Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001116
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001117For backward compatibility, the return value is also accessible as a
1118tuple whose values correspond to the attributes, in the order given above.
1119The standard module \refmodule{statvfs}\refstmodindex{statvfs}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001120defines constants that are useful for extracting information
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001121from a \ctype{statvfs} structure when accessing it as a sequence; this
1122remains useful when writing code that needs to work with versions of
1123Python that don't support accessing the fields as attributes.
1124
1125\versionchanged
1126[Added access to values as attributes of the returned object]{2.2}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001127\end{funcdesc}
1128
1129\begin{funcdesc}{symlink}{src, dst}
1130Create a symbolic link pointing to \var{src} named \var{dst}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001131Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001132\end{funcdesc}
1133
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001134\begin{funcdesc}{tempnam}{\optional{dir\optional{, prefix}}}
1135Return a unique path name that is reasonable for creating a temporary
1136file. This will be an absolute path that names a potential directory
1137entry in the directory \var{dir} or a common location for temporary
1138files if \var{dir} is omitted or \code{None}. If given and not
1139\code{None}, \var{prefix} is used to provide a short prefix to the
1140filename. Applications are responsible for properly creating and
1141managing files created using paths returned by \function{tempnam()};
1142no automatic cleanup is provided.
Fred Drake4b9ed2f2002-11-12 22:07:11 +00001143On \UNIX, the environment variable \envvar{TMPDIR} overrides
1144\var{dir}, while on Windows the \envvar{TMP} is used. The specific
1145behavior of this function depends on the C library implementation;
1146some aspects are underspecified in system documentation.
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001147\warning{Use of \function{tempnam()} is vulnerable to symlink attacks;
Georg Brandl6df3fd32005-06-25 20:44:10 +00001148consider using \function{tmpfile()} (section \ref{os-newstreams})
1149instead.} Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001150\end{funcdesc}
1151
1152\begin{funcdesc}{tmpnam}{}
1153Return a unique path name that is reasonable for creating a temporary
1154file. This will be an absolute path that names a potential directory
1155entry in a common location for temporary files. Applications are
1156responsible for properly creating and managing files created using
1157paths returned by \function{tmpnam()}; no automatic cleanup is
1158provided.
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001159\warning{Use of \function{tmpnam()} is vulnerable to symlink attacks;
Georg Brandl6df3fd32005-06-25 20:44:10 +00001160consider using \function{tmpfile()} (section \ref{os-newstreams})
1161instead.} Availability: \UNIX, Windows. This function probably
1162shouldn't be used on Windows, though: Microsoft's implementation of
1163\function{tmpnam()} always creates a name in the root directory of the
1164current drive, and that's generally a poor location for a temp file
1165(depending on privileges, you may not even be able to open a file
1166using this name).
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001167\end{funcdesc}
1168
1169\begin{datadesc}{TMP_MAX}
1170The maximum number of unique names that \function{tmpnam()} will
1171generate before reusing names.
1172\end{datadesc}
1173
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001174\begin{funcdesc}{unlink}{path}
1175Remove the file \var{path}. This is the same function as
1176\function{remove()}; the \function{unlink()} name is its traditional
1177\UNIX{} name.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001178Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001179\end{funcdesc}
1180
Barry Warsaw93a8eac2000-05-01 16:18:22 +00001181\begin{funcdesc}{utime}{path, times}
1182Set the access and modified times of the file specified by \var{path}.
1183If \var{times} is \code{None}, then the file's access and modified
1184times are set to the current time. Otherwise, \var{times} must be a
Fred Drakee06d0252000-05-02 17:29:35 +000011852-tuple of numbers, of the form \code{(\var{atime}, \var{mtime})}
1186which is used to set the access and modified times, respectively.
Tim Peters2cf5e192004-11-04 21:27:48 +00001187Whether a directory can be given for \var{path} depends on whether the
1188operating system implements directories as files (for example, Windows
1189does not). Note that the exact times you set here may not be returned
1190by a subsequent \function{stat()} call, depending on the resolution
1191with which your operating system records access and modification times;
1192see \function{stat()}.
Fred Drake4a152632000-10-19 05:33:46 +00001193\versionchanged[Added support for \code{None} for \var{times}]{2.0}
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001194Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001195\end{funcdesc}
1196
Guido van Rossumbf1bef82003-05-13 18:01:19 +00001197\begin{funcdesc}{walk}{top\optional{, topdown\code{=True}
1198 \optional{, onerror\code{=None}}}}
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001199\index{directory!walking}
1200\index{directory!traversal}
Tim Petersbf89b3a2003-04-28 02:09:43 +00001201\function{walk()} generates the file names in a directory tree, by
1202walking the tree either top down or bottom up.
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001203For each directory in the tree rooted at directory \var{top} (including
1204\var{top} itself), it yields a 3-tuple
1205\code{(\var{dirpath}, \var{dirnames}, \var{filenames})}.
1206
1207\var{dirpath} is a string, the path to the directory. \var{dirnames} is
1208a list of the names of the subdirectories in \var{dirpath}
1209(excluding \code{'.'} and \code{'..'}). \var{filenames} is a list of
1210the names of the non-directory files in \var{dirpath}. Note that the
1211names in the lists contain no path components. To get a full
Fred Drake2194a4e2003-04-25 14:50:06 +00001212path (which begins with \var{top}) to a file or directory in
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001213\var{dirpath}, do \code{os.path.join(\var{dirpath}, \var{name})}.
1214
1215If optional argument \var{topdown} is true or not specified, the triple
1216for a directory is generated before the triples for any of its
1217subdirectories (directories are generated top down). If \var{topdown} is
1218false, the triple for a directory is generated after the triples for all
1219of its subdirectories (directories are generated bottom up).
1220
1221When \var{topdown} is true, the caller can modify the \var{dirnames} list
Raymond Hettinger9756f382003-09-10 00:11:28 +00001222in-place (perhaps using \keyword{del} or slice assignment), and
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001223\function{walk()} will only recurse into the subdirectories whose names
1224remain in \var{dirnames}; this can be used to prune the search,
1225impose a specific order of visiting, or even to inform \function{walk()}
1226about directories the caller creates or renames before it resumes
1227\function{walk()} again. Modifying \var{dirnames} when \var{topdown} is
1228false is ineffective, because in bottom-up mode the directories in
Georg Brandlffa6f3d2006-01-22 20:47:26 +00001229\var{dirnames} are generated before \var{dirpath} itself is generated.
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001230
Guido van Rossumbf1bef82003-05-13 18:01:19 +00001231By default errors from the \code{os.listdir()} call are ignored. If
1232optional argument \var{onerror} is specified, it should be a function;
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001233it will be called with one argument, an \exception{OSError} instance. It can
Guido van Rossumbf1bef82003-05-13 18:01:19 +00001234report the error to continue with the walk, or raise the exception
1235to abort the walk. Note that the filename is available as the
1236\code{filename} attribute of the exception object.
1237
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001238\begin{notice}
1239If you pass a relative pathname, don't change the current working
Fred Drake2194a4e2003-04-25 14:50:06 +00001240directory between resumptions of \function{walk()}. \function{walk()}
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001241never changes the current directory, and assumes that its caller
1242doesn't either.
1243\end{notice}
1244
1245\begin{notice}
1246On systems that support symbolic links, links to subdirectories appear
1247in \var{dirnames} lists, but \function{walk()} will not visit them
1248(infinite loops are hard to avoid when following symbolic links).
1249To visit linked directories, you can identify them with
Fred Drake2194a4e2003-04-25 14:50:06 +00001250\code{os.path.islink(\var{path})}, and invoke \code{walk(\var{path})}
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001251on each directly.
1252\end{notice}
1253
1254This example displays the number of bytes taken by non-directory files
1255in each directory under the starting directory, except that it doesn't
1256look under any CVS subdirectory:
1257
1258\begin{verbatim}
1259import os
1260from os.path import join, getsize
1261for root, dirs, files in os.walk('python/Lib/email'):
1262 print root, "consumes",
Tim Peters7f13cfa2004-11-22 16:53:46 +00001263 print sum(getsize(join(root, name)) for name in files),
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001264 print "bytes in", len(files), "non-directory files"
1265 if 'CVS' in dirs:
1266 dirs.remove('CVS') # don't visit CVS directories
1267\end{verbatim}
Tim Petersbf89b3a2003-04-28 02:09:43 +00001268
1269In the next example, walking the tree bottom up is essential:
1270\function{rmdir()} doesn't allow deleting a directory before the
1271directory is empty:
1272
1273\begin{verbatim}
Tim Peters919a3b42004-11-22 16:49:02 +00001274# Delete everything reachable from the directory named in 'top',
1275# assuming there are no symbolic links.
Tim Petersa390c6e2003-04-28 19:15:10 +00001276# CAUTION: This is dangerous! For example, if top == '/', it
1277# could delete all your disk files.
Tim Peters919a3b42004-11-22 16:49:02 +00001278import os
Tim Petersbf89b3a2003-04-28 02:09:43 +00001279for root, dirs, files in os.walk(top, topdown=False):
1280 for name in files:
Tim Peters919a3b42004-11-22 16:49:02 +00001281 os.remove(os.path.join(root, name))
Tim Petersbf89b3a2003-04-28 02:09:43 +00001282 for name in dirs:
Tim Peters919a3b42004-11-22 16:49:02 +00001283 os.rmdir(os.path.join(root, name))
Tim Petersbf89b3a2003-04-28 02:09:43 +00001284\end{verbatim}
1285
Tim Petersc4e09402003-04-25 07:11:48 +00001286\versionadded{2.3}
1287\end{funcdesc}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001288
1289\subsection{Process Management \label{os-process}}
1290
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001291These functions may be used to create and manage processes.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001292
Fred Drake7be31152000-09-23 05:22:07 +00001293The various \function{exec*()} functions take a list of arguments for
1294the new program loaded into the process. In each case, the first of
1295these arguments is passed to the new program as its own name rather
1296than as an argument a user may have typed on a command line. For the
1297C programmer, this is the \code{argv[0]} passed to a program's
1298\cfunction{main()}. For example, \samp{os.execv('/bin/echo', ['foo',
1299'bar'])} will only print \samp{bar} on standard output; \samp{foo}
1300will seem to be ignored.
1301
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001302
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001303\begin{funcdesc}{abort}{}
1304Generate a \constant{SIGABRT} signal to the current process. On
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +00001305\UNIX, the default behavior is to produce a core dump; on Windows, the
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001306process immediately returns an exit code of \code{3}. Be aware that
1307programs which use \function{signal.signal()} to register a handler
1308for \constant{SIGABRT} will behave differently.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001309Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake18f7a451999-12-09 22:11:43 +00001310\end{funcdesc}
1311
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001312\begin{funcdesc}{execl}{path, arg0, arg1, \moreargs}
1313\funcline{execle}{path, arg0, arg1, \moreargs, env}
1314\funcline{execlp}{file, arg0, arg1, \moreargs}
1315\funcline{execlpe}{file, arg0, arg1, \moreargs, env}
1316\funcline{execv}{path, args}
1317\funcline{execve}{path, args, env}
1318\funcline{execvp}{file, args}
1319\funcline{execvpe}{file, args, env}
1320These functions all execute a new program, replacing the current
1321process; they do not return. On \UNIX, the new executable is loaded
1322into the current process, and will have the same process ID as the
1323caller. Errors will be reported as \exception{OSError} exceptions.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001324
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001325The \character{l} and \character{v} variants of the
1326\function{exec*()} functions differ in how command-line arguments are
1327passed. The \character{l} variants are perhaps the easiest to work
1328with if the number of parameters is fixed when the code is written;
1329the individual parameters simply become additional parameters to the
1330\function{execl*()} functions. The \character{v} variants are good
1331when the number of parameters is variable, with the arguments being
1332passed in a list or tuple as the \var{args} parameter. In either
Armin Rigob6aa8562004-09-27 19:54:33 +00001333case, the arguments to the child process should start with the name of
1334the command being run, but this is not enforced.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001335
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001336The variants which include a \character{p} near the end
1337(\function{execlp()}, \function{execlpe()}, \function{execvp()},
1338and \function{execvpe()}) will use the \envvar{PATH} environment
1339variable to locate the program \var{file}. When the environment is
1340being replaced (using one of the \function{exec*e()} variants,
1341discussed in the next paragraph), the
1342new environment is used as the source of the \envvar{PATH} variable.
1343The other variants, \function{execl()}, \function{execle()},
1344\function{execv()}, and \function{execve()}, will not use the
1345\envvar{PATH} variable to locate the executable; \var{path} must
1346contain an appropriate absolute or relative path.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001347
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001348For \function{execle()}, \function{execlpe()}, \function{execve()},
1349and \function{execvpe()} (note that these all end in \character{e}),
1350the \var{env} parameter must be a mapping which is used to define the
1351environment variables for the new process; the \function{execl()},
1352\function{execlp()}, \function{execv()}, and \function{execvp()}
1353all cause the new process to inherit the environment of the current
1354process.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001355Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001356\end{funcdesc}
1357
1358\begin{funcdesc}{_exit}{n}
1359Exit to the system with status \var{n}, without calling cleanup
1360handlers, flushing stdio buffers, etc.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001361Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001362
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +00001363\begin{notice}
1364The standard way to exit is \code{sys.exit(\var{n})}.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001365\function{_exit()} should normally only be used in the child process
1366after a \function{fork()}.
Fred Drake0ed66342004-04-16 15:20:01 +00001367\end{notice}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001368\end{funcdesc}
1369
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001370The following exit codes are a defined, and can be used with
1371\function{_exit()}, although they are not required. These are
1372typically used for system programs written in Python, such as a
1373mail server's external command delivery program.
Fred Drake3e3b6992005-06-27 23:23:43 +00001374\note{Some of these may not be available on all \UNIX{} platforms,
1375since there is some variation. These constants are defined where they
1376are defined by the underlying platform.}
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001377
1378\begin{datadesc}{EX_OK}
1379Exit code that means no error occurred.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001380Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001381\versionadded{2.3}
1382\end{datadesc}
1383
1384\begin{datadesc}{EX_USAGE}
1385Exit code that means the command was used incorrectly, such as when
1386the wrong number of arguments are given.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001387Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001388\versionadded{2.3}
1389\end{datadesc}
1390
1391\begin{datadesc}{EX_DATAERR}
1392Exit code that means the input data was incorrect.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001393Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001394\versionadded{2.3}
1395\end{datadesc}
1396
1397\begin{datadesc}{EX_NOINPUT}
1398Exit code that means an input file did not exist or was not readable.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001399Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001400\versionadded{2.3}
1401\end{datadesc}
1402
1403\begin{datadesc}{EX_NOUSER}
1404Exit code that means a specified user did not exist.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001405Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001406\versionadded{2.3}
1407\end{datadesc}
1408
1409\begin{datadesc}{EX_NOHOST}
1410Exit code that means a specified host did not exist.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001411Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001412\versionadded{2.3}
1413\end{datadesc}
1414
1415\begin{datadesc}{EX_UNAVAILABLE}
1416Exit code that means that a required service is unavailable.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001417Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001418\versionadded{2.3}
1419\end{datadesc}
1420
1421\begin{datadesc}{EX_SOFTWARE}
1422Exit code that means an internal software error was detected.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001423Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001424\versionadded{2.3}
1425\end{datadesc}
1426
1427\begin{datadesc}{EX_OSERR}
1428Exit code that means an operating system error was detected, such as
1429the inability to fork or create a pipe.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001430Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001431\versionadded{2.3}
1432\end{datadesc}
1433
1434\begin{datadesc}{EX_OSFILE}
1435Exit code that means some system file did not exist, could not be
1436opened, or had some other kind of error.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001437Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001438\versionadded{2.3}
1439\end{datadesc}
1440
1441\begin{datadesc}{EX_CANTCREAT}
1442Exit code that means a user specified output file could not be created.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001443Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001444\versionadded{2.3}
1445\end{datadesc}
1446
1447\begin{datadesc}{EX_IOERR}
1448Exit code that means that an error occurred while doing I/O on some file.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001449Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001450\versionadded{2.3}
1451\end{datadesc}
1452
1453\begin{datadesc}{EX_TEMPFAIL}
1454Exit code that means a temporary failure occurred. This indicates
1455something that may not really be an error, such as a network
1456connection that couldn't be made during a retryable operation.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001457Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001458\versionadded{2.3}
1459\end{datadesc}
1460
1461\begin{datadesc}{EX_PROTOCOL}
1462Exit code that means that a protocol exchange was illegal, invalid, or
1463not understood.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001464Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001465\versionadded{2.3}
1466\end{datadesc}
1467
1468\begin{datadesc}{EX_NOPERM}
1469Exit code that means that there were insufficient permissions to
1470perform the operation (but not intended for file system problems).
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001471Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001472\versionadded{2.3}
1473\end{datadesc}
1474
1475\begin{datadesc}{EX_CONFIG}
1476Exit code that means that some kind of configuration error occurred.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001477Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001478\versionadded{2.3}
1479\end{datadesc}
1480
1481\begin{datadesc}{EX_NOTFOUND}
1482Exit code that means something like ``an entry was not found''.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001483Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Barry Warsawb6604b32003-01-07 22:43:25 +00001484\versionadded{2.3}
1485\end{datadesc}
1486
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001487\begin{funcdesc}{fork}{}
1488Fork a child process. Return \code{0} in the child, the child's
1489process id in the parent.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001490Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001491\end{funcdesc}
1492
Fred Drakec82634c2000-06-28 17:27:48 +00001493\begin{funcdesc}{forkpty}{}
1494Fork a child process, using a new pseudo-terminal as the child's
1495controlling terminal. Return a pair of \code{(\var{pid}, \var{fd})},
1496where \var{pid} is \code{0} in the child, the new child's process id
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001497in the parent, and \var{fd} is the file descriptor of the master end
Fred Drakec82634c2000-06-28 17:27:48 +00001498of the pseudo-terminal. For a more portable approach, use the
1499\refmodule{pty} module.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001500Availability: Macintosh, Some flavors of \UNIX.
Fred Drakec82634c2000-06-28 17:27:48 +00001501\end{funcdesc}
1502
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001503\begin{funcdesc}{kill}{pid, sig}
1504\index{process!killing}
1505\index{process!signalling}
Neal Norwitz94832202005-10-18 05:07:49 +00001506Send signal \var{sig} to the process \var{pid}. Constants for the
Fred Drake5c798312001-12-21 03:58:47 +00001507specific signals available on the host platform are defined in the
1508\refmodule{signal} module.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001509Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001510\end{funcdesc}
1511
Martin v. Löwis33e94432002-12-27 10:21:19 +00001512\begin{funcdesc}{killpg}{pgid, sig}
1513\index{process!killing}
1514\index{process!signalling}
Neal Norwitz94832202005-10-18 05:07:49 +00001515Send the signal \var{sig} to the process group \var{pgid}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001516Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Martin v. Löwis33e94432002-12-27 10:21:19 +00001517\versionadded{2.3}
1518\end{funcdesc}
1519
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001520\begin{funcdesc}{nice}{increment}
1521Add \var{increment} to the process's ``niceness''. Return the new
1522niceness.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001523Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001524\end{funcdesc}
1525
1526\begin{funcdesc}{plock}{op}
1527Lock program segments into memory. The value of \var{op}
1528(defined in \code{<sys/lock.h>}) determines which segments are locked.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001529Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001530\end{funcdesc}
1531
Fred Drake046f4d82001-06-11 15:21:48 +00001532\begin{funcdescni}{popen}{\unspecified}
1533\funclineni{popen2}{\unspecified}
1534\funclineni{popen3}{\unspecified}
1535\funclineni{popen4}{\unspecified}
1536Run child processes, returning opened pipes for communications. These
1537functions are described in section \ref{os-newstreams}.
1538\end{funcdescni}
1539
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001540\begin{funcdesc}{spawnl}{mode, path, \moreargs}
1541\funcline{spawnle}{mode, path, \moreargs, env}
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001542\funcline{spawnlp}{mode, file, \moreargs}
1543\funcline{spawnlpe}{mode, file, \moreargs, env}
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001544\funcline{spawnv}{mode, path, args}
1545\funcline{spawnve}{mode, path, args, env}
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001546\funcline{spawnvp}{mode, file, args}
1547\funcline{spawnvpe}{mode, file, args, env}
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001548Execute the program \var{path} in a new process. If \var{mode} is
1549\constant{P_NOWAIT}, this function returns the process ID of the new
Tim Petersb4041452001-12-06 23:37:17 +00001550process; if \var{mode} is \constant{P_WAIT}, returns the process's
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001551exit code if it exits normally, or \code{-\var{signal}}, where
Fred Drake4dfb7a82002-04-01 23:30:47 +00001552\var{signal} is the signal that killed the process. On Windows, the
1553process ID will actually be the process handle, so can be used with
1554the \function{waitpid()} function.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001555
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001556The \character{l} and \character{v} variants of the
1557\function{spawn*()} functions differ in how command-line arguments are
1558passed. The \character{l} variants are perhaps the easiest to work
1559with if the number of parameters is fixed when the code is written;
1560the individual parameters simply become additional parameters to the
1561\function{spawnl*()} functions. The \character{v} variants are good
1562when the number of parameters is variable, with the arguments being
1563passed in a list or tuple as the \var{args} parameter. In either
1564case, the arguments to the child process must start with the name of
1565the command being run.
1566
Fred Drakedb7287c2001-10-18 18:58:30 +00001567The variants which include a second \character{p} near the end
1568(\function{spawnlp()}, \function{spawnlpe()}, \function{spawnvp()},
1569and \function{spawnvpe()}) will use the \envvar{PATH} environment
1570variable to locate the program \var{file}. When the environment is
1571being replaced (using one of the \function{spawn*e()} variants,
1572discussed in the next paragraph), the new environment is used as the
1573source of the \envvar{PATH} variable. The other variants,
1574\function{spawnl()}, \function{spawnle()}, \function{spawnv()}, and
1575\function{spawnve()}, will not use the \envvar{PATH} variable to
1576locate the executable; \var{path} must contain an appropriate absolute
1577or relative path.
1578
1579For \function{spawnle()}, \function{spawnlpe()}, \function{spawnve()},
1580and \function{spawnvpe()} (note that these all end in \character{e}),
1581the \var{env} parameter must be a mapping which is used to define the
1582environment variables for the new process; the \function{spawnl()},
1583\function{spawnlp()}, \function{spawnv()}, and \function{spawnvp()}
1584all cause the new process to inherit the environment of the current
1585process.
1586
Fred Drake739282d2001-08-16 21:21:28 +00001587As an example, the following calls to \function{spawnlp()} and
1588\function{spawnvpe()} are equivalent:
1589
1590\begin{verbatim}
1591import os
1592os.spawnlp(os.P_WAIT, 'cp', 'cp', 'index.html', '/dev/null')
1593
1594L = ['cp', 'index.html', '/dev/null']
1595os.spawnvpe(os.P_WAIT, 'cp', L, os.environ)
1596\end{verbatim}
1597
Fred Drake8c8e8712001-12-20 17:24:11 +00001598Availability: \UNIX, Windows. \function{spawnlp()},
1599\function{spawnlpe()}, \function{spawnvp()} and \function{spawnvpe()}
1600are not available on Windows.
Fred Drake0b9bc202001-06-11 18:25:34 +00001601\versionadded{1.6}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001602\end{funcdesc}
1603
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001604\begin{datadesc}{P_NOWAIT}
Fred Drake9329e5e1999-02-16 19:40:19 +00001605\dataline{P_NOWAITO}
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001606Possible values for the \var{mode} parameter to the \function{spawn*()}
1607family of functions. If either of these values is given, the
1608\function{spawn*()} functions will return as soon as the new process
1609has been created, with the process ID as the return value.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001610Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake0b9bc202001-06-11 18:25:34 +00001611\versionadded{1.6}
Fred Drake15861b22000-02-29 05:19:38 +00001612\end{datadesc}
1613
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001614\begin{datadesc}{P_WAIT}
1615Possible value for the \var{mode} parameter to the \function{spawn*()}
1616family of functions. If this is given as \var{mode}, the
1617\function{spawn*()} functions will not return until the new process
1618has run to completion and will return the exit code of the process the
1619run is successful, or \code{-\var{signal}} if a signal kills the
1620process.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001621Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake938a8d72001-10-09 18:07:04 +00001622\versionadded{1.6}
1623\end{datadesc}
1624
1625\begin{datadesc}{P_DETACH}
1626\dataline{P_OVERLAY}
1627Possible values for the \var{mode} parameter to the
1628\function{spawn*()} family of functions. These are less portable than
1629those listed above.
1630\constant{P_DETACH} is similar to \constant{P_NOWAIT}, but the new
1631process is detached from the console of the calling process.
1632If \constant{P_OVERLAY} is used, the current process will be replaced;
1633the \function{spawn*()} function will not return.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001634Availability: Windows.
Fred Drake0b9bc202001-06-11 18:25:34 +00001635\versionadded{1.6}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001636\end{datadesc}
1637
Georg Brandlf4f44152006-02-18 22:29:33 +00001638\begin{funcdesc}{startfile}{path\optional{, operation}}
1639Start a file with its associated application.
1640
1641When \var{operation} is not specified or \code{'open'}, this acts like
Fred Drake4ce4f2e2000-09-29 04:15:19 +00001642double-clicking the file in Windows Explorer, or giving the file name
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001643as an argument to the \program{start} command from the interactive
1644command shell: the file is opened with whatever application (if any)
1645its extension is associated.
Fred Drake4ce4f2e2000-09-29 04:15:19 +00001646
Georg Brandlf4f44152006-02-18 22:29:33 +00001647When another \var{operation} is given, it must be a ``command verb''
1648that specifies what should be done with the file.
1649Common verbs documented by Microsoft are \code{'print'} and
1650\code{'edit'} (to be used on files) as well as \code{'explore'} and
1651\code{'find'} (to be used on directories).
1652
Fred Drake4ce4f2e2000-09-29 04:15:19 +00001653\function{startfile()} returns as soon as the associated application
1654is launched. There is no option to wait for the application to close,
1655and no way to retrieve the application's exit status. The \var{path}
1656parameter is relative to the current directory. If you want to use an
1657absolute path, make sure the first character is not a slash
1658(\character{/}); the underlying Win32 \cfunction{ShellExecute()}
Fred Drake8a2adcf2001-07-23 19:20:56 +00001659function doesn't work if it is. Use the \function{os.path.normpath()}
Fred Drake4ce4f2e2000-09-29 04:15:19 +00001660function to ensure that the path is properly encoded for Win32.
1661Availability: Windows.
1662\versionadded{2.0}
Georg Brandlf4f44152006-02-18 22:29:33 +00001663\versionadded[The \var{operation} parameter]{2.5}
Fred Drake4ce4f2e2000-09-29 04:15:19 +00001664\end{funcdesc}
1665
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001666\begin{funcdesc}{system}{command}
1667Execute the command (a string) in a subshell. This is implemented by
1668calling the Standard C function \cfunction{system()}, and has the
Fred Drakeec6baaf1999-04-21 18:13:31 +00001669same limitations. Changes to \code{posix.environ}, \code{sys.stdin},
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001670etc.\ are not reflected in the environment of the executed command.
Tim Petersdbaf04e2003-05-20 16:15:58 +00001671
Fred Drake15eac1f2003-05-20 16:21:51 +00001672On \UNIX, the return value is the exit status of the process encoded in the
Tim Petersdbaf04e2003-05-20 16:15:58 +00001673format specified for \function{wait()}. Note that \POSIX{} does not
1674specify the meaning of the return value of the C \cfunction{system()}
1675function, so the return value of the Python function is system-dependent.
1676
Fred Drake15eac1f2003-05-20 16:21:51 +00001677On Windows, the return value is that returned by the system shell after
Tim Petersdbaf04e2003-05-20 16:15:58 +00001678running \var{command}, given by the Windows environment variable
Fred Drake15eac1f2003-05-20 16:21:51 +00001679\envvar{COMSPEC}: on \program{command.com} systems (Windows 95, 98 and ME)
1680this is always \code{0}; on \program{cmd.exe} systems (Windows NT, 2000
Tim Petersdbaf04e2003-05-20 16:15:58 +00001681and XP) this is the exit status of the command run; on systems using
1682a non-native shell, consult your shell documentation.
1683
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001684Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001685\end{funcdesc}
1686
1687\begin{funcdesc}{times}{}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001688Return a 5-tuple of floating point numbers indicating accumulated
1689(processor or other)
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001690times, in seconds. The items are: user time, system time, children's
1691user time, children's system time, and elapsed real time since a fixed
Fred Drakeec6baaf1999-04-21 18:13:31 +00001692point in the past, in that order. See the \UNIX{} manual page
1693\manpage{times}{2} or the corresponding Windows Platform API
1694documentation.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001695Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX, Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001696\end{funcdesc}
1697
1698\begin{funcdesc}{wait}{}
1699Wait for completion of a child process, and return a tuple containing
1700its pid and exit status indication: a 16-bit number, whose low byte is
1701the signal number that killed the process, and whose high byte is the
1702exit status (if the signal number is zero); the high bit of the low
1703byte is set if a core file was produced.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001704Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001705\end{funcdesc}
1706
1707\begin{funcdesc}{waitpid}{pid, options}
Fred Drake1f89e2a2002-05-10 12:37:56 +00001708The details of this function differ on \UNIX{} and Windows.
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +00001709
1710On \UNIX:
Fred Drake31e5e371999-08-13 13:36:33 +00001711Wait for completion of a child process given by process id \var{pid},
1712and return a tuple containing its process id and exit status
1713indication (encoded as for \function{wait()}). The semantics of the
1714call are affected by the value of the integer \var{options}, which
1715should be \code{0} for normal operation.
Fred Drake31e5e371999-08-13 13:36:33 +00001716
1717If \var{pid} is greater than \code{0}, \function{waitpid()} requests
1718status information for that specific process. If \var{pid} is
1719\code{0}, the request is for the status of any child in the process
1720group of the current process. If \var{pid} is \code{-1}, the request
1721pertains to any child of the current process. If \var{pid} is less
1722than \code{-1}, status is requested for any process in the process
1723group \code{-\var{pid}} (the absolute value of \var{pid}).
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +00001724
1725On Windows:
Fred Drake4dfb7a82002-04-01 23:30:47 +00001726Wait for completion of a process given by process handle \var{pid},
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +00001727and return a tuple containing \var{pid},
1728and its exit status shifted left by 8 bits (shifting makes cross-platform
1729use of the function easier).
1730A \var{pid} less than or equal to \code{0} has no special meaning on
1731Windows, and raises an exception.
1732The value of integer \var{options} has no effect.
1733\var{pid} can refer to any process whose id is known, not necessarily a
1734child process.
1735The \function{spawn()} functions called with \constant{P_NOWAIT}
Fred Drake4dfb7a82002-04-01 23:30:47 +00001736return suitable process handles.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001737\end{funcdesc}
1738
Georg Brandl5f284da2006-04-02 21:18:27 +00001739\begin{funcdesc}{wait3}{\optional{options}}
Neal Norwitz05a45592006-03-20 06:30:08 +00001740Similar to \function{waitpid()}, except no process id argument is given and
1741a 3-element tuple containing the child's process id, exit status indication,
1742and resource usage information is returned. Refer to
1743\module{resource}.\function{getrusage()}
1744for details on resource usage information. The option argument is the same
1745as that provided to \function{waitpid()} and \function{wait4()}.
1746Availability: \UNIX.
1747\versionadded{2.5}
1748\end{funcdesc}
1749
1750\begin{funcdesc}{wait4}{pid, options}
1751Similar to \function{waitpid()}, except a 3-element tuple, containing the
1752child's process id, exit status indication, and resource usage information
1753is returned. Refer to \module{resource}.\function{getrusage()} for details
1754on resource usage information. The arguments to \function{wait4()} are
1755the same as those provided to \function{waitpid()}.
1756Availability: \UNIX.
1757\versionadded{2.5}
1758\end{funcdesc}
1759
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001760\begin{datadesc}{WNOHANG}
Georg Brandl03dbb4f2005-06-25 19:55:04 +00001761The option for \function{waitpid()} to return immediately if no child
1762process status is available immediately. The function returns
1763\code{(0, 0)} in this case.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001764Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001765\end{datadesc}
1766
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001767\begin{datadesc}{WCONTINUED}
1768This option causes child processes to be reported if they have been
1769continued from a job control stop since their status was last
1770reported.
1771Availability: Some \UNIX{} systems.
1772\versionadded{2.3}
1773\end{datadesc}
1774
1775\begin{datadesc}{WUNTRACED}
1776This option causes child processes to be reported if they have been
1777stopped but their current state has not been reported since they were
1778stopped.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001779Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001780\versionadded{2.3}
1781\end{datadesc}
1782
Fred Drake38e5d272000-04-03 20:13:55 +00001783The following functions take a process status code as returned by
1784\function{system()}, \function{wait()}, or \function{waitpid()} as a
1785parameter. They may be used to determine the disposition of a
1786process.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001787
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001788\begin{funcdesc}{WCOREDUMP}{status}
1789Returns \code{True} if a core dump was generated for the process,
1790otherwise it returns \code{False}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001791Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001792\versionadded{2.3}
1793\end{funcdesc}
1794
1795\begin{funcdesc}{WIFCONTINUED}{status}
1796Returns \code{True} if the process has been continued from a job
1797control stop, otherwise it returns \code{False}.
1798Availability: \UNIX.
1799\versionadded{2.3}
1800\end{funcdesc}
1801
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001802\begin{funcdesc}{WIFSTOPPED}{status}
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001803Returns \code{True} if the process has been stopped, otherwise it
1804returns \code{False}.
Fred Drakec37b65e2001-11-28 07:26:15 +00001805Availability: \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001806\end{funcdesc}
1807
1808\begin{funcdesc}{WIFSIGNALED}{status}
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001809Returns \code{True} if the process exited due to a signal, otherwise
1810it returns \code{False}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001811Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001812\end{funcdesc}
1813
1814\begin{funcdesc}{WIFEXITED}{status}
Fred Drake106c1a02002-04-23 15:58:02 +00001815Returns \code{True} if the process exited using the \manpage{exit}{2}
1816system call, otherwise it returns \code{False}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001817Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001818\end{funcdesc}
1819
1820\begin{funcdesc}{WEXITSTATUS}{status}
1821If \code{WIFEXITED(\var{status})} is true, return the integer
Tim Petersab034fa2002-02-01 11:27:43 +00001822parameter to the \manpage{exit}{2} system call. Otherwise, the return
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001823value is meaningless.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001824Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001825\end{funcdesc}
1826
1827\begin{funcdesc}{WSTOPSIG}{status}
Fred Drake35c3ffd1999-03-04 14:08:10 +00001828Return the signal which caused the process to stop.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001829Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake35c3ffd1999-03-04 14:08:10 +00001830\end{funcdesc}
1831
1832\begin{funcdesc}{WTERMSIG}{status}
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001833Return the signal which caused the process to exit.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001834Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001835\end{funcdesc}
1836
1837
Thomas Woutersf8316632000-07-16 19:01:10 +00001838\subsection{Miscellaneous System Information \label{os-path}}
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001839
1840
1841\begin{funcdesc}{confstr}{name}
1842Return string-valued system configuration values.
1843\var{name} specifies the configuration value to retrieve; it may be a
1844string which is the name of a defined system value; these names are
Raymond Hettingerb67449d2003-09-08 18:52:18 +00001845specified in a number of standards (\POSIX, \UNIX{} 95, \UNIX{} 98, and
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001846others). Some platforms define additional names as well. The names
Skip Montanaro94785ef2006-04-20 01:29:48 +00001847known to the host operating system are given as the keys of the
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001848\code{confstr_names} dictionary. For configuration variables not
1849included in that mapping, passing an integer for \var{name} is also
1850accepted.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001851Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001852
Skip Montanaro94785ef2006-04-20 01:29:48 +00001853If the configuration value specified by \var{name} isn't defined,
1854\code{None} is returned.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001855
1856If \var{name} is a string and is not known, \exception{ValueError} is
1857raised. If a specific value for \var{name} is not supported by the
1858host system, even if it is included in \code{confstr_names}, an
1859\exception{OSError} is raised with \constant{errno.EINVAL} for the
1860error number.
1861\end{funcdesc}
1862
1863\begin{datadesc}{confstr_names}
1864Dictionary mapping names accepted by \function{confstr()} to the
1865integer values defined for those names by the host operating system.
1866This can be used to determine the set of names known to the system.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001867Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001868\end{datadesc}
1869
Martin v. Löwis438b5342002-12-27 10:16:42 +00001870\begin{funcdesc}{getloadavg}{}
1871Return the number of processes in the system run queue averaged over
Georg Brandl4865e4a2006-01-22 19:34:59 +00001872the last 1, 5, and 15 minutes or raises \exception{OSError} if the load
1873average was unobtainable.
Martin v. Löwis438b5342002-12-27 10:16:42 +00001874
1875\versionadded{2.3}
1876\end{funcdesc}
1877
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001878\begin{funcdesc}{sysconf}{name}
1879Return integer-valued system configuration values.
1880If the configuration value specified by \var{name} isn't defined,
1881\code{-1} is returned. The comments regarding the \var{name}
1882parameter for \function{confstr()} apply here as well; the dictionary
1883that provides information on the known names is given by
1884\code{sysconf_names}.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001885Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001886\end{funcdesc}
1887
1888\begin{datadesc}{sysconf_names}
1889Dictionary mapping names accepted by \function{sysconf()} to the
1890integer values defined for those names by the host operating system.
1891This can be used to determine the set of names known to the system.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001892Availability: Macintosh, \UNIX.
Fred Drake88f6ca21999-12-15 19:39:04 +00001893\end{datadesc}
1894
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001895
1896The follow data values are used to support path manipulation
1897operations. These are defined for all platforms.
1898
1899Higher-level operations on pathnames are defined in the
1900\refmodule{os.path} module.
1901
1902
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00001903\begin{datadesc}{curdir}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001904The constant string used by the operating system to refer to the current
1905directory.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001906For example: \code{'.'} for \POSIX{} or \code{':'} for Mac OS 9.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001907Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00001908\end{datadesc}
1909
1910\begin{datadesc}{pardir}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001911The constant string used by the operating system to refer to the parent
1912directory.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001913For example: \code{'..'} for \POSIX{} or \code{'::'} for Mac OS 9.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001914Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00001915\end{datadesc}
1916
1917\begin{datadesc}{sep}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001918The character used by the operating system to separate pathname components,
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001919for example, \character{/} for \POSIX{} or \character{:} for
1920Mac OS 9. Note that knowing this is not sufficient to be able to
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +00001921parse or concatenate pathnames --- use \function{os.path.split()} and
Fred Drake1a3c2a01998-08-06 15:18:23 +00001922\function{os.path.join()} --- but it is occasionally useful.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001923Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum5fdeeea1994-01-02 01:22:07 +00001924\end{datadesc}
1925
Guido van Rossumb2afc811997-08-29 22:37:44 +00001926\begin{datadesc}{altsep}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001927An alternative character used by the operating system to separate pathname
1928components, or \code{None} if only one separator character exists. This is
Martin v. Löwis36a4d8c2002-10-10 18:24:54 +00001929set to \character{/} on Windows systems where \code{sep} is a
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001930backslash.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001931Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossumb2afc811997-08-29 22:37:44 +00001932\end{datadesc}
1933
Skip Montanaro47e46e22003-02-14 05:45:31 +00001934\begin{datadesc}{extsep}
Fred Drake002a5de2003-02-14 06:39:37 +00001935The character which separates the base filename from the extension;
1936for example, the \character{.} in \file{os.py}.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001937Also available via \module{os.path}.
Fred Drake002a5de2003-02-14 06:39:37 +00001938\versionadded{2.2}
Skip Montanaro47e46e22003-02-14 05:45:31 +00001939\end{datadesc}
1940
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +00001941\begin{datadesc}{pathsep}
Fred Drake8ee679f2001-07-14 02:50:55 +00001942The character conventionally used by the operating system to separate
Walter Dörwald3fa932f2004-12-15 23:44:18 +00001943search path components (as in \envvar{PATH}), such as \character{:} for
Martin v. Löwis36a4d8c2002-10-10 18:24:54 +00001944\POSIX{} or \character{;} for Windows.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001945Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum9c59ce91998-06-30 15:54:27 +00001946\end{datadesc}
1947
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +00001948\begin{datadesc}{defpath}
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001949The default search path used by \function{exec*p*()} and
1950\function{spawn*p*()} if the environment doesn't have a \code{'PATH'}
1951key.
Skip Montanaro117910d2003-02-14 19:35:31 +00001952Also available via \module{os.path}.
Guido van Rossum470be141995-03-17 16:07:09 +00001953\end{datadesc}
1954
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001955\begin{datadesc}{linesep}
1956The string used to separate (or, rather, terminate) lines on the
Fred Drake907e76b2001-07-06 20:30:11 +00001957current platform. This may be a single character, such as \code{'\e
Fred Drake6995bb62001-11-29 20:48:44 +00001958n'} for \POSIX{} or \code{'\e r'} for Mac OS, or multiple characters,
Martin v. Löwis36a4d8c2002-10-10 18:24:54 +00001959for example, \code{'\e r\e n'} for Windows.
Fred Drake215fe2f1999-02-02 19:02:35 +00001960\end{datadesc}
Martin v. Löwisbdec50f2004-06-08 08:29:33 +00001961
1962\begin{datadesc}{devnull}
1963The file path of the null device.
Brett Cannon7706c2d2005-02-13 22:50:04 +00001964For example: \code{'/dev/null'} for \POSIX{} or \code{'Dev:Nul'} for
1965Mac OS 9.
Martin v. Löwisbdec50f2004-06-08 08:29:33 +00001966Also available via \module{os.path}.
1967\versionadded{2.4}
1968\end{datadesc}
Martin v. Löwisdc3883f2004-08-29 15:46:35 +00001969
1970
1971\subsection{Miscellaneous Functions \label{os-miscfunc}}
1972
1973\begin{funcdesc}{urandom}{n}
1974Return a string of \var{n} random bytes suitable for cryptographic use.
1975
Tim Peters2cf5e192004-11-04 21:27:48 +00001976This function returns random bytes from an OS-specific
1977randomness source. The returned data should be unpredictable enough for
1978cryptographic applications, though its exact quality depends on the OS
1979implementation. On a UNIX-like system this will query /dev/urandom, and
1980on Windows it will use CryptGenRandom. If a randomness source is not
Martin v. Löwisdc3883f2004-08-29 15:46:35 +00001981found, \exception{NotImplementedError} will be raised.
1982\versionadded{2.4}
1983\end{funcdesc}
1984
1985
1986
1987