Andrew MacIntyre | f47d60f | 2002-02-22 11:06:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 1 | # this module is an OS/2 oriented replacement for the pwd standard |
| 2 | # extension module. |
| 3 | |
| 4 | # written by Andrew MacIntyre, April 2001. |
| 5 | # released into the public domain "as is", with NO WARRANTY |
| 6 | |
| 7 | # note that this implementation checks whether ":" or ";" as used as |
| 8 | # the field separator character. Path conversions are are applied when |
| 9 | # the database uses ":" as the field separator character. |
| 10 | |
| 11 | """Replacement for pwd standard extension module, intended for use on |
| 12 | OS/2 and similar systems which don't normally have an /etc/passwd file. |
| 13 | |
| 14 | The standard Unix password database is an ASCII text file with 7 fields |
| 15 | per record (line), separated by a colon: |
| 16 | - user name (string) |
| 17 | - password (encrypted string, or "*" or "") |
| 18 | - user id (integer) |
| 19 | - group id (integer) |
| 20 | - description (usually user's name) |
| 21 | - home directory (path to user's home directory) |
| 22 | - shell (path to the user's login shell) |
| 23 | |
| 24 | (see the section 8.1 of the Python Library Reference) |
| 25 | |
| 26 | This implementation differs from the standard Unix implementation by |
| 27 | allowing use of the platform's native path separator character - ';' on OS/2, |
| 28 | DOS and MS-Windows - as the field separator in addition to the Unix |
| 29 | standard ":". Additionally, when ":" is the separator path conversions |
| 30 | are applied to deal with any munging of the drive letter reference. |
| 31 | |
| 32 | The module looks for the password database at the following locations |
| 33 | (in order first to last): |
| 34 | - ${ETC_PASSWD} (or %ETC_PASSWD%) |
| 35 | - ${ETC}/passwd (or %ETC%/passwd) |
| 36 | - ${PYTHONHOME}/Etc/passwd (or %PYTHONHOME%/Etc/passwd) |
| 37 | |
| 38 | Classes |
| 39 | ------- |
| 40 | |
| 41 | None |
| 42 | |
| 43 | Functions |
| 44 | --------- |
| 45 | |
| 46 | getpwuid(uid) - return the record for user-id uid as a 7-tuple |
| 47 | |
| 48 | getpwnam(name) - return the record for user 'name' as a 7-tuple |
| 49 | |
| 50 | getpwall() - return a list of 7-tuples, each tuple being one record |
| 51 | (NOTE: the order is arbitrary) |
| 52 | |
| 53 | Attributes |
| 54 | ---------- |
| 55 | |
| 56 | passwd_file - the path of the password database file |
| 57 | |
| 58 | """ |
| 59 | |
| 60 | import os |
| 61 | |
| 62 | # try and find the passwd file |
| 63 | __passwd_path = [] |
| 64 | if os.environ.has_key('ETC_PASSWD'): |
| 65 | __passwd_path.append(os.environ['ETC_PASSWD']) |
| 66 | if os.environ.has_key('ETC'): |
| 67 | __passwd_path.append('%s/passwd' % os.environ['ETC']) |
| 68 | if os.environ.has_key('PYTHONHOME'): |
| 69 | __passwd_path.append('%s/Etc/passwd' % os.environ['PYTHONHOME']) |
| 70 | |
| 71 | passwd_file = None |
| 72 | for __i in __passwd_path: |
| 73 | try: |
| 74 | __f = open(__i, 'r') |
| 75 | __f.close() |
| 76 | passwd_file = __i |
| 77 | break |
| 78 | except: |
| 79 | pass |
| 80 | |
| 81 | # path conversion handlers |
| 82 | def __nullpathconv(path): |
| 83 | return path.replace(os.altsep, os.sep) |
| 84 | |
| 85 | def __unixpathconv(path): |
| 86 | # two known drive letter variations: "x;" and "$x" |
| 87 | if path[0] == '$': |
| 88 | conv = path[1] + ':' + path[2:] |
| 89 | elif path[1] == ';': |
| 90 | conv = path[0] + ':' + path[2:] |
| 91 | else: |
| 92 | conv = path |
| 93 | return conv.replace(os.altsep, os.sep) |
| 94 | |
| 95 | # decide what field separator we can try to use - Unix standard, with |
| 96 | # the platform's path separator as an option. No special field conversion |
| 97 | # handler is required when using the platform's path separator as field |
| 98 | # separator, but are required for the home directory and shell fields when |
| 99 | # using the standard Unix (":") field separator. |
| 100 | __field_sep = {':': __unixpathconv} |
| 101 | if os.pathsep: |
| 102 | if os.pathsep != ':': |
| 103 | __field_sep[os.pathsep] = __nullpathconv |
| 104 | |
| 105 | # helper routine to identify which separator character is in use |
| 106 | def __get_field_sep(record): |
| 107 | fs = None |
| 108 | for c in __field_sep.keys(): |
| 109 | # there should be 6 delimiter characters (for 7 fields) |
| 110 | if record.count(c) == 6: |
| 111 | fs = c |
| 112 | break |
| 113 | if fs: |
| 114 | return fs |
| 115 | else: |
| 116 | raise KeyError, '>> passwd database fields not delimited <<' |
| 117 | |
| 118 | # read the whole file, parsing each entry into tuple form |
| 119 | # with dictionaries to speed recall by UID or passwd name |
| 120 | def __read_passwd_file(): |
| 121 | if passwd_file: |
| 122 | passwd = open(passwd_file, 'r') |
| 123 | else: |
| 124 | raise KeyError, '>> no password database <<' |
| 125 | uidx = {} |
| 126 | namx = {} |
| 127 | sep = None |
| 128 | while 1: |
| 129 | entry = passwd.readline().strip() |
| 130 | if len(entry) > 6: |
| 131 | if sep == None: |
| 132 | sep = __get_field_sep(entry) |
| 133 | fields = entry.split(sep) |
| 134 | for i in (2, 3): |
| 135 | fields[i] = int(fields[i]) |
| 136 | for i in (5, 6): |
| 137 | fields[i] = __field_sep[sep](fields[i]) |
| 138 | record = tuple(fields) |
| 139 | if not uidx.has_key(fields[2]): |
| 140 | uidx[fields[2]] = record |
| 141 | if not namx.has_key(fields[0]): |
| 142 | namx[fields[0]] = record |
| 143 | elif len(entry) > 0: |
| 144 | pass # skip empty or malformed records |
| 145 | else: |
| 146 | break |
| 147 | passwd.close() |
| 148 | if len(uidx) == 0: |
| 149 | raise KeyError |
| 150 | return (uidx, namx) |
| 151 | |
| 152 | # return the passwd database entry by UID |
| 153 | def getpwuid(uid): |
| 154 | u, n = __read_passwd_file() |
| 155 | return u[uid] |
| 156 | |
| 157 | # return the passwd database entry by passwd name |
| 158 | def getpwnam(name): |
| 159 | u, n = __read_passwd_file() |
| 160 | return n[name] |
| 161 | |
| 162 | # return all the passwd database entries |
| 163 | def getpwall(): |
| 164 | u, n = __read_passwd_file() |
| 165 | return n.values() |
| 166 | |
| 167 | # test harness |
| 168 | if __name__ == '__main__': |
| 169 | getpwall() |