python-peps/pep-0428.txt

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PEP: 428
Title: The pathlib module -- object-oriented filesystem paths
Version: $Revision$
2012-10-05 17:29:21 -04:00
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Antoine Pitrou <solipsis@pitrou.net>
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 30-July-2012
Python-Version: 3.4
2012-10-05 19:04:50 -04:00
Post-History: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-October/016338.html
Abstract
========
This PEP proposes the inclusion of a third-party module, `pathlib`_, in
the standard library. The inclusion is proposed under the provisional
label, as described in :pep:`411`. Therefore, API changes can be done,
either as part of the PEP process, or after acceptance in the standard
library (and until the provisional label is removed).
The aim of this library is to provide a simple hierarchy of classes to
handle filesystem paths and the common operations users do over them.
.. _`pathlib`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pathlib/
Related work
============
An object-oriented API for filesystem paths has already been proposed
and rejected in :pep:`355`. Several third-party implementations of the
idea of object-oriented filesystem paths exist in the wild:
* The historical `path.py module`_ by Jason Orendorff, Jason R. Coombs
and others, which provides a ``str``-subclassing ``Path`` class;
* Twisted's slightly specialized `FilePath class`_;
* An `AlternativePathClass proposal`_, subclassing ``tuple`` rather than
``str``;
* `Unipath`_, a variation on the str-subclassing approach with two public
classes, an ``AbstractPath`` class for operations which don't do I/O and a
``Path`` class for all common operations.
This proposal attempts to learn from these previous attempts and the
rejection of :pep:`355`.
.. _`path.py module`: https://github.com/jaraco/path.py
.. _`FilePath class`: http://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/api/twisted.python.filepath.FilePath.html
.. _`AlternativePathClass proposal`: http://wiki.python.org/moin/AlternativePathClass
.. _`Unipath`: https://bitbucket.org/sluggo/unipath/overview
Implementation
==============
The implementation of this proposal is tracked in the ``pep428`` branch
of pathlib's `Mercurial repository`_.
.. _`Mercurial repository`: https://bitbucket.org/pitrou/pathlib/
Why an object-oriented API
==========================
The rationale to represent filesystem paths using dedicated classes is the
same as for other kinds of stateless objects, such as dates, times or IP
addresses. Python has been slowly moving away from strictly replicating
the C language's APIs to providing better, more helpful abstractions around
all kinds of common functionality. Even if this PEP isn't accepted, it is
likely that another form of filesystem handling abstraction will be adopted
one day into the standard library.
Indeed, many people will prefer handling dates and times using the high-level
objects provided by the ``datetime`` module, rather than using numeric
timestamps and the ``time`` module API. Moreover, using a dedicated class
allows to enable desirable behaviours by default, for example the case
insensitivity of Windows paths.
Proposal
========
Class hierarchy
---------------
The `pathlib`_ module implements a simple hierarchy of classes::
+----------+
| |
---------| PurePath |--------
| | | |
| +----------+ |
| | |
| | |
v | v
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+---------------+ | +-----------------+
| | | | |
| PurePosixPath | | | PureWindowsPath |
| | | | |
+---------------+ | +-----------------+
| v |
| +------+ |
| | | |
| -------| Path |------ |
| | | | | |
| | +------+ | |
| | | |
| | | |
v v v v
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+-----------+ +-------------+
| | | |
| PosixPath | | WindowsPath |
| | | |
+-----------+ +-------------+
This hierarchy divides path classes along two dimensions:
* a path class can be either pure or concrete: pure classes support only
operations that don't need to do any actual I/O, which are most path
manipulation operations; concrete classes support all the operations
of pure classes, plus operations that do I/O.
* a path class is of a given flavour according to the kind of operating
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system paths it represents. `pathlib`_ implements two flavours: Windows
paths for the filesystem semantics embodied in Windows systems, POSIX
paths for other systems.
Any pure class can be instantiated on any system: for example, you can
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manipulate ``PurePosixPath`` objects under Windows, ``PureWindowsPath``
objects under Unix, and so on. However, concrete classes can only be
instantiated on a matching system: indeed, it would be error-prone to start
doing I/O with ``WindowsPath`` objects under Unix, or vice-versa.
Furthermore, there are two base classes which also act as system-dependent
factories: ``PurePath`` will instantiate either a ``PurePosixPath`` or a
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``PureWindowsPath`` depending on the operating system. Similarly, ``Path``
will instantiate either a ``PosixPath`` or a ``WindowsPath``.
It is expected that, in most uses, using the ``Path`` class is adequate,
which is why it has the shortest name of all.
No confusion with builtins
--------------------------
In this proposal, the path classes do not derive from a builtin type. This
contrasts with some other Path class proposals which were derived from
``str``. They also do not pretend to implement the sequence protocol:
if you want a path to act as a sequence, you have to lookup a dedicate
attribute (the ``parts`` attribute).
By avoiding to pass as builtin types, the path classes minimize the potential
for confusion if they are combined by accident with genuine builtin types.
Immutability
------------
Path objects are immutable, which makes them hashable and also prevents a
class of programming errors.
Sane behaviour
--------------
Little of the functionality from os.path is reused. Many os.path functions
are tied by backwards compatibility to confusing or plain wrong behaviour
(for example, the fact that ``os.path.abspath()`` simplifies ".." path
components without resolving symlinks first).
Comparisons
-----------
Paths of the same flavour are comparable and orderable, whether pure or not::
>>> PurePosixPath('a') == PurePosixPath('b')
False
>>> PurePosixPath('a') < PurePosixPath('b')
True
>>> PurePosixPath('a') == PosixPath('a')
True
Comparing and ordering Windows path objects is case-insensitive::
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>>> PureWindowsPath('a') == PureWindowsPath('A')
True
Paths of different flavours always compare unequal, and cannot be ordered::
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>>> PurePosixPath('a') == PureWindowsPath('a')
False
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>>> PurePosixPath('a') < PureWindowsPath('a')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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TypeError: unorderable types: PurePosixPath() < PureWindowsPath()
Useful notations
----------------
The API tries to provide useful notations all the while avoiding magic.
Some examples::
>>> p = Path('/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py')
>>> p.name
'setup.py'
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>>> p.suffix
'.py'
>>> p.root
'/'
>>> p.parts
('/', 'home', 'antoine', 'pathlib', 'setup.py')
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>>> p.relative_to('/home/antoine')
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PosixPath('pathlib/setup.py')
>>> p.exists()
True
Pure paths API
==============
The philosophy of the ``PurePath`` API is to provide a consistent array of
useful path manipulation operations, without exposing a hodge-podge of
functions like ``os.path`` does.
Definitions
-----------
First a couple of conventions:
* All paths can have a drive and a root. For POSIX paths, the drive is
always empty.
* A relative path has neither drive nor root.
* A POSIX path is absolute if it has a root. A Windows path is absolute if
it has both a drive *and* a root. A Windows UNC path (e.g.
``\\host\share\myfile.txt``) always has a drive and a root
(here, ``\\host\share`` and ``\``, respectively).
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* A path which has either a drive *or* a root is said to be anchored.
Its anchor is the concatenation of the drive and root. Under POSIX,
"anchored" is the same as "absolute".
Construction
------------
We will present construction and joining together since they expose
similar semantics.
The simplest way to construct a path is to pass it its string representation::
>>> PurePath('setup.py')
PurePosixPath('setup.py')
Extraneous path separators and ``"."`` components are eliminated::
>>> PurePath('a///b/c/./d/')
PurePosixPath('a/b/c/d')
If you pass several arguments, they will be automatically joined::
>>> PurePath('docs', 'Makefile')
PurePosixPath('docs/Makefile')
Joining semantics are similar to os.path.join, in that anchored paths ignore
the information from the previously joined components::
>>> PurePath('/etc', '/usr', 'bin')
PurePosixPath('/usr/bin')
However, with Windows paths, the drive is retained as necessary::
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>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/foo', '/Windows')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows')
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>>> PureWindowsPath('c:/foo', 'd:')
PureWindowsPath('d:')
Also, path separators are normalized to the platform default::
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>>> PureWindowsPath('a/b') == PureWindowsPath('a\\b')
True
Extraneous path separators and ``"."`` components are eliminated, but not
``".."`` components::
>>> PurePosixPath('a//b/./c/')
PurePosixPath('a/b/c')
>>> PurePosixPath('a/../b')
PurePosixPath('a/../b')
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Multiple leading slashes are treated differently depending on the path
flavour. They are always retained on Windows paths (because of the UNC
notation)::
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>>> PureWindowsPath('//some/path')
PureWindowsPath('//some/path/')
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On POSIX, they are collapsed except if there are exactly two leading slashes,
which is a special case in the POSIX specification on `pathname resolution`_
(this is also necessary for Cygwin compatibility)::
>>> PurePosixPath('///some/path')
PurePosixPath('/some/path')
>>> PurePosixPath('//some/path')
PurePosixPath('//some/path')
Calling the constructor without any argument creates a path object pointing
to the logical "current directory"::
>>> PurePosixPath()
PurePosixPath('.')
.. _pathname resolution: http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap04.html#tag_04_11
Representing
------------
To represent a path (e.g. to pass it to third-party libraries), just call
``str()`` on it::
>>> p = PurePath('/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py')
>>> str(p)
'/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py'
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/windows')
>>> str(p)
'c:\\windows'
To force the string representation with forward slashes, use the ``as_posix()``
method::
>>> p.as_posix()
'c:/windows'
To get the bytes representation (which might be useful under Unix systems),
call ``bytes()`` on it, which internally uses ``os.fsencode()``::
>>> bytes(p)
b'/home/antoine/pathlib/setup.py'
To represent the path as a ``file:`` URI, call the ``as_uri()`` method::
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/etc/passwd')
>>> p.as_uri()
'file:///etc/passwd'
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows')
>>> p.as_uri()
'file:///c:/Windows'
The repr() of a path always uses forward slashes, even under Windows, for
readability and to remind users that forward slashes are ok::
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows')
>>> p
PureWindowsPath('c:/Windows')
Properties
----------
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Several simple properties are provided on every path (each can be empty)::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.gz')
>>> p.drive
'c:'
>>> p.root
'\\'
>>> p.anchor
'c:\\'
>>> p.name
'pathlib.tar.gz'
>>> p.stem
'pathlib.tar'
>>> p.suffix
'.gz'
>>> p.suffixes
['.tar', '.gz']
Deriving new paths
------------------
Joining
^^^^^^^
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A path can be joined with another using the ``/`` operator::
>>> p = PurePosixPath('foo')
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>>> p / 'bar'
PurePosixPath('foo/bar')
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>>> p / PurePosixPath('bar')
PurePosixPath('foo/bar')
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>>> 'bar' / p
PurePosixPath('bar/foo')
As with the constructor, multiple path components can be specified, either
collapsed or separately::
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>>> p / 'bar/xyzzy'
PurePosixPath('foo/bar/xyzzy')
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>>> p / 'bar' / 'xyzzy'
PurePosixPath('foo/bar/xyzzy')
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A joinpath() method is also provided, with the same behaviour::
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>>> p.joinpath('Python')
PurePosixPath('foo/Python')
Changing the path's final component
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The ``with_name()`` method returns a new path, with the name changed::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.gz')
>>> p.with_name('setup.py')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/setup.py')
It fails with a ``ValueError`` if the path doesn't have an actual name::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/')
>>> p.with_name('setup.py')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "pathlib.py", line 875, in with_name
raise ValueError("%r has an empty name" % (self,))
ValueError: PureWindowsPath('c:/') has an empty name
>>> p.name
''
The ``with_suffix()`` method returns a new path with the suffix changed.
However, if the path has no suffix, the new suffix is added::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.gz')
>>> p.with_suffix('.bz2')
PureWindowsPath('c:/Downloads/pathlib.tar.bz2')
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('README')
>>> p.with_suffix('.bz2')
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PureWindowsPath('README.bz2')
Making the path relative
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``relative_to()`` method computes the relative difference of a path to
another::
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>>> PurePosixPath('/usr/bin/python').relative_to('/usr')
PurePosixPath('bin/python')
ValueError is raised if the method cannot return a meaningful value::
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>>> PurePosixPath('/usr/bin/python').relative_to('/etc')
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
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File "pathlib.py", line 926, in relative_to
.format(str(self), str(formatted)))
ValueError: '/usr/bin/python' does not start with '/etc'
Sequence-like access
--------------------
The ``parts`` property returns a tuple providing read-only sequence access
to a path's components::
>>> p = PurePosixPath('/etc/init.d')
>>> p.parts
('/', 'etc', 'init.d')
Windows paths handle the drive and the root as a single path component::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/setup.py')
>>> p.parts
('c:\\', 'setup.py')
(separating them would be wrong, since ``C:`` is not the parent of ``C:\\``).
The ``parent`` property returns the logical parent of the path::
>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/python33/bin/python.exe')
>>> p.parent
PureWindowsPath('c:/python33/bin')
The ``parents`` property returns an immutable sequence of the path's
logical ancestors::
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>>> p = PureWindowsPath('c:/python33/bin/python.exe')
>>> len(p.parents)
3
>>> p.parents[0]
PureWindowsPath('c:/python33/bin')
>>> p.parents[1]
PureWindowsPath('c:/python33')
>>> p.parents[2]
PureWindowsPath('c:/')
Querying
--------
``is_relative()`` returns True if the path is relative (see definition
above), False otherwise.
``is_reserved()`` returns True if a Windows path is a reserved path such
as ``CON`` or ``NUL``. It always returns False for POSIX paths.
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``match()`` matches the path against a glob pattern. It operates on
individual parts and matches from the right:
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>>> p = PurePosixPath('/usr/bin')
>>> p.match('/usr/b*')
True
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>>> p.match('usr/b*')
True
>>> p.match('b*')
True
>>> p.match('/u*')
False
This behaviour respects the following expectations:
- A simple pattern such as "\*.py" matches arbitrarily long paths as long
as the last part matches, e.g. "/usr/foo/bar.py".
- Longer patterns can be used as well for more complex matching, e.g.
"/usr/foo/\*.py" matches "/usr/foo/bar.py".
Concrete paths API
==================
In addition to the operations of the pure API, concrete paths provide
additional methods which actually access the filesystem to query or mutate
information.
Constructing
------------
The classmethod ``cwd()`` creates a path object pointing to the current
working directory in absolute form::
>>> Path.cwd()
PosixPath('/home/antoine/pathlib')
File metadata
-------------
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The ``stat()`` returns the file's stat() result; similarly, ``lstat()``
returns the file's lstat() result (which is different iff the file is a
symbolic link)::
>>> p.stat()
posix.stat_result(st_mode=33277, st_ino=7483155, st_dev=2053, st_nlink=1, st_uid=500, st_gid=500, st_size=928, st_atime=1343597970, st_mtime=1328287308, st_ctime=1343597964)
Higher-level methods help examine the kind of the file::
>>> p.exists()
True
>>> p.is_file()
True
>>> p.is_dir()
False
>>> p.is_symlink()
False
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>>> p.is_socket()
False
>>> p.is_fifo()
False
>>> p.is_block_device()
False
>>> p.is_char_device()
False
The file owner and group names (rather than numeric ids) are queried
through corresponding methods::
>>> p = Path('/etc/shadow')
>>> p.owner()
'root'
>>> p.group()
'shadow'
Path resolution
---------------
The ``resolve()`` method makes a path absolute, resolving any symlink on
the way (like the POSIX realpath() call). It is the only operation which
will remove "``..``" path components. On Windows, this method will also
take care to return the canonical path (with the right casing).
Directory walking
-----------------
Simple (non-recursive) directory access is done by calling the iterdir()
method, which returns an iterator over the child paths::
>>> p = Path('docs')
>>> for child in p.iterdir(): child
...
PosixPath('docs/conf.py')
PosixPath('docs/_templates')
PosixPath('docs/make.bat')
PosixPath('docs/index.rst')
PosixPath('docs/_build')
PosixPath('docs/_static')
PosixPath('docs/Makefile')
This allows simple filtering through list comprehensions::
>>> p = Path('.')
>>> [child for child in p.iterdir() if child.is_dir()]
[PosixPath('.hg'), PosixPath('docs'), PosixPath('dist'), PosixPath('__pycache__'), PosixPath('build')]
Simple and recursive globbing is also provided::
>>> for child in p.glob('**/*.py'): child
...
PosixPath('test_pathlib.py')
PosixPath('setup.py')
PosixPath('pathlib.py')
PosixPath('docs/conf.py')
PosixPath('build/lib/pathlib.py')
File opening
------------
The ``open()`` method provides a file opening API similar to the builtin
``open()`` method::
>>> p = Path('setup.py')
>>> with p.open() as f: f.readline()
...
'#!/usr/bin/env python3\n'
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Filesystem modification
-----------------------
Several common filesystem operations are provided as methods: ``touch()``,
``mkdir()``, ``rename()``, ``replace()``, ``unlink()``, ``rmdir()``,
``chmod()``, ``lchmod()``, ``symlink_to()``. More operations could be
provided, for example some of the functionality of the shutil module.
Detailed documentation of the proposed API can be found at the `pathlib
docs`_.
.. _pathlib docs: https://pathlib.readthedocs.org/en/pep428/
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Discussion
==========
Division operator
-----------------
The division operator came out first in a `poll`_ about the path joining
operator. Initial versions of `pathlib`_ used square brackets
(i.e. ``__getitem__``) instead.
.. _poll: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-ideas/2012-October/016544.html
joinpath()
----------
The joinpath() method was initially called join(), but several people
objected that it could be confused with str.join() which has different
semantics. Therefore it was renamed to joinpath().
Case-sensitivity
----------------
Windows users consider filesystem paths to be case-insensitive and expect
path objects to observe that characteristic, even though in some rare
situations some foreign filesystem mounts may be case-sensitive under
Windows.
In the words of one commenter,
"If glob("\*.py") failed to find SETUP.PY on Windows, that would be a
usability disaster".
-- Paul Moore in
https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-April/125254.html
Copyright
=========
This document has been placed into the public domain.
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