New in version 2.3.
Source code: Lib/tarfile.py
The tarfile
module makes it possible to read and write tar archives, including those using gzip or bz2 compression. Use the zipfile
module to read or write .zip
files, or the higher-level functions in shutil.
Some facts and figures:
gzip
and bz2
compressed archives if the respective modules are available.read/write support for the POSIX.1-2001 (pax) format.
New in version 2.6.
Note
Handling of multi-stream bzip2 files is not supported. Modules such as bz2file let you overcome this.
tarfile.open(name=None, mode='r', fileobj=None, bufsize=10240, **kwargs)
Return a TarFile
object for the pathname name. For detailed information on TarFile
objects and the keyword arguments that are allowed, see TarFile Objects.
mode has to be a string of the form 'filemode[:compression]'
, it defaults to 'r'
. Here is a full list of mode combinations:
mode | action |
---|---|
| Open for reading with transparent compression (recommended). |
| Open for reading exclusively without compression. |
| Open for reading with gzip compression. |
| Open for reading with bzip2 compression. |
| Open for appending with no compression. The file is created if it does not exist. |
| Open for uncompressed writing. |
| Open for gzip compressed writing. |
| Open for bzip2 compressed writing. |
Note that 'a:gz'
or 'a:bz2'
is not possible. If mode is not suitable to open a certain (compressed) file for reading, ReadError
is raised. Use mode 'r'
to avoid this. If a compression method is not supported, CompressionError
is raised.
If fileobj is specified, it is used as an alternative to a file object opened for name. It is supposed to be at position 0.
For modes 'w:gz'
, 'r:gz'
, 'w:bz2'
, 'r:bz2'
, tarfile.open()
accepts the keyword argument compresslevel (default 9
) to specify the compression level of the file.
For special purposes, there is a second format for mode: 'filemode|[compression]'
. tarfile.open()
will return a TarFile
object that processes its data as a stream of blocks. No random seeking will be done on the file. If given, fileobj may be any object that has a read()
or write()
method (depending on the mode). bufsize specifies the blocksize and defaults to 20 * 512
bytes. Use this variant in combination with e.g. sys.stdin
, a socket file object or a tape device. However, such a TarFile
object is limited in that it does not allow random access, see Examples. The currently possible modes:
Mode | Action |
---|---|
| Open a stream of tar blocks for reading with transparent compression. |
| Open a stream of uncompressed tar blocks for reading. |
| Open a gzip compressed stream for reading. |
| Open a bzip2 compressed stream for reading. |
| Open an uncompressed stream for writing. |
| Open a gzip compressed stream for writing. |
| Open a bzip2 compressed stream for writing. |
class tarfile.TarFile
Class for reading and writing tar archives. Do not use this class directly, better use tarfile.open()
instead. See TarFile Objects.
tarfile.is_tarfile(name)
Return True
if name is a tar archive file, that the tarfile
module can read.
class tarfile.TarFileCompat(filename, mode='r', compression=TAR_PLAIN)
Class for limited access to tar archives with a zipfile
-like interface. Please consult the documentation of the zipfile
module for more details. compression must be one of the following constants:
TAR_PLAIN
Constant for an uncompressed tar archive.
TAR_GZIPPED
Constant for a gzip
compressed tar archive.
Deprecated since version 2.6: The TarFileCompat
class has been removed in Python 3.
exception tarfile.TarError
Base class for all tarfile
exceptions.
exception tarfile.ReadError
Is raised when a tar archive is opened, that either cannot be handled by the tarfile
module or is somehow invalid.
exception tarfile.CompressionError
Is raised when a compression method is not supported or when the data cannot be decoded properly.
exception tarfile.StreamError
Is raised for the limitations that are typical for stream-like TarFile
objects.
exception tarfile.ExtractError
Is raised for non-fatal errors when using TarFile.extract()
, but only if TarFile.errorlevel
== 2
.
The following constants are available at the module level:
tarfile.ENCODING
The default character encoding: 'utf-8'
on Windows, the value returned by sys.getfilesystemencoding()
otherwise.
exception tarfile.HeaderError
Is raised by TarInfo.frombuf()
if the buffer it gets is invalid.
New in version 2.6.
Each of the following constants defines a tar archive format that the tarfile
module is able to create. See section Supported tar formats for details.
tarfile.USTAR_FORMAT
POSIX.1-1988 (ustar) format.
tarfile.GNU_FORMAT
GNU tar format.
tarfile.PAX_FORMAT
POSIX.1-2001 (pax) format.
tarfile.DEFAULT_FORMAT
The default format for creating archives. This is currently GNU_FORMAT
.
See also
Module
zipfile
Documentation of the zipfile
standard module.
Documentation of the higher-level archiving facilities provided by the standard shutil
module.
Documentation for tar archive files, including GNU tar extensions.
The TarFile
object provides an interface to a tar archive. A tar archive is a sequence of blocks. An archive member (a stored file) is made up of a header block followed by data blocks. It is possible to store a file in a tar archive several times. Each archive member is represented by a TarInfo
object, see TarInfo Objects for details.
A TarFile
object can be used as a context manager in a with
statement. It will automatically be closed when the block is completed. Please note that in the event of an exception an archive opened for writing will not be finalized; only the internally used file object will be closed. See the Examples section for a use case.
New in version 2.7: Added support for the context management protocol.
class tarfile.TarFile(name=None, mode='r', fileobj=None, format=DEFAULT_FORMAT, tarinfo=TarInfo, dereference=False, ignore_zeros=False, encoding=ENCODING, errors=None, pax_headers=None, debug=0, errorlevel=0)
All following arguments are optional and can be accessed as instance attributes as well.
name is the pathname of the archive. It can be omitted if fileobj is given. In this case, the file object’s name
attribute is used if it exists.
mode is either 'r'
to read from an existing archive, 'a'
to append data to an existing file or 'w'
to create a new file overwriting an existing one.
If fileobj is given, it is used for reading or writing data. If it can be determined, mode is overridden by fileobj’s mode. fileobj will be used from position 0.
Note
fileobj is not closed, when TarFile
is closed.
format controls the archive format. It must be one of the constants USTAR_FORMAT
, GNU_FORMAT
or PAX_FORMAT
that are defined at module level.
New in version 2.6.
The tarinfo argument can be used to replace the default TarInfo
class with a different one.
New in version 2.6.
If dereference is False
, add symbolic and hard links to the archive. If it is True
, add the content of the target files to the archive. This has no effect on systems that do not support symbolic links.
If ignore_zeros is False
, treat an empty block as the end of the archive. If it is True
, skip empty (and invalid) blocks and try to get as many members as possible. This is only useful for reading concatenated or damaged archives.
debug can be set from 0
(no debug messages) up to 3
(all debug messages). The messages are written to sys.stderr
.
If errorlevel is 0
, all errors are ignored when using TarFile.extract()
. Nevertheless, they appear as error messages in the debug output, when debugging is enabled. If 1
, all fatal errors are raised as OSError
or IOError
exceptions. If 2
, all non-fatal errors are raised as TarError
exceptions as well.
The encoding and errors arguments control the way strings are converted to unicode objects and vice versa. The default settings will work for most users. See section Unicode issues for in-depth information.
New in version 2.6.
The pax_headers argument is an optional dictionary of unicode strings which will be added as a pax global header if format is PAX_FORMAT
.
New in version 2.6.
classmethod TarFile.open(...)
Alternative constructor. The tarfile.open()
function is actually a shortcut to this classmethod.
TarFile.getmember(name)
Return a TarInfo
object for member name. If name can not be found in the archive, KeyError
is raised.
Note
If a member occurs more than once in the archive, its last occurrence is assumed to be the most up-to-date version.
TarFile.getmembers()
Return the members of the archive as a list of TarInfo
objects. The list has the same order as the members in the archive.
TarFile.getnames()
Return the members as a list of their names. It has the same order as the list returned by getmembers()
.
TarFile.list(verbose=True)
Print a table of contents to sys.stdout
. If verbose is False
, only the names of the members are printed. If it is True
, output similar to that of ls -l is produced.
TarFile.next()
Return the next member of the archive as a TarInfo
object, when TarFile
is opened for reading. Return None
if there is no more available.
TarFile.extractall(path=".", members=None)
Extract all members from the archive to the current working directory or directory path. If optional members is given, it must be a subset of the list returned by getmembers()
. Directory information like owner, modification time and permissions are set after all members have been extracted. This is done to work around two problems: A directory’s modification time is reset each time a file is created in it. And, if a directory’s permissions do not allow writing, extracting files to it will fail.
Warning
Never extract archives from untrusted sources without prior inspection. It is possible that files are created outside of path, e.g. members that have absolute filenames starting with "/"
or filenames with two dots ".."
.
New in version 2.5.
TarFile.extract(member, path="")
Extract a member from the archive to the current working directory, using its full name. Its file information is extracted as accurately as possible. member may be a filename or a TarInfo
object. You can specify a different directory using path.
Note
The extract()
method does not take care of several extraction issues. In most cases you should consider using the extractall()
method.
Warning
See the warning for extractall()
.
TarFile.extractfile(member)
Extract a member from the archive as a file object. member may be a filename or a TarInfo
object. If member is a regular file, a file-like object is returned. If member is a link, a file-like object is constructed from the link’s target. If member is none of the above, None
is returned.
Note
The file-like object is read-only. It provides the methods read()
, readline()
, readlines()
, seek()
, tell()
, and close()
, and also supports iteration over its lines.
TarFile.add(name, arcname=None, recursive=True, exclude=None, filter=None)
Add the file name to the archive. name may be any type of file (directory, fifo, symbolic link, etc.). If given, arcname specifies an alternative name for the file in the archive. Directories are added recursively by default. This can be avoided by setting recursive to False
. If exclude is given it must be a function that takes one filename argument and returns a boolean value. Depending on this value the respective file is either excluded (True
) or added (False
). If filter is specified it must be a function that takes a TarInfo
object argument and returns the changed TarInfo
object. If it instead returns None
the TarInfo
object will be excluded from the archive. See Examples for an example.
Changed in version 2.6: Added the exclude parameter.
Changed in version 2.7: Added the filter parameter.
Deprecated since version 2.7: The exclude parameter is deprecated, please use the filter parameter instead. For maximum portability, filter should be used as a keyword argument rather than as a positional argument so that code won’t be affected when exclude is ultimately removed.
TarFile.addfile(tarinfo, fileobj=None)
Add the TarInfo
object tarinfo to the archive. If fileobj is given, tarinfo.size
bytes are read from it and added to the archive. You can create TarInfo
objects directly, or by using gettarinfo()
.
Note
On Windows platforms, fileobj should always be opened with mode 'rb'
to avoid irritation about the file size.
TarFile.gettarinfo(name=None, arcname=None, fileobj=None)
Create a TarInfo
object from the result of os.stat()
or equivalent on an existing file. The file is either named by name, or specified as a file object fileobj with a file descriptor. If given, arcname specifies an alternative name for the file in the archive, otherwise, the name is taken from fileobj’s name
attribute, or the name argument.
You can modify some of the TarInfo
’s attributes before you add it using addfile()
. If the file object is not an ordinary file object positioned at the beginning of the file, attributes such as size
may need modifying. This is the case for objects such as GzipFile
. The name
may also be modified, in which case arcname could be a dummy string.
TarFile.close()
Close the TarFile
. In write mode, two finishing zero blocks are appended to the archive.
TarFile.posix
Setting this to True
is equivalent to setting the format
attribute to USTAR_FORMAT
, False
is equivalent to GNU_FORMAT
.
Changed in version 2.4: posix defaults to False
.
Deprecated since version 2.6: Use the format
attribute instead.
TarFile.pax_headers
A dictionary containing key-value pairs of pax global headers.
New in version 2.6.
A TarInfo
object represents one member in a TarFile
. Aside from storing all required attributes of a file (like file type, size, time, permissions, owner etc.), it provides some useful methods to determine its type. It does not contain the file’s data itself.
TarInfo
objects are returned by TarFile
’s methods getmember()
, getmembers()
and gettarinfo()
.
class tarfile.TarInfo(name="")
Create a TarInfo
object.
TarInfo.frombuf(buf)
Create and return a TarInfo
object from string buffer buf.
New in version 2.6: Raises HeaderError
if the buffer is invalid..
TarInfo.fromtarfile(tarfile)
Read the next member from the TarFile
object tarfile and return it as a TarInfo
object.
New in version 2.6.
TarInfo.tobuf(format=DEFAULT_FORMAT, encoding=ENCODING, errors='strict')
Create a string buffer from a TarInfo
object. For information on the arguments see the constructor of the TarFile
class.
Changed in version 2.6: The arguments were added.
A TarInfo
object has the following public data attributes:
TarInfo.name
Name of the archive member.
TarInfo.size
Size in bytes.
TarInfo.mtime
Time of last modification.
TarInfo.mode
Permission bits.
TarInfo.type
File type. type is usually one of these constants: REGTYPE
, AREGTYPE
, LNKTYPE
, SYMTYPE
, DIRTYPE
, FIFOTYPE
, CONTTYPE
, CHRTYPE
, BLKTYPE
, GNUTYPE_SPARSE
. To determine the type of a TarInfo
object more conveniently, use the is*()
methods below.
TarInfo.linkname
Name of the target file name, which is only present in TarInfo
objects of type LNKTYPE
and SYMTYPE
.
TarInfo.uid
User ID of the user who originally stored this member.
TarInfo.gid
Group ID of the user who originally stored this member.
TarInfo.uname
User name.
TarInfo.gname
Group name.
TarInfo.pax_headers
A dictionary containing key-value pairs of an associated pax extended header.
New in version 2.6.
A TarInfo
object also provides some convenient query methods:
TarInfo.isfile()
Return True
if the Tarinfo
object is a regular file.
TarInfo.isreg()
Same as isfile()
.
TarInfo.isdir()
Return True
if it is a directory.
TarInfo.issym()
Return True
if it is a symbolic link.
TarInfo.islnk()
Return True
if it is a hard link.
TarInfo.ischr()
Return True
if it is a character device.
TarInfo.isblk()
Return True
if it is a block device.
TarInfo.isfifo()
Return True
if it is a FIFO.
TarInfo.isdev()
Return True
if it is one of character device, block device or FIFO.
How to extract an entire tar archive to the current working directory:
import tarfile tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz") tar.extractall() tar.close()
How to extract a subset of a tar archive with TarFile.extractall()
using a generator function instead of a list:
import os import tarfile def py_files(members): for tarinfo in members: if os.path.splitext(tarinfo.name)[1] == ".py": yield tarinfo tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz") tar.extractall(members=py_files(tar)) tar.close()
How to create an uncompressed tar archive from a list of filenames:
import tarfile tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar", "w") for name in ["foo", "bar", "quux"]: tar.add(name) tar.close()
The same example using the with
statement:
import tarfile with tarfile.open("sample.tar", "w") as tar: for name in ["foo", "bar", "quux"]: tar.add(name)
How to read a gzip compressed tar archive and display some member information:
import tarfile tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz", "r:gz") for tarinfo in tar: print tarinfo.name, "is", tarinfo.size, "bytes in size and is", if tarinfo.isreg(): print "a regular file." elif tarinfo.isdir(): print "a directory." else: print "something else." tar.close()
How to create an archive and reset the user information using the filter parameter in TarFile.add()
:
import tarfile def reset(tarinfo): tarinfo.uid = tarinfo.gid = 0 tarinfo.uname = tarinfo.gname = "root" return tarinfo tar = tarfile.open("sample.tar.gz", "w:gz") tar.add("foo", filter=reset) tar.close()
There are three tar formats that can be created with the tarfile
module:
USTAR_FORMAT
). It supports filenames up to a length of at best 256 characters and linknames up to 100 characters. The maximum file size is 8 gigabytes. This is an old and limited but widely supported format.GNU_FORMAT
). It supports long filenames and linknames, files bigger than 8 gigabytes and sparse files. It is the de facto standard on GNU/Linux systems. tarfile
fully supports the GNU tar extensions for long names, sparse file support is read-only.The POSIX.1-2001 pax format (PAX_FORMAT
). It is the most flexible format with virtually no limits. It supports long filenames and linknames, large files and stores pathnames in a portable way. However, not all tar implementations today are able to handle pax archives properly.
The pax format is an extension to the existing ustar format. It uses extra headers for information that cannot be stored otherwise. There are two flavours of pax headers: Extended headers only affect the subsequent file header, global headers are valid for the complete archive and affect all following files. All the data in a pax header is encoded in UTF-8 for portability reasons.
There are some more variants of the tar format which can be read, but not created:
The tar format was originally conceived to make backups on tape drives with the main focus on preserving file system information. Nowadays tar archives are commonly used for file distribution and exchanging archives over networks. One problem of the original format (that all other formats are merely variants of) is that there is no concept of supporting different character encodings. For example, an ordinary tar archive created on a UTF-8 system cannot be read correctly on a Latin-1 system if it contains non-ASCII characters. Names (i.e. filenames, linknames, user/group names) containing these characters will appear damaged. Unfortunately, there is no way to autodetect the encoding of an archive.
The pax format was designed to solve this problem. It stores non-ASCII names using the universal character encoding UTF-8. When a pax archive is read, these UTF-8 names are converted to the encoding of the local file system.
The details of unicode conversion are controlled by the encoding and errors keyword arguments of the TarFile
class.
The default value for encoding is the local character encoding. It is deduced from sys.getfilesystemencoding()
and sys.getdefaultencoding()
. In read mode, encoding is used exclusively to convert unicode names from a pax archive to strings in the local character encoding. In write mode, the use of encoding depends on the chosen archive format. In case of PAX_FORMAT
, input names that contain non-ASCII characters need to be decoded before being stored as UTF-8 strings. The other formats do not make use of encoding unless unicode objects are used as input names. These are converted to 8-bit character strings before they are added to the archive.
The errors argument defines how characters are treated that cannot be converted to or from encoding. Possible values are listed in section Codec Base Classes. In read mode, there is an additional scheme 'utf-8'
which means that bad characters are replaced by their UTF-8 representation. This is the default scheme. In write mode the default value for errors is 'strict'
to ensure that name information is not altered unnoticed.
© 2001–2020 Python Software Foundation
Licensed under the PSF License.
https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/tarfile.html