I am following a Django Tutorial where you are required to construct some image thumbnails once an image is saved in admin. I am also using Python\'s tempfile module to save
I think this is down to the behavior of NamedTemporaryFile
on Windows. From the documentation:
This function operates exactly as TemporaryFile() does, except that the file is guaranteed to have a visible name in the file system (on Unix, the directory entry is not unlinked). That name can be retrieved from the name member of the file object. Whether the name can be used to open the file a second time, while the named temporary file is still open, varies across platforms (it can be so used on Unix; it cannot on Windows NT or later).
(emphasis mine)
in the line:
im.save(tf2.name, "JPEG")
save
presumably tries to open the file so that it can write to it.
From the PIL docs you can pass save
a file object instead of a filename so replacing the above with
im.save(tf2, "JPEG")
may help.
I regret but mikej's answer is not a solution at all as PIL supports both syntax examples. Probably, I copied the same piece of software from somewhere, and it works perfectly on my linux machines but not on windows 7. The reason is not in the image save command but rather in the following one. The command ...
self.thumbnail.save(thumb_fn, File(open(tf.name)), save=False)
... causes the permission denied error because the file is still open and cannot be opened twice at least on windows. The same error can be simulated by
copyfile(tf2.name,"some-new-filepath")
A proper workaround is
This works no matter how you save the thumbnail.
tf = NamedTemporaryFile(delete=False)
im.save(tf.name, "PNG")
#im.save(tf, "PNG")
tf.close()
copyfile(tf.name,"some-new-filepath")
os.remove(tf.name)