In the program I maintain it is done as in:
# count the files in the archive
length = 0
command = ur'"%s" l -slt "%s"' % (u'path/to/7z.exe', srcFile)
ins, err = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, stdin=PIPE,
startupinfo=startupinfo).communicate()
ins = StringIO.StringIO(ins)
for line in ins: length += 1
ins.close()
- Is it really the only way ? I can't seem to find any other command but it seems a bit odd that I can't just ask for the number of files
What about error checking ? Would it be enough to modify this to:
proc = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, stdin=PIPE, startupinfo=startupinfo) out = proc.stdout # ... count returncode = proc.wait() if returncode: raise Exception(u'Failed reading number of files from ' + srcFile)
or should I actually parse the output of Popen ?
EDIT: interested in 7z, rar, zip archives (that are supported by 7z.exe) - but 7z and zip would be enough for starters
To count the number of archive members in a zip archive in Python:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
from contextlib import closing
from zipfile import ZipFile
with closing(ZipFile(sys.argv[1])) as archive:
count = len(archive.infolist())
print(count)
It may use zlib
, bz2
, lzma
modules if available, to decompress the archive.
To count the number of regular files in a tar archive:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
import tarfile
with tarfile.open(sys.argv[1]) as archive:
count = sum(1 for member in archive if member.isreg())
print(count)
It may support gzip
, bz2
and lzma
compression depending on version of Python.
You could find a 3rd-party module that would provide a similar functionality for 7z archives.
To get the number of files in an archive using 7z
utility:
import os
import subprocess
def count_files_7z(archive):
s = subprocess.check_output(["7z", "l", archive], env=dict(os.environ, LC_ALL="C"))
return int(re.search(br'(\d+)\s+files,\s+\d+\s+folders$', s).group(1))
Here's version that may use less memory if there are many files in the archive:
import os
import re
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, CalledProcessError
def count_files_7z(archive):
command = ["7z", "l", archive]
p = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, bufsize=1, env=dict(os.environ, LC_ALL="C"))
with p.stdout:
for line in p.stdout:
if line.startswith(b'Error:'): # found error
error = line + b"".join(p.stdout)
raise CalledProcessError(p.wait(), command, error)
returncode = p.wait()
assert returncode == 0
return int(re.search(br'(\d+)\s+files,\s+\d+\s+folders', line).group(1))
Example:
import sys
try:
print(count_files_7z(sys.argv[1]))
except CalledProcessError as e:
getattr(sys.stderr, 'buffer', sys.stderr).write(e.output)
sys.exit(e.returncode)
To count the number of lines in the output of a generic subprocess:
from functools import partial
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE, CalledProcessError
p = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, bufsize=-1)
with p.stdout:
read_chunk = partial(p.stdout.read, 1 << 15)
count = sum(chunk.count(b'\n') for chunk in iter(read_chunk, b''))
if p.wait() != 0:
raise CalledProcessError(p.returncode, command)
print(count)
It supports unlimited output.
Could you explain why buffsize=-1 (as opposed to buffsize=1 in your previous answer: stackoverflow.com/a/30984882/281545)
bufsize=-1
means use the default I/O buffer size instead of bufsize=0
(unbuffered) on Python 2. It is a performance boost on Python 2. It is default on the recent Python 3 versions. You might get a short read (lose data) if on some earlier Python 3 versions where bufsize
is not changed to bufsize=-1
.
This answer reads in chunks and therefore the stream is fully buffered for efficiency. The solution you've linked is line-oriented. bufsize=1
means "line buffered". There is minimal difference from bufsize=-1
otherwise.
and also what the read_chunk = partial(p.stdout.read, 1 << 15) buys us ?
It is equivalent to read_chunk = lambda: p.stdout.read(1<<15)
but provides more introspection in general. It is used to implement wc -l
in Python efficiently.
Since I already have 7z.exe bundled with the app and I surely want to avoid a third party lib, while I do need to parse rar and 7z archives I think I will go with:
regErrMatch = re.compile(u'Error:', re.U).match # needs more testing
r"""7z list command output is of the form:
Date Time Attr Size Compressed Name
------------------- ----- ------------ ------------ ------------------------
2015-06-29 21:14:04 ....A <size> <filename>
where ....A is the attribute value for normal files, ....D for directories
"""
reFileMatch = re.compile(ur'(\d|:|-|\s)*\.\.\.\.A', re.U).match
def countFilesInArchive(srcArch, listFilePath=None):
"""Count all regular files in srcArch (or only the subset in
listFilePath)."""
# https://stackoverflow.com/q/31124670/281545
command = ur'"%s" l -scsUTF-8 -sccUTF-8 "%s"' % ('compiled/7z.exe', srcArch)
if listFilePath: command += u' @"%s"' % listFilePath
proc = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, startupinfo=startupinfo, bufsize=-1)
length, errorLine = 0, []
with proc.stdout as out:
for line in iter(out.readline, b''):
line = unicode(line, 'utf8')
if errorLine or regErrMatch(line):
errorLine.append(line)
elif reFileMatch(line):
length += 1
returncode = proc.wait()
if returncode or errorLine: raise StateError(u'%s: Listing failed\n' +
srcArch + u'7z.exe return value: ' + str(returncode) +
u'\n' + u'\n'.join([x.strip() for x in errorLine if x.strip()]))
return length
Error checking as in Python Popen - wait vs communicate vs CalledProcessError by @JFSebastien
My final(ish) based on accepted answer - unicode may not be needed, kept it for now as I use it everywhere. Also kept regex (which I may expand, I have seen things like re.compile(u'^(Error:.+|.+ Data Error?|Sub items Errors:.+)',re.U)
. Will have to look into check_output and CalledProcessError.
def countFilesInArchive(srcArch, listFilePath=None):
"""Count all regular files in srcArch (or only the subset in
listFilePath)."""
command = [exe7z, u'l', u'-scsUTF-8', u'-sccUTF-8', srcArch]
if listFilePath: command += [u'@%s' % listFilePath]
proc = Popen(command, stdout=PIPE, stdin=PIPE, # stdin needed if listFilePath
startupinfo=startupinfo, bufsize=1)
errorLine = line = u''
with proc.stdout as out:
for line in iter(out.readline, b''): # consider io.TextIOWrapper
line = unicode(line, 'utf8')
if regErrMatch(line):
errorLine = line + u''.join(out)
break
returncode = proc.wait()
msg = u'%s: Listing failed\n' % srcArch.s
if returncode or errorLine:
msg += u'7z.exe return value: ' + str(returncode) + u'\n' + errorLine
elif not line: # should not happen
msg += u'Empty output'
else: msg = u''
if msg: raise StateError(msg) # consider using CalledProcessError
# number of files is reported in the last line - example:
# 3534900 325332 75 files, 29 folders
return int(re.search(ur'(\d+)\s+files,\s+\d+\s+folders', line).group(1))
Will edit this with my findings.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31124670/how-to-programmatically-count-the-number-of-files-in-an-archive-using-python