The stat module defines constants and functions for
interpreting the results of os.stat(),
os.fstat() and os.lstat() (if they exist). For
complete details about the stat(), fstat() and
lstat() calls, consult the documentation for your system.
The stat module defines the following functions to test for
specific file types:
Return the portion of the file's mode that can be set by
os.chmod()--that is, the file's permission bits, plus the
sticky bit, set-group-id, and set-user-id bits (on systems that support
them).
Return the portion of the file's mode that describes the file type (used
by the S_IS*() functions above).
Normally, you would use the os.path.is*() functions for
testing the type of a file; the functions here are useful when you are
doing multiple tests of the same file and wish to avoid the overhead of
the stat() system call for each test. These are also
useful when checking for information about a file that isn't handled
by os.path, like the tests for block and character
devices.
All the variables below are simply symbolic indexes into the 10-tuple
returned by os.stat(), os.fstat() or
os.lstat().
Time of last status change (see manual pages for details).
The interpretation of ``file size'' changes according to the file
type. For plain files this is the size of the file in bytes. For
FIFOs and sockets under most flavors of Unix (including Linux in
particular), the ``size'' is the number of bytes waiting to be read at
the time of the call to os.stat(), os.fstat(),
or os.lstat(); this can sometimes be useful, especially for
polling one of these special files after a non-blocking open. The
meaning of the size field for other character and block devices varies
more, depending on the implementation of the underlying system call.
Example:
import os, sys
from stat import *
def walktree(dir, callback):
'''recursively descend the directory rooted at dir,
calling the callback function for each regular file'''
for f in os.listdir(dir):
pathname = '%s/%s' % (dir, f)
mode = os.stat(pathname)[ST_MODE]
if S_ISDIR(mode):
# It's a directory, recurse into it
walktree(pathname, callback)
elif S_ISREG(mode):
# It's a file, call the callback function
callback(pathname)
else:
# Unknown file type, print a message
print 'Skipping %s' % pathname
def visitfile(file):
print 'visiting', file
if __name__ == '__main__':
walktree(sys.argv[1], visitfile)