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- scandir, a better directory iterator and faster os.walk()
- =========================================================
- .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/scandir.svg
- :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/scandir
- :alt: scandir on PyPI (Python Package Index)
- .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/benhoyt/scandir.svg?branch=master
- :target: https://travis-ci.org/benhoyt/scandir
- :alt: Travis CI tests (Linux)
- .. image:: https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/benhoyt/scandir?branch=master&svg=true
- :target: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/benhoyt/scandir
- :alt: Appveyor tests (Windows)
- ``scandir()`` is a directory iteration function like ``os.listdir()``,
- except that instead of returning a list of bare filenames, it yields
- ``DirEntry`` objects that include file type and stat information along
- with the name. Using ``scandir()`` increases the speed of ``os.walk()``
- by 2-20 times (depending on the platform and file system) by avoiding
- unnecessary calls to ``os.stat()`` in most cases.
- Now included in a Python near you!
- ----------------------------------
- ``scandir`` has been included in the Python 3.5 standard library as
- ``os.scandir()``, and the related performance improvements to
- ``os.walk()`` have also been included. So if you're lucky enough to be
- using Python 3.5 (release date September 13, 2015) you get the benefit
- immediately, otherwise just
- `download this module from PyPI <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/scandir>`_,
- install it with ``pip install scandir``, and then do something like
- this in your code:
- .. code-block:: python
- # Use the built-in version of scandir/walk if possible, otherwise
- # use the scandir module version
- try:
- from os import scandir, walk
- except ImportError:
- from scandir import scandir, walk
- `PEP 471 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0471/>`_, which is the
- PEP that proposes including ``scandir`` in the Python standard library,
- was `accepted <https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2014-July/135561.html>`_
- in July 2014 by Victor Stinner, the BDFL-delegate for the PEP.
- This ``scandir`` module is intended to work on Python 2.7+ and Python
- 3.4+ (and it has been tested on those versions).
- Background
- ----------
- Python's built-in ``os.walk()`` is significantly slower than it needs to be,
- because -- in addition to calling ``listdir()`` on each directory -- it calls
- ``stat()`` on each file to determine whether the filename is a directory or not.
- But both ``FindFirstFile`` / ``FindNextFile`` on Windows and ``readdir`` on Linux/OS
- X already tell you whether the files returned are directories or not, so
- no further ``stat`` system calls are needed. In short, you can reduce the number
- of system calls from about 2N to N, where N is the total number of files and
- directories in the tree.
- In practice, removing all those extra system calls makes ``os.walk()`` about
- **7-50 times as fast on Windows, and about 3-10 times as fast on Linux and Mac OS
- X.** So we're not talking about micro-optimizations. See more benchmarks
- in the "Benchmarks" section below.
- Somewhat relatedly, many people have also asked for a version of
- ``os.listdir()`` that yields filenames as it iterates instead of returning them
- as one big list. This improves memory efficiency for iterating very large
- directories.
- So as well as a faster ``walk()``, scandir adds a new ``scandir()`` function.
- They're pretty easy to use, but see "The API" below for the full docs.
- Benchmarks
- ----------
- Below are results showing how many times as fast ``scandir.walk()`` is than
- ``os.walk()`` on various systems, found by running ``benchmark.py`` with no
- arguments:
- ==================== ============== =============
- System version Python version Times as fast
- ==================== ============== =============
- Windows 7 64-bit 2.7.7 64-bit 10.4
- Windows 7 64-bit SSD 2.7.7 64-bit 10.3
- Windows 7 64-bit NFS 2.7.6 64-bit 36.8
- Windows 7 64-bit SSD 3.4.1 64-bit 9.9
- Windows 7 64-bit SSD 3.5.0 64-bit 9.5
- Ubuntu 14.04 64-bit 2.7.6 64-bit 5.8
- Mac OS X 10.9.3 2.7.5 64-bit 3.8
- ==================== ============== =============
- All of the above tests were done using the fast C version of scandir
- (source code in ``_scandir.c``).
- Note that the gains are less than the above on smaller directories and greater
- on larger directories. This is why ``benchmark.py`` creates a test directory
- tree with a standardized size.
- The API
- -------
- walk()
- ~~~~~~
- The API for ``scandir.walk()`` is exactly the same as ``os.walk()``, so just
- `read the Python docs <https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/os.html#os.walk>`_.
- scandir()
- ~~~~~~~~~
- The full docs for ``scandir()`` and the ``DirEntry`` objects it yields are
- available in the `Python documentation here <https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/os.html#os.scandir>`_.
- But below is a brief summary as well.
- scandir(path='.') -> iterator of DirEntry objects for given path
- Like ``listdir``, ``scandir`` calls the operating system's directory
- iteration system calls to get the names of the files in the given
- ``path``, but it's different from ``listdir`` in two ways:
- * Instead of returning bare filename strings, it returns lightweight
- ``DirEntry`` objects that hold the filename string and provide
- simple methods that allow access to the additional data the
- operating system may have returned.
- * It returns a generator instead of a list, so that ``scandir`` acts
- as a true iterator instead of returning the full list immediately.
- ``scandir()`` yields a ``DirEntry`` object for each file and
- sub-directory in ``path``. Just like ``listdir``, the ``'.'``
- and ``'..'`` pseudo-directories are skipped, and the entries are
- yielded in system-dependent order. Each ``DirEntry`` object has the
- following attributes and methods:
- * ``name``: the entry's filename, relative to the scandir ``path``
- argument (corresponds to the return values of ``os.listdir``)
- * ``path``: the entry's full path name (not necessarily an absolute
- path) -- the equivalent of ``os.path.join(scandir_path, entry.name)``
- * ``is_dir(*, follow_symlinks=True)``: similar to
- ``pathlib.Path.is_dir()``, but the return value is cached on the
- ``DirEntry`` object; doesn't require a system call in most cases;
- don't follow symbolic links if ``follow_symlinks`` is False
- * ``is_file(*, follow_symlinks=True)``: similar to
- ``pathlib.Path.is_file()``, but the return value is cached on the
- ``DirEntry`` object; doesn't require a system call in most cases;
- don't follow symbolic links if ``follow_symlinks`` is False
- * ``is_symlink()``: similar to ``pathlib.Path.is_symlink()``, but the
- return value is cached on the ``DirEntry`` object; doesn't require a
- system call in most cases
- * ``stat(*, follow_symlinks=True)``: like ``os.stat()``, but the
- return value is cached on the ``DirEntry`` object; does not require a
- system call on Windows (except for symlinks); don't follow symbolic links
- (like ``os.lstat()``) if ``follow_symlinks`` is False
- * ``inode()``: return the inode number of the entry; the return value
- is cached on the ``DirEntry`` object
- Here's a very simple example of ``scandir()`` showing use of the
- ``DirEntry.name`` attribute and the ``DirEntry.is_dir()`` method:
- .. code-block:: python
- def subdirs(path):
- """Yield directory names not starting with '.' under given path."""
- for entry in os.scandir(path):
- if not entry.name.startswith('.') and entry.is_dir():
- yield entry.name
- This ``subdirs()`` function will be significantly faster with scandir
- than ``os.listdir()`` and ``os.path.isdir()`` on both Windows and POSIX
- systems, especially on medium-sized or large directories.
- Further reading
- ---------------
- * `The Python docs for scandir <https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/os.html#os.scandir>`_
- * `PEP 471 <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0471/>`_, the
- (now-accepted) Python Enhancement Proposal that proposed adding
- ``scandir`` to the standard library -- a lot of details here,
- including rejected ideas and previous discussion
- Flames, comments, bug reports
- -----------------------------
- Please send flames, comments, and questions about scandir to Ben Hoyt:
- http://benhoyt.com/
- File bug reports for the version in the Python 3.5 standard library
- `here <https://docs.python.org/3.5/bugs.html>`_, or file bug reports
- or feature requests for this module at the GitHub project page:
- https://github.com/benhoyt/scandir
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