Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Barney Gale a6644d4464
GH-73991: Rework `pathlib.Path.copytree()` into `copy()` (#122369)
Rename `pathlib.Path.copy()` to `_copy_file()` (i.e. make it private.)

Rename `pathlib.Path.copytree()` to `copy()`, and add support for copying
non-directories. This simplifies the interface for users, and nicely
complements the upcoming `move()` and `delete()` methods (which will also
accept any type of file.)

Co-authored-by: Adam Turner <9087854+AA-Turner@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-08-11 22:43:18 +01:00
Barney Gale f09d184821
GH-73991: Support copying directory symlinks on older Windows (#120807)
Check for `ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER` when calling `_winapi.CopyFile2()` and
raise `UnsupportedOperation`. In `Path.copy()`, handle this exception and
fall back to the `PathBase.copy()` implementation.
2024-07-03 04:30:29 +01:00
Barney Gale d8d94911e2
Move pathlib implementation out of `__init__.py` (#118582)
Use the `__init__.py` file only for imports that define the API, following the example of asyncio.
2024-05-05 20:57:19 +01:00
Barney Gale a40f557d7b
GH-116380: Move pathlib globbing implementation into `pathlib._glob` (#118562)
Moving this code under the `pathlib` package makes it quite a lot easier
to backport in the `pathlib-abc` PyPI package. It was a bit foolish of me
to add it to `glob` in the first place.

Also add `translate()` to `__all__` in `glob`. This function is new in
3.13, so there's no NEWS needed.
2024-05-03 20:29:25 +00:00
Andrew Zipperer a6b610a94b
docs: typo: tiny grammar change: "pointed by" -> "pointed to by" (#118411)
* docs: tiny grammar change: "pointed by" -> "pointed to by"

This commit uses "file pointed to by" to replace "file pointed by" in
 - doc for shutil.copytree
 - docstring for shutil.copytree
 - docstring _abc.PathBase.open
 - docstring for pathlib.Path.open
 - doc for os.copy_file_range
 - doc for os.splice

The docs use "file pointed to by" more frequently than
"file pointed by". So, this commit replaces the uses of
"file pointed by" in order to make the uses consistent
through the docs.

```bash
$ grep -ri 'pointed to by' cpython/
```
yields more results than
```bash
$ grep -ri 'pointed by' cpython/
```

Separately:

There are two occurrences of "tree pointed by":
 - cpython/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst for
     `xml.etree.ElementInclude.include`
 - cpython/Lib/xml/etree/ElementInclude.py for `include`

For those uses of "tree pointed by", I expect "tree pointed to by"
instead. However, I found enough uses online of (a) "tree pointed by"
rather than (b) "tree pointed to by" to convince me that (a) is in
common use.

So, this commit does not replace those occurrences of "tree pointed by"
to "tree pointed to by". But I will replace them if a reviewer
believes it is correct to replace them.

* docs: typo: "exists and executable" -> "exists and is executable"

---------

Co-authored-by: Andrew-Zipperer <atzipperer@gmail.com>
2024-05-02 05:37:12 +00:00
Barney Gale 15fbd53ba9
GH-112855: Speed up `pathlib.PurePath` pickling (#112856)
The second item in the tuple returned from `__reduce__()` is a tuple of arguments to supply to path constructor. Previously we returned the `parts` tuple here, which entailed joining, parsing and normalising the path object, and produced a compact pickle representation.

With this patch, we instead return a tuple of paths that were originally given to the path constructor. This makes pickling much faster (at the expense of compactness).

It's worth noting that, in the olden times, pathlib performed this parsing/normalization up-front in every case, and so using `parts` for pickling was almost free. Nowadays pathlib only parses/normalises paths when it's necessary or advantageous to do so (e.g. computing a path parent, or iterating over a directory, respectively).
2024-04-20 17:46:52 +01:00
Barney Gale a74f117dab
GH-115060: Speed up `pathlib.Path.glob()` by omitting initial `stat()` (#117831)
Since 6258844c, paths that might not exist can be fed into pathlib's
globbing implementation, which will call `os.scandir()` / `os.lstat()` only
when strictly necessary. This allows us to drop an initial `self.is_dir()`
call, which saves a `stat()`.

Co-authored-by: Shantanu <12621235+hauntsaninja@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-04-14 00:08:03 +01:00
Barney Gale 30f0643e36
GH-117727: Speed up `pathlib.Path.iterdir()` by using `os.scandir()` (#117728)
Replace use of `os.listdir()` with `os.scandir()`. Forgo setting `_drv`,
`_root` and `_tail_cached`, as these usually aren't needed. Use
`os.DirEntry.path` to set `_str`.
2024-04-12 22:02:39 +00:00
Barney Gale 0cc71bde00
GH-117586: Speed up `pathlib.Path.walk()` by working with strings (#117726)
Move `pathlib.Path.walk()` implementation into `glob._Globber`. The new
`glob._Globber.walk()` classmethod works with strings internally, which is
a little faster than generating `Path` objects and keeping them normalized.
The `pathlib.Path.walk()` method converts the strings back to path objects.

In the private pathlib ABCs, our existing subclass of `_Globber` ensures
that `PathBase` instances are used throughout.

Follow-up to #117589.
2024-04-11 01:26:53 +01:00
Barney Gale 6258844c27
GH-117586: Speed up `pathlib.Path.glob()` by working with strings (#117589)
Move pathlib globbing implementation into a new private class: `glob._Globber`. This class implements fast string-based globbing. It's called by `pathlib.Path.glob()`, which then converts strings back to path objects.

In the private pathlib ABCs, add a `pathlib._abc.Globber` subclass that works with `PathBase` objects rather than strings, and calls user-defined path methods like `PathBase.stat()` rather than `os.stat()`.

This sets the stage for two more improvements:

- GH-115060: Query non-wildcard segments with `lstat()`
- GH-116380: Unify `pathlib` and `glob` implementations of globbing.

No change to the implementations of `glob.glob()` and `glob.iglob()`.
2024-04-10 20:43:07 +01:00
Barney Gale 6150bb2412
GH-77609: Add recurse_symlinks argument to `pathlib.Path.glob()` (#117311)
Replace tri-state `follow_symlinks` with boolean `recurse_symlinks` argument. The new argument controls whether symlinks are followed when expanding recursive `**` wildcards. The possible argument values correspond as follows:

    follow_symlinks  recurse_symlinks
    ===============  ================
    False            N/A
    None             False
    True             True

We therefore drop support for not following symlinks when expanding non-recursive pattern parts; it wasn't requested in the original issue, and it's a feature not found in any shells.

This makes the API a easier to grok by eliminating `None` as an option.

No news blurb as `follow_symlinks` was new in 3.13.
2024-04-05 18:51:54 +00:00
Barney Gale 752e18389e
GH-114575: Rename `PurePath.pathmod` to `PurePath.parser` (#116513)
And rename the private base class from `PathModuleBase` to `ParserBase`.
2024-03-31 19:14:48 +01:00
Barney Gale 6f93b4df92
GH-115060: Speed up `pathlib.Path.glob()` by removing redundant regex matching (#115061)
When expanding and filtering paths for a `**` wildcard segment, build an `re.Pattern` object from the subsequent pattern parts, rather than the entire pattern, and match against the `os.DirEntry` object prior to instantiating a path object. Also skip compiling a pattern when expanding a `*` wildcard segment.
2024-02-10 18:12:34 +00:00
Barney Gale 1667c28686
pathlib ABCs: raise `UnsupportedOperation` directly. (#114776)
Raise `UnsupportedOperation` directly, rather than via an `_unsupported()`
helper, to give human readers and IDEs/typecheckers/etc a bigger hint that
these methods are abstract.
2024-01-31 00:38:01 +00:00
Barney Gale fda7445ca5
GH-70303: Make `pathlib.Path.glob('**')` return both files and directories (#114684)
Return files and directories from `pathlib.Path.glob()` if the pattern ends
with `**`. This is more compatible with `PurePath.full_match()` and with
other glob implementations such as bash and `glob.glob()`. Users can add a
trailing slash to match only directories.

In my previous patch I added a `FutureWarning` with the intention of fixing
this in Python 3.15. Upon further reflection I think this was an
unnecessarily cautious remedy to a clear bug.
2024-01-30 19:52:53 +00:00
Barney Gale 7e31d6dea2
gh-88569: add `ntpath.isreserved()` (#95486)
Add `ntpath.isreserved()`, which identifies reserved pathnames such as "NUL", "AUX" and "CON".

Deprecate `pathlib.PurePath.is_reserved()`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Eryk Sun <eryksun@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>
Co-authored-by: Steve Dower <steve.dower@microsoft.com>
2024-01-26 18:14:24 +00:00
Barney Gale b69548a0f5
GH-73435: Add `pathlib.PurePath.full_match()` (#114350)
In 49f90ba we added support for the recursive wildcard `**` in
`pathlib.PurePath.match()`. This should allow arbitrary prefix and suffix
matching, like `p.match('foo/**')` or `p.match('**/foo')`, but there's a
problem: for relative patterns only, `match()` implicitly inserts a `**`
token on the left hand side, causing all patterns to match from the right.
As a result, it's impossible to match relative patterns from the left:
`PurePath('foo/bar').match('bar/**')` is true!

This commit reverts the changes to `match()`, and instead adds a new
`full_match()` method that:

- Allows empty patterns
- Supports the recursive wildcard `**`
- Matches the *entire* path when given a relative pattern
2024-01-26 01:12:46 +00:00
Barney Gale 6313cdde58
GH-79634: Accept path-like objects as pathlib glob patterns. (#114017)
Allow `os.PathLike` objects to be passed as patterns to `pathlib.Path.glob()` and `rglob()`. (It's already possible to use them in `PurePath.match()`)

While we're in the area:

- Allow empty glob patterns in `PathBase` (but not `Path`)
- Speed up globbing in `PathBase` by generating paths with trailing slashes only as a final step, rather than for every intermediate directory.
- Simplify and speed up handling of rare patterns involving both `**` and `..` segments.
2024-01-20 02:10:25 +00:00
Barney Gale ca6cf56330
Add `pathlib._abc.PathModuleBase` (#113893)
Path modules provide a subset of the `os.path` API, specifically those
functions needed to provide `PurePathBase` functionality. Each
`PurePathBase` subclass references its path module via a `pathmod` class
attribute.

This commit adds a new `PathModuleBase` class, which provides abstract
methods that unconditionally raise `UnsupportedOperation`. An instance of
this class is assigned to `PurePathBase.pathmod`, replacing `posixpath`.
As a result, `PurePathBase` is no longer POSIX-y by default, and
all its methods raise `UnsupportedOperation` courtesy of `pathmod`.

Users who subclass `PurePathBase` or `PathBase` should choose the path
syntax by setting `pathmod` to `posixpath`, `ntpath`, `os.path`, or their
own subclass of `PathModuleBase`, as circumstances demand.
2024-01-14 21:49:53 +00:00
Barney Gale f20b151a1c
pathlib ABCs: add `_raw_path` property (#113976)
It's wrong for the `PurePathBase` methods to rely so much on `__str__()`.
Instead, they should treat the raw path(s) as opaque objects and leave the
details to `pathmod`.

This commit adds a `PurePathBase._raw_path` property and uses it through
many of the other ABC methods. These methods are all redefined in
`PurePath` and `Path`, so this has no effect on the public classes.
2024-01-13 08:03:21 +00:00
Barney Gale beb80d11ec
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase` (#113559)
Apply pathlib's normalization and performance tuning in `pathlib.PurePath`, but not `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase`.

With this change, the pathlib ABCs do not normalize away alternate path separators, empty segments, or dot segments. A single string given to the initialiser will round-trip by default, i.e. `str(PurePathBase(my_string)) == my_string`. Implementors can set their own path domain-specific normalization scheme by overriding `__str__()`

Eliminating path normalization makes maintaining and caching the path's parts and string representation both optional and not very useful, so this commit moves the `_drv`, `_root`, `_tail_cached` and `_str` slots from `PurePathBase` to `PurePath`. Only `_raw_paths` and `_resolving` slots remain in `PurePathBase`. This frees the ABCs from the burden of some of pathlib's hardest-to-understand code.
2024-01-09 23:52:15 +00:00
Barney Gale cdca0ce0ad
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.relative_to()` (again) (#113882)
Restore full battle-tested implementations of `PurePath.[is_]relative_to()`. These were recently split up in 3375dfe and a15a773.

In `PurePathBase`, add entirely new implementations based on `_stack`, which itself calls `pathmod.split()` repeatedly to disassemble a path. These new implementations preserve features like trailing slashes where possible, while still observing that a `..` segment cannot be added to traverse an empty or `.` segment in *walk_up* mode. They do not rely on `parents` nor `__eq__()`, nor do they spin up temporary path objects.

Unfortunately calling `pathmod.relpath()` isn't an option, as it calls `abspath()` and in turn `os.getcwd()`, which is impure.
2024-01-09 23:04:14 +00:00
Barney Gale 5c7bd0e398
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.parts` (#113883)
Implement `parts` using `_stack`, which itself calls `pathmod.split()`
repeatedly. This avoids use of `_tail`, which will be moved to `PurePath`
shortly.
2024-01-09 22:46:50 +00:00
Barney Gale 9100fc407e
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PathBase._make_child_relpath()` (#113532)
Call straight through to `joinpath()` in `PathBase._make_child_relpath()`.
Move optimised/caching code to `pathlib.Path._make_child_relpath()`
2024-01-09 19:11:17 +00:00
Barney Gale a15a7735e6
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.relative_to()` (#113529)
Replace use of `_from_parsed_parts()` with `with_segments()` in
`PurePathBase.relative_to()`, and move the assignment of `_drv`, `_root`
and `_tail_cached` slots into `PurePath.relative_to()`.
2024-01-06 21:37:38 +00:00
Barney Gale 37bd893a22
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.parent` (#113530)
Replace use of `_from_parsed_parts()` with `with_segments()`, and move
assignments to `_drv`, `_root`, _tail_cached` and `_str` slots into
`PurePath`.
2024-01-06 21:17:51 +00:00
Barney Gale 1e914ad89d
GH-113528: Deoptimise `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.name` (#113531)
Replace usage of `_from_parsed_parts()` with `with_segments()` in
`with_name()`, and take a similar approach in `name` for consistency's
sake.
2024-01-06 20:50:25 +00:00
Barney Gale 3375dfed40
GH-113568: Stop raising deprecation warnings from pathlib ABCs (#113757) 2024-01-05 22:56:04 +00:00
Barney Gale 3c4e972d6d
GH-113568: Stop raising auditing events from pathlib ABCs (#113571)
Raise auditing events in `pathlib.Path.glob()`, `rglob()` and `walk()`,
but not in `pathlib._abc.PathBase` methods. Also move generation of a
deprecation warning into `pathlib.Path` so it gets the right stack level.
2024-01-05 21:41:19 +00:00
Barney Gale c2e8298eba
GH-113225: Speed up `pathlib.Path.glob()` (#113226)
Use `os.DirEntry.path` as the string representation of child paths, unless
the parent path is empty, in which case we use the entry `name`.
2024-01-04 20:48:26 +00:00
Barney Gale b664d91599
GH-113225: Speed up `pathlib._abc.PathBase.glob()` (#113556)
`PathBase._scandir()` is implemented using `iterdir()`, so we can use its
results directly, rather than passing them through `_make_child_relpath()`.
2023-12-28 22:23:01 +00:00
Barney Gale f8b6e171ad
GH-110109: pathlib ABCs: drop use of `io.text_encoding()` (#113417)
Do not use the locale-specific default encoding in `PathBase.read_text()`
and `write_text()`. Locale settings shouldn't influence the operation of
these base classes, which are intended mostly for implementing rich paths
on *nonlocal* filesystems.
2023-12-27 15:32:35 +00:00
Barney Gale a0d3d3ec9d
GH-110109: pathlib ABCs: do not vary path syntax by host OS. (#113219)
Change the value of `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase.pathmod` from `os.path` to
`posixpath`.

User subclasses of `PurePathBase` and `PathBase` previously used the host
OS's path syntax, e.g. backslashes as separators on Windows. This is wrong
in most use cases, and likely to catch developers out unless they test on
both Windows and non-Windows machines.

In this patch we change the default to POSIX syntax, regardless of OS. This
is somewhat arguable (why not make all aspects of syntax abstract and
individually configurable?) but an improvement all the same.

This change has no effect on `PurePath`, `Path`, nor their subclasses. Only
private APIs are affected.
2023-12-22 18:09:50 +00:00
Barney Gale 237e2cff00
GH-110109: Fix misleading `pathlib._abc.PurePathBase` repr (#113376)
`PurePathBase.__repr__()` produces a string like `MyPath('/foo')`. This
repr is incorrect/misleading when a subclass's `__init__()` method is
customized, which I expect to be the very common.

This commit moves the `__repr__()` method to `PurePath`, leaving
`PurePathBase` with the default `object` repr.

No user-facing changes because the `pathlib._abc` module remains private.
2023-12-22 15:11:16 +00:00
Barney Gale 23df46a1dd
GH-112906: Fix performance regression in pathlib path initialisation (#112907)
This was caused by 76929fdeeb, specifically its use of `super()` and its
packing/unpacking `*args`.

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2023-12-10 00:06:27 +00:00
Barney Gale a98e7a8112
GH-110109: Move pathlib ABCs to new `pathlib._abc` module. (#112881)
Move `_PurePathBase` and `_PathBase` to a new `pathlib._abc` module, and
drop the underscores from the class names.

Tests are mostly left alone in this commit, but they'll be similarly split
in a subsequent commit.

The `pathlib._abc` module will be published as an independent PyPI package
(similar to how `zipfile._path` is published as `zipp`), to be refined
and stabilised prior to its possible addition to the standard library.
2023-12-09 16:07:40 +01:00