# this module is an OS/2 oriented replacement for the grp standard # extension module. # written by Andrew MacIntyre, April 2001. # released into the public domain "as is", with NO WARRANTY # note that this implementation checks whether ":" or ";" as used as # the field separator character. """Replacement for grp standard extension module, intended for use on OS/2 and similar systems which don't normally have an /etc/group file. The standard Unix group database is an ASCII text file with 4 fields per record (line), separated by a colon: - group name (string) - group password (optional encrypted string) - group id (integer) - group members (comma delimited list of userids, with no spaces) Note that members are only included in the group file for groups that aren't their primary groups. (see the section 8.2 of the Python Library Reference) This implementation differs from the standard Unix implementation by allowing use of the platform's native path separator character - ';' on OS/2, DOS and MS-Windows - as the field separator in addition to the Unix standard ":". The module looks for the group database at the following locations (in order first to last): - ${ETC_GROUP} (or %ETC_GROUP%) - ${ETC}/group (or %ETC%/group) - ${PYTHONHOME}/Etc/group (or %PYTHONHOME%/Etc/group) Classes ------- None Functions --------- getgrgid(gid) - return the record for group-id gid as a 4-tuple getgrnam(name) - return the record for group 'name' as a 4-tuple getgrall() - return a list of 4-tuples, each tuple being one record (NOTE: the order is arbitrary) Attributes ---------- group_file - the path of the group database file """ import os # try and find the group file __group_path = [] if os.environ.has_key('ETC_GROUP'): __group_path.append(os.environ['ETC_GROUP']) if os.environ.has_key('ETC'): __group_path.append('%s/group' % os.environ['ETC']) if os.environ.has_key('PYTHONHOME'): __group_path.append('%s/Etc/group' % os.environ['PYTHONHOME']) group_file = None for __i in __group_path: try: __f = open(__i, 'r') __f.close() group_file = __i break except: pass # decide what field separator we can try to use - Unix standard, with # the platform's path separator as an option. No special field conversion # handlers are required for the group file. __field_sep = [':'] if os.pathsep: if os.pathsep != ':': __field_sep.append(os.pathsep) # helper routine to identify which separator character is in use def __get_field_sep(record): fs = None for c in __field_sep: # there should be 3 delimiter characters (for 4 fields) if record.count(c) == 3: fs = c break if fs: return fs else: raise KeyError, '>> group database fields not delimited <<' # read the whole file, parsing each entry into tuple form # with dictionaries to speed recall by GID or group name def __read_group_file(): if group_file: group = open(group_file, 'r') else: raise KeyError, '>> no group database <<' gidx = {} namx = {} sep = None while 1: entry = group.readline().strip() if len(entry) > 3: if sep == None: sep = __get_field_sep(entry) fields = entry.split(sep) fields[2] = int(fields[2]) record = tuple(fields) if not gidx.has_key(fields[2]): gidx[fields[2]] = record if not namx.has_key(fields[0]): namx[fields[0]] = record elif len(entry) > 0: pass # skip empty or malformed records else: break group.close() if len(gidx) == 0: raise KeyError return (gidx, namx) # return the group database entry by GID def getgrgid(gid): g, n = __read_group_file() return g[gid] # return the group database entry by group name def getgrnam(name): g, n = __read_group_file() return n[name] # return all the group database entries def getgrall(): g, n = __read_group_file() return g.values() # test harness if __name__ == '__main__': getgrall()