mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
450 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
450 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
:mod:`_winreg` -- Windows registry access
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=========================================
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.. module:: _winreg
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:platform: Windows
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:synopsis: Routines and objects for manipulating the Windows registry.
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.. sectionauthor:: Mark Hammond <MarkH@ActiveState.com>
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.. note::
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The :mod:`_winreg` module has been renamed to :mod:`winreg` in Python 3.0.
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The :term:`2to3` tool will automatically adapt imports when converting your
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sources to 3.0.
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.. versionadded:: 2.0
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These functions expose the Windows registry API to Python. Instead of using an
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integer as the registry handle, a handle object is used to ensure that the
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handles are closed correctly, even if the programmer neglects to explicitly
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close them.
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This module exposes a very low-level interface to the Windows registry; it is
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expected that in the future a new ``winreg`` module will be created offering a
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higher-level interface to the registry API.
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This module offers the following functions:
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.. function:: CloseKey(hkey)
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Closes a previously opened registry key. The hkey argument specifies a
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previously opened key.
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Note that if *hkey* is not closed using this method (or via
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:meth:`handle.Close`), it is closed when the *hkey* object is destroyed by
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Python.
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.. function:: ConnectRegistry(computer_name, key)
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Establishes a connection to a predefined registry handle on another computer,
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and returns a :ref:`handle object <handle-object>`.
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*computer_name* is the name of the remote computer, of the form
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``r"\\computername"``. If ``None``, the local computer is used.
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*key* is the predefined handle to connect to.
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The return value is the handle of the opened key. If the function fails, a
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:exc:`WindowsError` exception is raised.
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.. function:: CreateKey(key, sub_key)
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Creates or opens the specified key, returning a
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:ref:`handle object <handle-object>`.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that names the key this method opens or creates.
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If *key* is one of the predefined keys, *sub_key* may be ``None``. In that
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case, the handle returned is the same key handle passed in to the function.
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If the key already exists, this function opens the existing key.
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The return value is the handle of the opened key. If the function fails, a
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:exc:`WindowsError` exception is raised.
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.. function:: DeleteKey(key, sub_key)
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Deletes the specified key.
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*key* is an already open key, or any one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that must be a subkey of the key identified by the *key*
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parameter. This value must not be ``None``, and the key may not have subkeys.
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*This method can not delete keys with subkeys.*
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If the method succeeds, the entire key, including all of its values, is removed.
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If the method fails, a :exc:`WindowsError` exception is raised.
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.. function:: DeleteValue(key, value)
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Removes a named value from a registry key.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*value* is a string that identifies the value to remove.
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.. function:: EnumKey(key, index)
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Enumerates subkeys of an open registry key, returning a string.
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*key* is an already open key, or any one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*index* is an integer that identifies the index of the key to retrieve.
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The function retrieves the name of one subkey each time it is called. It is
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typically called repeatedly until a :exc:`WindowsError` exception is
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raised, indicating, no more values are available.
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.. function:: EnumValue(key, index)
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Enumerates values of an open registry key, returning a tuple.
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*key* is an already open key, or any one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*index* is an integer that identifies the index of the value to retrieve.
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The function retrieves the name of one subkey each time it is called. It is
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typically called repeatedly, until a :exc:`WindowsError` exception is
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raised, indicating no more values.
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The result is a tuple of 3 items:
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+-------+--------------------------------------------+
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| Index | Meaning |
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+=======+============================================+
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| ``0`` | A string that identifies the value name |
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+-------+--------------------------------------------+
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| ``1`` | An object that holds the value data, and |
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| | whose type depends on the underlying |
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| | registry type |
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+-------+--------------------------------------------+
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| ``2`` | An integer that identifies the type of the |
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| | value data |
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+-------+--------------------------------------------+
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.. function:: ExpandEnvironmentStrings(unicode)
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Expands environment strings %NAME% in unicode string like const:`REG_EXPAND_SZ`::
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>>> ExpandEnvironmentStrings(u"%windir%")
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u"C:\\Windows"
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.. versionadded:: 2.6
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.. function:: FlushKey(key)
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Writes all the attributes of a key to the registry.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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It is not necessary to call :func:`FlushKey` to change a key. Registry changes are
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flushed to disk by the registry using its lazy flusher. Registry changes are
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also flushed to disk at system shutdown. Unlike :func:`CloseKey`, the
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:func:`FlushKey` method returns only when all the data has been written to the
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registry. An application should only call :func:`FlushKey` if it requires
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absolute certainty that registry changes are on disk.
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.. note::
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If you don't know whether a :func:`FlushKey` call is required, it probably
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isn't.
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.. function:: LoadKey(key, sub_key, file_name)
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Creates a subkey under the specified key and stores registration information
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from a specified file into that subkey.
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*key* is an already open key, or any of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that identifies the sub_key to load.
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*file_name* is the name of the file to load registry data from. This file must
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have been created with the :func:`SaveKey` function. Under the file allocation
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table (FAT) file system, the filename may not have an extension.
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A call to LoadKey() fails if the calling process does not have the
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:const:`SE_RESTORE_PRIVILEGE` privilege. Note that privileges are different than
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permissions -- see the Win32 documentation for more details.
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If *key* is a handle returned by :func:`ConnectRegistry`, then the path
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specified in *fileName* is relative to the remote computer.
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The Win32 documentation implies *key* must be in the :const:`HKEY_USER` or
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:const:`HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE` tree. This may or may not be true.
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.. function:: OpenKey(key, sub_key, res=0, sam=KEY_READ)
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Opens the specified key, returning a :ref:`handle object <handle-object>`.
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*key* is an already open key, or any one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that identifies the sub_key to open.
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*res* is a reserved integer, and must be zero. The default is zero.
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*sam* is an integer that specifies an access mask that describes the desired
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security access for the key. Default is :const:`KEY_READ`
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The result is a new handle to the specified key.
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If the function fails, :exc:`WindowsError` is raised.
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.. function:: OpenKeyEx()
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The functionality of :func:`OpenKeyEx` is provided via :func:`OpenKey`,
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by the use of default arguments.
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.. function:: QueryInfoKey(key)
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Returns information about a key, as a tuple.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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The result is a tuple of 3 items:
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+-------+---------------------------------------------+
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| Index | Meaning |
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+=======+=============================================+
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| ``0`` | An integer giving the number of sub keys |
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| | this key has. |
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+-------+---------------------------------------------+
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| ``1`` | An integer giving the number of values this |
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| | key has. |
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+-------+---------------------------------------------+
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| ``2`` | A long integer giving when the key was last |
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| | modified (if available) as 100's of |
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| | nanoseconds since Jan 1, 1600. |
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+-------+---------------------------------------------+
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.. function:: QueryValue(key, sub_key)
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Retrieves the unnamed value for a key, as a string.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that holds the name of the subkey with which the value is
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associated. If this parameter is ``None`` or empty, the function retrieves the
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value set by the :func:`SetValue` method for the key identified by *key*.
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Values in the registry have name, type, and data components. This method
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retrieves the data for a key's first value that has a NULL name. But the
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underlying API call doesn't return the type, so always use
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:func:`QueryValueEx` if possible.
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.. function:: QueryValueEx(key, value_name)
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Retrieves the type and data for a specified value name associated with
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an open registry key.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*value_name* is a string indicating the value to query.
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The result is a tuple of 2 items:
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+-------+-----------------------------------------+
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| Index | Meaning |
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+=======+=========================================+
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| ``0`` | The value of the registry item. |
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+-------+-----------------------------------------+
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| ``1`` | An integer giving the registry type for |
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| | this value. |
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+-------+-----------------------------------------+
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.. function:: SaveKey(key, file_name)
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Saves the specified key, and all its subkeys to the specified file.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*file_name* is the name of the file to save registry data to. This file cannot
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already exist. If this filename includes an extension, it cannot be used on file
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allocation table (FAT) file systems by the :meth:`LoadKey`, :meth:`ReplaceKey`
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or :meth:`RestoreKey` methods.
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If *key* represents a key on a remote computer, the path described by
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*file_name* is relative to the remote computer. The caller of this method must
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possess the :const:`SeBackupPrivilege` security privilege. Note that
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privileges are different than permissions -- see the Win32 documentation for
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more details.
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This function passes NULL for *security_attributes* to the API.
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.. function:: SetValue(key, sub_key, type, value)
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Associates a value with a specified key.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*sub_key* is a string that names the subkey with which the value is associated.
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*type* is an integer that specifies the type of the data. Currently this must be
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:const:`REG_SZ`, meaning only strings are supported. Use the :func:`SetValueEx`
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function for support for other data types.
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*value* is a string that specifies the new value.
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If the key specified by the *sub_key* parameter does not exist, the SetValue
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function creates it.
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Value lengths are limited by available memory. Long values (more than 2048
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bytes) should be stored as files with the filenames stored in the configuration
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registry. This helps the registry perform efficiently.
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The key identified by the *key* parameter must have been opened with
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:const:`KEY_SET_VALUE` access.
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.. function:: SetValueEx(key, value_name, reserved, type, value)
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Stores data in the value field of an open registry key.
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*key* is an already open key, or one of the predefined :const:`HKEY_\*`
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constants.
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*value_name* is a string that names the subkey with which the value is
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associated.
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*type* is an integer that specifies the type of the data. This should be one
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of the following constants defined in this module:
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| Constant | Meaning |
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+==================================+=============================================+
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| :const:`REG_BINARY` | Binary data in any form. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_DWORD` | A 32-bit number. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_DWORD_LITTLE_ENDIAN` | A 32-bit number in little-endian format. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_DWORD_BIG_ENDIAN` | A 32-bit number in big-endian format. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_EXPAND_SZ` | Null-terminated string containing |
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| | references to environment variables |
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| | (``%PATH%``). |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_LINK` | A Unicode symbolic link. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_MULTI_SZ` | A sequence of null-terminated strings, |
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| | terminated by two null characters. (Python |
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| | handles this termination automatically.) |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_NONE` | No defined value type. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_RESOURCE_LIST` | A device-driver resource list. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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| :const:`REG_SZ` | A null-terminated string. |
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+----------------------------------+---------------------------------------------+
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*reserved* can be anything -- zero is always passed to the API.
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*value* is a string that specifies the new value.
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This method can also set additional value and type information for the specified
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key. The key identified by the key parameter must have been opened with
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:const:`KEY_SET_VALUE` access.
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To open the key, use the :func:`CreateKey` or :func:`OpenKey` methods.
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Value lengths are limited by available memory. Long values (more than 2048
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bytes) should be stored as files with the filenames stored in the configuration
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registry. This helps the registry perform efficiently.
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.. _handle-object:
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Registry Handle Objects
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-----------------------
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This object wraps a Windows HKEY object, automatically closing it when the
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object is destroyed. To guarantee cleanup, you can call either the
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:meth:`Close` method on the object, or the :func:`CloseKey` function.
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All registry functions in this module return one of these objects.
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All registry functions in this module which accept a handle object also accept
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an integer, however, use of the handle object is encouraged.
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Handle objects provide semantics for :meth:`__nonzero__` -- thus::
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if handle:
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print "Yes"
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will print ``Yes`` if the handle is currently valid (has not been closed or
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detached).
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The object also support comparison semantics, so handle objects will compare
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true if they both reference the same underlying Windows handle value.
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Handle objects can be converted to an integer (e.g., using the built-in
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:func:`int` function), in which case the underlying Windows handle value is
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returned. You can also use the :meth:`Detach` method to return the integer
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handle, and also disconnect the Windows handle from the handle object.
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.. method:: PyHKEY.Close()
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Closes the underlying Windows handle.
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If the handle is already closed, no error is raised.
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.. method:: PyHKEY.Detach()
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Detaches the Windows handle from the handle object.
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The result is an integer (or long on 64 bit Windows) that holds the value of the
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handle before it is detached. If the handle is already detached or closed, this
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will return zero.
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After calling this function, the handle is effectively invalidated, but the
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handle is not closed. You would call this function when you need the
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underlying Win32 handle to exist beyond the lifetime of the handle object.
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.. method:: PyHKEY.__enter__()
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PyHKEY.__exit__(\*exc_info)
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The HKEY object implements :meth:`__enter__` and :meth:`__exit__` and thus
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supports the context protocol for the :keyword:`with` statement::
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with OpenKey(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, "foo") as key:
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# ... work with key ...
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will automatically close *key* when control leaves the :keyword:`with` block.
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.. versionadded:: 2.6
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