Bastian Kleineidam: 'copy_file()' now returns the output filename, rather

than a boolean indicating whether it did the copy.
This commit is contained in:
Greg Ward 2000-06-23 01:42:40 +00:00
parent f419572708
commit a392dcb211
1 changed files with 5 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@ -96,9 +96,8 @@ def copy_file (src, dst,
on other systems, uses '_copy_file_contents()' to copy file
contents.
Return true if the file was copied (or would have been copied),
false otherwise (ie. 'update' was true and the destination is
up-to-date)."""
Return the name of the destination file, whether it was actually
copied or not."""
# XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if
# copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what
@ -123,7 +122,7 @@ def copy_file (src, dst,
if update and not newer (src, dst):
if verbose:
print "not copying %s (output up-to-date)" % src
return 0
return dst
try:
action = _copy_action[link]
@ -137,7 +136,7 @@ def copy_file (src, dst,
print "%s %s -> %s" % (action, src, dst)
if dry_run:
return 1
return dst
# On a Mac, use the native file copy routine
if os.name == 'mac':
@ -171,7 +170,7 @@ def copy_file (src, dst,
if preserve_mode:
os.chmod (dst, S_IMODE (st[ST_MODE]))
return 1
return dst
# copy_file ()