My python script needs to read files from a directory passed on the command line. I have defined a readable_dir type as below to be used with argparse for validating that the directory passed on the command line is existent and readable. Additionally, a default value (/tmp/non_existent_dir in the example below) has also been specified for the directory argument. The problem here is that argparse invokes readable_dir() on the default value even in a situation where a directory argument is explicitly passed in on the command line. This causes the script to crap out as the default path /tmp/non_existent_dir does not exist in a context where a directory is explicitly passed in on the command line. I could get around this by not specifying a default value and making this argument mandatory, or by deferring the validation until later in the script but is a more elegant solution that anyone is aware of?
#!/usr/bin/python
import argparse
import os
def readable_dir(prospective_dir):
if not os.path.isdir(prospective_dir):
raise Exception("readable_dir:{0} is not a valid path".format(prospective_dir))
if os.access(prospective_dir, os.R_OK):
return prospective_dir
else:
raise Exception("readable_dir:{0} is not a readable dir".format(prospective_dir))
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='test', fromfile_prefix_chars="@")
parser.add_argument('-l', '--launch_directory', type=readable_dir, default='/tmp/non_existent_dir')
args = parser.parse_args()
raise argparse.ArgumentTypeError
, but otherwise, I'm digging the readable_dir type.