I can use os.stat(pathname) to get pathname's perssmions, mtime, atime....
Howerver, I hava a file that has a '+i' attribute, you can see it by:
lsattr /tmp/test.py
Is there a way to know if the pathname has the '+i' attribute by using python?
2 Answers
This related SO post about why os.chflags doesn't exist on Linux shows a way to work around the absence of lsattr in the os module using fcntl. However, it relies on copying constant definitions from a header file (ext2fs/ext2_fs.h), so it's fragile. A more permanent solution would require writing some C or something like Cython.
Meanwhile, PM 2Ring's answer works, though it should be modified to work with paths that contain the letter "i". Perhaps someone with some reputation could comment or edit that answer (this is my first post)?
import subprocess
def is_immutable(fname):
p = subprocess.Popen(['lsattr', fname], bufsize=1, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
data, _ = p.communicate()
#print(data)
return 'i' in data
def is_immutable_safe(file_path):
"""Check if the immutable flag is set on a Linux file path
Uses the lsattr command, and assumes that the immutable flag
appears in the first 16 characters of its output.
"""
return 'i' in subprocess.check_output(['lsattr', file_path])[:16]
# These assertions will pass if the immutable bit is not set on
# /etc/inittab on your system
assert is_immutable('/etc/inittab') is True
assert is_immutable_safe('/etc/inittab') is False
There doesn't appear to be an os module function to get these Linux file attributes, but you can use the subprocess module to call the lsattr command in Python.
The code below should work on Python 2 or 3, although it can be made more compact in recent Python versions.
FWIW, I have the i bit set on my fstab file because I got sick of it randomly getting wiped out.
import subprocess
def is_immutable(fname):
p = subprocess.Popen(['lsattr', fname], bufsize=1, stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
data, _ = p.communicate()
#print(data)
return 'i' in data.split(None, 1)[0]
print(is_immutable("/etc/fstab"))
Update
The previous version of this code had
return 'i' in data.split
However, that will also detect an 'i' if one is present in the file name! The new version only detects an 'i' in the attribute flags. Thanks, sverasch for bring this to my attention.
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'i' in datamay not be a good idea, it's better to use re to match the resultp = re.compile(r'-+i-+')– pageFeb 22, 2016 at 3:17 -
@page: Why? On my machine, using
inon the result string thatlsattrsends to stdout is around 10 times faster than usingmatchwith your compiled pattern, and that's not counting the time to importreor compile the pattern;searchis even slower, especially when the search fails. If I use a simplified regexr'i', anintest is still faster than a regexsearch, even if I make the target string 1000 times longer.– PM 2RingFeb 22, 2016 at 6:21 -
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@sverasch I hastily rejected your edit because I didn't realise why it was needed... until 5 seconds later. :) But I would've fixed it myself if you'd left me a comment...– PM 2RingNov 4, 2016 at 19:16
/tmpa nfs share or something similar?