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BACKGROUND

I have some directory in my home directory called delivery_content. Inside that directory there are two folders content_123 and content_456. Each directory contains a text file. So the over all structure looks like the following.

-delivery_content
 -content_123/
   -content_123.txt
 -content_456/
   -content_456.txt

I am writing code that when given a directory it will zip all of it's contents.

CODE

import os
import shutil
from pathlib import Path
from datetime import datetime


DOWNLOAD_DIR = Path(os.getenv("HOME")) / "delivery_content"

date = datetime.today().strftime("%Y-%m-%d")
delivery_name = f"foo_{date}"
shutil.make_archive(str(DOWNLOAD_DIR / delivery_name), "zip", str(DOWNLOAD_DIR))
print("Zipping Has Complete")

So for the given code above i expect to see a foo_todays_date.zip in the DOWNLOAD_DIR and when i unzip it i expect to see the following

 -content_123/
   -content_123.txt
 -content_456/
   -content_456.txt

However I see the followingenter image description here

Is there a way i can avoid having a .zip inside my zipfile?

1 Answer 1

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The problem is that you are putting the zip file inside the directory that you are archiving. make_archive is probably creating an empty file to verify it can write to the destination before it starts archiving. So it then sees the empty zip file as a file to archive. The only way I see around this using the make_archive function is to put the archive file outside of the directory to archive like below:

shutil.make_archive(str(DOWNLOAD_DIR / ".."/ delivery_name), "zip", str(DOWNLOAD_DIR))

You can always move the zip file into the DOWNLOAD_DIR afterward.

2
  • The confusing part for me is which argument specifies where the zipped file will be outputted? Why do you use ".." ? What does that indicate?
    – Dinero
    Oct 28, 2020 at 23:47
  • The first argument specifies where to put the zip file. The ".." says to put in the directory above DOWNLOAD_DIR. I just picked that location arbitrarily. There might be a better place in your circumstance, but only you would know that.
    – pcarter
    Oct 29, 2020 at 11:23

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