when i give ls -l /etc/fonts/conf.d/70-yes-bitmaps.conf
lrwxrwxrwx <snip> /etc/fonts/conf.d/70-yes-bitmaps.conf -> ../conf.avail/70-yes-bitmaps.conf
so for a symbolic link or soft link, how to find the target file's full(absolute path) in python,
If i use
os.readlink('/etc/fonts/conf.d/70-yes-bitmaps.conf')
it outputs
../conf.avail/70-yes-bitmaps.conf
but i need the absolute path not the relative path, so my desired output must be,
/etc/fonts/conf.avail/70-yes-bitmaps.conf
how to replace the ..
with the actual full path of the p开发者_运维技巧arent directory of the symbolic link or soft link file.
os.path.realpath(path)
os.path.realpath returns the canonical path of the specified filename, eliminating any symbolic links encountered in the path.
As unutbu says, os.path.realpath(path)
should be the right answer, returning the canonical path of the specified filename, resolving any symbolic links to their targets. But it's broken under Windows.
I've created a patch for Python 3.2 to fix this bug, and uploaded it to:
http://bugs.python.org/issue9949
It fixes the realpath()
function in Python32\Lib\ntpath.py
I've also put it on my server, here:
http://www.burtonsys.com/ntpath_fix_issue9949.zip
Unfortunately, the bug is present in Python 2.x, too, and I know of no fix for it there.
http://docs.python.org/library/os.path.html#os.path.abspath
also joinpath()
and normpath()
, depending on whether you're in the current working directory, or you're working with things elsewhere. normpath()
might be more direct for you.
Specifically:
os.path.normpath(
os.path.join(
os.path.dirname( '/etc/fonts/conf.d/70-yes-bitmaps.conf' ),
os.readlink('/etc/fonts/conf.d/70-yes-bitmaps.conf')
)
)
I recommend using pathlib
library for filesystem operations.
import pathlib
x = pathlib.Path('lol/lol/path')
x.resolve()
Documentation for Path.resolve(strict=False)
: make the path absolute, resolving any symlinks. A new path object is returned.
On windows 10, python 3.5, os.readlink("C:\\Users\PP")
where "C:\Users\PP" is a symbolic link (not a junction link) works.
It returns the absolute path to the directory.
This works on Ubuntu 16.04, python 3.5 as well.
The documentation says to use os.path.join()
:
The result may be either an absolute or relative pathname; if it is relative, it may be converted to an absolute pathname using
os.path.join(os.path.dirname(path), result)
.
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