PathSpec ======== *pathspec* is a utility library for pattern matching of file paths. So far this only includes Git's wildmatch pattern matching which itself is derived from Rsync's wildmatch. Git uses wildmatch for its `gitignore`_ files. .. _`gitignore`: http://git-scm.com/docs/gitignore Tutorial -------- Say you have a "Projects" directory and you want to back it up, but only certain files, and ignore others depending on certain conditions:: >>> import pathspec >>> # The gitignore-style patterns for files to select, but we're including >>> # instead of ignoring. >>> spec_text = """ ... ... # This is a comment because the line begins with a hash: "#" ... ... # Include several project directories (and all descendants) relative to ... # the current directory. To reference a directory you must end with a ... # slash: "/" ... /project-a/ ... /project-b/ ... /project-c/ ... ... # Patterns can be negated by prefixing with exclamation mark: "!" ... ... # Ignore temporary files beginning or ending with "~" and ending with ... # ".swp". ... !~* ... !*~ ... !*.swp ... ... # These are python projects so ignore compiled python files from ... # testing. ... !*.pyc ... ... # Ignore the build directories but only directly under the project ... # directories. ... !/*/build/ ... ... """ We want to use the ``GitWildMatchPattern`` class to compile our patterns. The ``PathSpec`` class provides an interface around pattern implementations:: >>> spec = pathspec.PathSpec.from_lines(pathspec.patterns.GitWildMatchPattern, spec_text.splitlines()) That may be a mouthful but it allows for additional patterns to be implemented in the future without them having to deal with anything but matching the paths sent to them. ``GitWildMatchPattern`` is the implementation of the actual pattern which internally gets converted into a regular expression. ``PathSpec`` is a simple wrapper around a list of compiled patterns. To make things simpler, we can use the registered name for a pattern class instead of always having to provide a reference to the class itself. The ``GitWildMatchPattern`` class is registered as **gitwildmatch**:: >>> spec = pathspec.PathSpec.from_lines('gitwildmatch', spec_text.splitlines()) If we wanted to manually compile the patterns we can just do the following:: >>> patterns = map(pathspec.patterns.GitWildMatchPattern, spec_text.splitlines()) >>> spec = PathSpec(patterns) ``PathSpec.from_lines()`` is simply a class method which does just that. If you want to load the patterns from file, you can pass the file instance directly as well:: >>> with open('patterns.list', 'r') as fh: >>> spec = pathspec.PathSpec.from_lines('gitwildmatch', fh) You can perform matching on a whole directory tree with:: >>> matches = spec.match_tree('path/to/directory') Or you can perform matching on a specific set of file paths with:: >>> matches = spec.match_files(file_paths) Or check to see if an individual file matches:: >>> is_matched = spec.match_file(file_path) There is a specialized class, ``pathspec.GitIgnoreSpec``, which more closely implements the behavior of **gitignore**. This uses ``GitWildMatchPattern`` pattern by default and handles some edge cases differently from the generic ``PathSpec`` class. ``GitIgnoreSpec`` can be used without specifying the pattern factory:: >>> spec = pathspec.GitIgnoreSpec.from_lines(spec_text.splitlines()) License ------- *pathspec* is licensed under the `Mozilla Public License Version 2.0`_. See `LICENSE`_ or the `FAQ`_ for more information. In summary, you may use *pathspec* with any closed or open source project without affecting the license of the larger work so long as you: - give credit where credit is due, - and release any custom changes made to *pathspec*. .. _`Mozilla Public License Version 2.0`: http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/2.0 .. _`LICENSE`: LICENSE .. _`FAQ`: http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/FAQ.html Source ------ The source code for *pathspec* is available from the GitHub repo `cpburnz/python-pathspec`_. .. _`cpburnz/python-pathspec`: https://github.com/cpburnz/python-pathspec Installation ------------ *pathspec* is available for install through `PyPI`_:: pip install pathspec *pathspec* can also be built from source. The following packages will be required: - `build`_ (>=0.6.0) *pathspec* can then be built and installed with:: python -m build pip install dist/pathspec-*-py3-none-any.whl .. _`PyPI`: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pathspec .. _`build`: https://pypi.org/project/build/ Documentation ------------- Documentation for *pathspec* is available on `Read the Docs`_. .. _`Read the Docs`: https://python-path-specification.readthedocs.io Other Languages --------------- The related project `pathspec-ruby`_ (by *highb*) provides a similar library as a `Ruby gem`_. .. _`pathspec-ruby`: https://github.com/highb/pathspec-ruby .. _`Ruby gem`: https://rubygems.org/gems/pathspec