""" Move a file in the safest way possible:: >>> from django.core.files.move import file_move_save >>> file_move_save("/tmp/old_file", "/tmp/new_file") """ import os from django.core.files import locks __all__ = ['file_move_safe'] try: import shutil file_move = shutil.move except ImportError: file_move = os.rename def file_move_safe(old_file_name, new_file_name, chunk_size = 1024*64, allow_overwrite=False): """ Moves a file from one location to another in the safest way possible. First, try using ``shutils.move``, which is OS-dependent but doesn't break if moving across filesystems. Then, try ``os.rename``, which will break across filesystems. Finally, streams manually from one file to another in pure Python. If the destination file exists and ``allow_overwrite`` is ``False``, this function will throw an ``IOError``. """ # There's no reason to move if we don't have to. if old_file_name == new_file_name: return if not allow_overwrite and os.path.exists(new_file_name): raise IOError("Cannot overwrite existing file '%s'." % new_file_name) try: file_move(old_file_name, new_file_name) return except OSError: # This will happen with os.rename if moving to another filesystem pass # If the built-in didn't work, do it the hard way. new_file = open(new_file_name, 'wb') locks.lock(new_file, locks.LOCK_EX) old_file = open(old_file_name, 'rb') current_chunk = None while current_chunk != '': current_chunk = old_file.read(chunk_size) new_file.write(current_chunk) new_file.close() old_file.close() os.remove(old_file_name)