File identification library for Python.
Given a file (or some information about a file), return a set of standardized tags identifying what the file is.
If you have an actual file on disk, you can get the most information possible (a superset of all other methods):
>>> identify.tags_from_path('/path/to/file.py')
{'file', 'text', 'python', 'non-executable'}
>>> identify.tags_from_path('/path/to/file-with-shebang')
{'file', 'text', 'shell', 'bash', 'executable'}
>>> identify.tags_from_path('/bin/bash')
{'file', 'binary', 'executable'}
>>> identify.tags_from_path('/path/to/directory')
{'directory'}
>>> identify.tags_from_path('/path/to/symlink')
{'symlink'}
When using a file on disk, the checks performed are:
- File type (file, symlink, directory)
- Mode (is it executable?)
- File name (mostly based on extension)
- If executable, the shebang is read and the interpreter interpreted
>>> identify.tags_from_filename('file.py')
{'text', 'python'}
>>> identify.tags_from_interpreter('python3.5')
{'python', 'python3'}
>>> identify.tags_from_interpreter('bash')
{'shell', 'bash'}
>>> identify.tags_from_interpreter('some-unrecognized-thing')
set()
$ identify-cli --help
usage: identify-cli [-h] [--filename-only] path
positional arguments:
path
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--filename-only
$ identify-cli setup.py; echo $?
["file", "non-executable", "python", "text"]
0
identify setup.py --filename-only; echo $?
["python", "text"]
0
$ identify-cli wat.wat; echo $?
wat.wat does not exist.
1
$ identify-cli wat.wat --filename-only; echo $?
1
identify
also has an api for determining what type of license is contained
in a file. This routine is roughly based on the approaches used by
licensee (the ruby gem that github uses to figure out the license for a
repo).
The approach that identify
uses is as follows:
- Strip the copyright line
- Normalize all whitespace
- Return any exact matches
- Return the closest by edit distance (where edit distance < 5%)
To use the api, install via pip install identify[license]
>>> from identify import identify
>>> identify.license_id('LICENSE')
'MIT'
The return value of the license_id
function is an SPDX id. Currently
licenses are sourced from choosealicense.com.
A call to tags_from_path
does this:
- What is the type: file, symlink, directory? If it's not file, stop here.
- Is it executable? Add the appropriate tag.
- Do we recognize the file extension? If so, add the appropriate tags, stop here. These tags would include binary/text.
- Peek at the first X bytes of the file. Use these to determine whether it is binary or text, add the appropriate tag.
- If identified as text above, try to read and interpret the shebang, and add appropriate tags.
By design, this means we don't need to partially read files where we recognize the file extension.