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389 lines
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Plaintext
389 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
==============
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Managing files
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==============
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**New in Django development version**
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This document describes Django's file access APIs.
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By default, Django stores files locally, using the ``MEDIA_ROOT`` and
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``MEDIA_URL`` settings_. The examples below assume that you're using
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these defaults.
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However, Django provides ways to write custom `file storage systems`_ that
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allow you to completely customize where and how Django stores files. The
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second half of this document describes how these storage systems work.
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.. _file storage systems: `File storage`_
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.. _settings: ../settings/
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Using files in models
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=====================
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When you use a `FileField`_ or `ImageField`_, Django provides a set of APIs you can use to deal with that file.
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.. _filefield: ../model-api/#filefield
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.. _imagefield: ../model-api/#imagefield
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Consider the following model, using a ``FileField`` to store a photo::
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class Car(models.Model):
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name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
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price = models.DecimalField(max_digits=5, decimal_places=2)
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photo = models.ImageField(upload_to='cars')
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Any ``Car`` instance will have a ``photo`` attribute that you can use to get at
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the details of the attached photo::
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>>> car = Car.object.get(name="57 Chevy")
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>>> car.photo
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<ImageFieldFile: chevy.jpg>
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>>> car.photo.name
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u'chevy.jpg'
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>>> car.photo.path
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u'/media/cars/chevy.jpg'
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>>> car.photo.url
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u'http://media.example.com/cars/chevy.jpg'
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This object -- ``car.photo`` in the example -- is a ``File`` object, which means
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it has all the methods and attributes described below.
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The ``File`` object
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===================
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Internally, Django uses a ``django.core.files.File`` any time it needs to
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represent a file. This object is a thin wrapper around Python's `built-in file
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object`_ with some Django-specific additions.
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.. _built-in file object: http://docs.python.org/lib/bltin-file-objects.html
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Creating ``File`` instances
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---------------------------
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Most of the time you'll simply use a ``File`` that Django's given you (i.e. a
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file attached to a model as above, or perhaps an `uploaded file`_).
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.. _uploaded file: ../upload_handling/
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If you need to construct a ``File`` yourself, the easiest way is to create one
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using a Python built-in ``file`` object::
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>>> from django.core.files import File
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# Create a Python file object using open()
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>>> f = open('/tmp/hello.world', 'w')
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>>> myfile = File(f)
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Now you can use any of the ``File`` attributes and methods defined below.
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``File`` attributes and methods
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-------------------------------
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Django's ``File`` has the following attributes and methods:
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``File.path``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The absolute path to the file's location on a local filesystem.
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Custom `file storage systems`_ may not store files locally; files stored on
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these systems will have a ``path`` of ``None``.
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``File.url``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The URL where the file can be retrieved. This is often useful in templates_; for
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example, a bit of a template for displaying a ``Car`` (see above) might look
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like::
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<img src='{{ car.photo.url }}' alt='{{ car.name }}' />
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.. _templates: ../templates/
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``File.size``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The size of the file in bytes.
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``File.open(mode=None)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Open or reopen the file (which by definition also does ``File.seek(0)``). The
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``mode`` argument allows the same values as Python's standard ``open()``.
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When reopening a file, ``mode`` will override whatever mode the file was
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originally opened with; ``None`` means to reopen with the original mode.
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``File.read(num_bytes=None)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Read content from the file. The optional ``size`` is the number of bytes to
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read; if not specified, the file will be read to the end.
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``File.__iter__()``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Iterate over the file yielding one line at a time.
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``File.chunks(chunk_size=None)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Iterate over the file yielding "chunks" of a given size. ``chunk_size`` defaults
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to 64 KB.
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This is especially useful with very large files since it allows them to be
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streamed off disk and avoids storing the whole file in memory.
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``File.multiple_chunks(chunk_size=None)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Returns ``True`` if the file is large enough to require multiple chunks to
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access all of its content give some ``chunk_size``.
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``File.write(content)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Writes the specified content string to the file. Depending on the storage system
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behind the scenes, this content might not be fully committed until ``close()``
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is called on the file.
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``File.close()``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Close the file.
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.. TODO: document the rest of the File methods.
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Additional ``ImageField`` attributes
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------------------------------------
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``File.width`` and ``File.height``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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These attributes provide the dimensions of the image.
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Additional methods on files attached to objects
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-----------------------------------------------
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Any ``File`` that's associated with an object (as with ``Car.photo``, above)
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will also have a couple of extra methods:
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``File.save(name, content, save=True)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Saves a new file with the file name and contents provided. This will not replace
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the existing file, but will create a new file and update the object to point to
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it. If ``save`` is ``True``, the model's ``save()`` method will be called once
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the file is saved. That is, these two lines::
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>>> car.photo.save('myphoto.jpg', contents, save=False)
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>>> car.save()
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are the same as this one line::
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>>> car.photo.save('myphoto.jpg', contents, save=True)
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``File.delete(save=True)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Remove the file from the model instance and delete the underlying file. The
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``save`` argument works as above.
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File storage
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============
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Behind the scenes, Django delegates decisions about how and where to store files
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to a file storage system. This is the object that actually understands things
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like file systems, opening and reading files, etc.
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Django's default file storage is given by the `DEFAULT_FILE_STORAGE setting`_;
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if you don't explicitly provide a storage system, this is the one that will be
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used.
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.. _default_file_storage setting: ../settings/#default-file-storage
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The built-in filesystem storage class
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-------------------------------------
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Django ships with a built-in ``FileSystemStorage`` class (defined in
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``django.core.files.storage``) which implements basic local filesystem file
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storage. Its initializer takes two arguments:
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====================== ===================================================
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Argument Description
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====================== ===================================================
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``location`` Optional. Absolute path to the directory that will
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hold the files. If omitted, it will be set to the
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value of your ``MEDIA_ROOT`` setting.
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``base_url`` Optional. URL that serves the files stored at this
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location. If omitted, it will default to the value
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of your ``MEDIA_URL`` setting.
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====================== ===================================================
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For example, the following code will store uploaded files under
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``/media/photos`` regardless of what your ``MEDIA_ROOT`` setting is::
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from django.db import models
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from django.core.files.storage import FileSystemStorage
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fs = FileSystemStorage(location='/media/photos')
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class Car(models.Model):
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...
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photo = models.ImageField(storage=fs)
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`Custom storage systems`_ work the same way: you can pass them in as the
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``storage`` argument to a ``FileField``.
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.. _custom storage systems: `writing a custom storage system`_
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Storage objects
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---------------
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Though most of the time you'll want to use a ``File`` object (which delegates to
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the proper storage for that file), you can use file storage systems directly.
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You can create an instance of some custom file storage class, or -- often more
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useful -- you can use the global default storage system::
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>>> from django.core.files.storage import default_storage
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>>> path = default_storage.save('/path/to/file', 'new content')
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>>> path
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u'/path/to/file'
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>>> default_storage.filesize(path)
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11
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>>> default_storage.open(path).read()
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'new content'
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>>> default_storage.delete(path)
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>>> default_storage.exists(path)
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False
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Storage objects define the following methods:
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``Storage.exists(name)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``True`` if a file exists given some ``name``.
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``Storage.path(name)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The local filesystem path where the file can be opened using Python's standard
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``open()``. For storage systems that aren't accessible from the local
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filesystem, this will raise ``NotImplementedError`` instead.
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``Storage.size(name)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Returns the total size, in bytes, of the file referenced by ``name``.
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``Storage.url(name)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Returns the URL where the contents of the file referenced by ``name`` can be
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accessed.
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``Storage.open(name, mode='rb')``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Opens the file given by ``name``. Note that although the returned file is
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guaranteed to be a ``File`` object, it might actually be some subclass. In the
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case of remote file storage this means that reading/writing could be quite slow,
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so be warned.
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``Storage.save(name, content)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Saves a new file using the storage system, preferably with the name specified.
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If there already exists a file with this name ``name``, the storage system may
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modify the filename as necessary to get a unique name. The actual name of the
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stored file will be returned.
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``Storage.delete(name)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Deletes the file referenced by ``name``. This method won't raise an exception if
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the file doesn't exist.
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Writing a custom storage system
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===============================
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If you need to provide custom file storage -- a common example is storing files
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on some remote system -- you can do so by defining a custom storage class.
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You'll need to follow these steps:
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#. Your custom storage system must be a subclass of
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``django.core.files.storage.Storage``::
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from django.core.files.storage import Storage
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class MyStorage(Storage):
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...
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#. Django must be able to instantiate your storage system without any arguments.
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This means that any settings should be taken from ``django.conf.settings``::
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from django.conf import settings
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from django.core.files.storage import Storage
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class MyStorage(Storage):
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def __init__(self, option=None):
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if not option:
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option = settings.CUSTOM_STORAGE_OPTIONS
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...
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#. Your storage class must implement the ``_open()`` and ``_save()`` methods,
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along with any other methods appropriate to your storage class. See below for
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more on these methods.
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In addition, if your class provides local file storage, it must override
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the ``path()`` method.
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Custom storage system methods
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-----------------------------
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Your custom storage system may override any of the storage methods explained
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above in `storage objects`_. However, it's usually better to use the hooks
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specifically designed for custom storage objects. These are:
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``_open(name, mode='rb')``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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**Required**.
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Called by ``Storage.open()``, this is the actual mechanism the storage class
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uses to open the file. This must return a ``File`` object, though in most cases,
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you'll want to return some subclass here that implements logic specific to the
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backend storage system.
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``_save(name, content)``
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Called by ``Storage.save()``. The ``name`` will already have gone through
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``get_valid_name()`` and ``get_available_name()``, and the ``content`` will be a
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``File`` object itself. No return value is expected.
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``get_valid_name(name)``
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------------------------
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Returns a filename suitable for use with the underlying storage system. The
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``name`` argument passed to this method is the original filename sent to the
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server, after having any path information removed. Override this to customize
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how non-standard characters are converted to safe filenames.
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The code provided on ``Storage`` retains only alpha-numeric characters, periods
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and underscores from the original filename, removing everything else.
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``get_available_name(name)``
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----------------------------
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Returns a filename that is available in the storage mechanism, possibly taking
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the provided filename into account. The ``name`` argument passed to this method
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will have already cleaned to a filename valid for the storage system, according
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to the ``get_valid_name()`` method described above.
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The code provided on ``Storage`` simply appends underscores to the filename
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until it finds one that's available in the destination directory.
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