Metadata-Version: 2.1 Name: appdirs Version: 1.4.4 Summary: A small Python module for determining appropriate platform-specific dirs, e.g. a "user data dir". Home-page: http://github.com/ActiveState/appdirs Author: Trent Mick Author-email: trentm@gmail.com Maintainer: Jeff Rouse Maintainer-email: jr@its.to License: MIT Keywords: application directory log cache user Platform: UNKNOWN Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules .. image:: https://secure.travis-ci.org/ActiveState/appdirs.png :target: http://travis-ci.org/ActiveState/appdirs the problem =========== What directory should your app use for storing user data? If running on Mac OS X, you should use:: ~/Library/Application Support/ If on Windows (at least English Win XP) that should be:: C:\Documents and Settings\\Application Data\Local Settings\\ or possibly:: C:\Documents and Settings\\Application Data\\ for `roaming profiles `_ but that is another story. On Linux (and other Unices) the dir, according to the `XDG spec `_, is:: ~/.local/share/ ``appdirs`` to the rescue ========================= This kind of thing is what the ``appdirs`` module is for. ``appdirs`` will help you choose an appropriate: - user data dir (``user_data_dir``) - user config dir (``user_config_dir``) - user cache dir (``user_cache_dir``) - site data dir (``site_data_dir``) - site config dir (``site_config_dir``) - user log dir (``user_log_dir``) and also: - is a single module so other Python packages can include their own private copy - is slightly opinionated on the directory names used. Look for "OPINION" in documentation and code for when an opinion is being applied. some example output =================== On Mac OS X:: >>> from appdirs import * >>> appname = "SuperApp" >>> appauthor = "Acme" >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor) '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp' >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor) '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp' >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor) '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp' >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor) '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp' On Windows 7:: >>> from appdirs import * >>> appname = "SuperApp" >>> appauthor = "Acme" >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor) 'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp' >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor, roaming=True) 'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Roaming\\Acme\\SuperApp' >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor) 'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp\\Cache' >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor) 'C:\\Users\\trentm\\AppData\\Local\\Acme\\SuperApp\\Logs' On Linux:: >>> from appdirs import * >>> appname = "SuperApp" >>> appauthor = "Acme" >>> user_data_dir(appname, appauthor) '/home/trentm/.local/share/SuperApp >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor) '/usr/local/share/SuperApp' >>> site_data_dir(appname, appauthor, multipath=True) '/usr/local/share/SuperApp:/usr/share/SuperApp' >>> user_cache_dir(appname, appauthor) '/home/trentm/.cache/SuperApp' >>> user_log_dir(appname, appauthor) '/home/trentm/.cache/SuperApp/log' >>> user_config_dir(appname) '/home/trentm/.config/SuperApp' >>> site_config_dir(appname) '/etc/xdg/SuperApp' >>> os.environ['XDG_CONFIG_DIRS'] = '/etc:/usr/local/etc' >>> site_config_dir(appname, multipath=True) '/etc/SuperApp:/usr/local/etc/SuperApp' ``AppDirs`` for convenience =========================== :: >>> from appdirs import AppDirs >>> dirs = AppDirs("SuperApp", "Acme") >>> dirs.user_data_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp' >>> dirs.site_data_dir '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp' >>> dirs.user_cache_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp' >>> dirs.user_log_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp' Per-version isolation ===================== If you have multiple versions of your app in use that you want to be able to run side-by-side, then you may want version-isolation for these dirs:: >>> from appdirs import AppDirs >>> dirs = AppDirs("SuperApp", "Acme", version="1.0") >>> dirs.user_data_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0' >>> dirs.site_data_dir '/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0' >>> dirs.user_cache_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Caches/SuperApp/1.0' >>> dirs.user_log_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Logs/SuperApp/1.0' appdirs Changelog ================= appdirs 1.4.4 ------------- - [PR #92] Don't import appdirs from setup.py Project officially classified as Stable which is important for inclusion in other distros such as ActivePython. First of several incremental releases to catch up on maintenance. appdirs 1.4.3 ------------- - [PR #76] Python 3.6 invalid escape sequence deprecation fixes - Fix for Python 3.6 support appdirs 1.4.2 ------------- - [PR #84] Allow installing without setuptools - [PR #86] Fix string delimiters in setup.py description - Add Python 3.6 support appdirs 1.4.1 ------------- - [issue #38] Fix _winreg import on Windows Py3 - [issue #55] Make appname optional appdirs 1.4.0 ------------- - [PR #42] AppAuthor is now optional on Windows - [issue 41] Support Jython on Windows, Mac, and Unix-like platforms. Windows support requires `JNA `_. - [PR #44] Fix incorrect behaviour of the site_config_dir method appdirs 1.3.0 ------------- - [Unix, issue 16] Conform to XDG standard, instead of breaking it for everybody - [Unix] Removes gratuitous case mangling of the case, since \*nix-es are usually case sensitive, so mangling is not wise - [Unix] Fixes the utterly wrong behaviour in ``site_data_dir``, return result based on XDG_DATA_DIRS and make room for respecting the standard which specifies XDG_DATA_DIRS is a multiple-value variable - [Issue 6] Add ``*_config_dir`` which are distinct on nix-es, according to XDG specs; on Windows and Mac return the corresponding ``*_data_dir`` appdirs 1.2.0 ------------- - [Unix] Put ``user_log_dir`` under the *cache* dir on Unix. Seems to be more typical. - [issue 9] Make ``unicode`` work on py3k. appdirs 1.1.0 ------------- - [issue 4] Add ``AppDirs.user_log_dir``. - [Unix, issue 2, issue 7] appdirs now conforms to `XDG base directory spec `_. - [Mac, issue 5] Fix ``site_data_dir()`` on Mac. - [Mac] Drop use of 'Carbon' module in favour of hardcoded paths; supports Python3 now. - [Windows] Append "Cache" to ``user_cache_dir`` on Windows by default. Use ``opinion=False`` option to disable this. - Add ``appdirs.AppDirs`` convenience class. Usage: >>> dirs = AppDirs("SuperApp", "Acme", version="1.0") >>> dirs.user_data_dir '/Users/trentm/Library/Application Support/SuperApp/1.0' - [Windows] Cherry-pick Komodo's change to downgrade paths to the Windows short paths if there are high bit chars. - [Linux] Change default ``user_cache_dir()`` on Linux to be singular, e.g. "~/.superapp/cache". - [Windows] Add ``roaming`` option to ``user_data_dir()`` (for use on Windows only) and change the default ``user_data_dir`` behaviour to use a *non*-roaming profile dir (``CSIDL_LOCAL_APPDATA`` instead of ``CSIDL_APPDATA``). Why? Because a large roaming profile can cause login speed issues. The "only syncs on logout" behaviour can cause surprises in appdata info. appdirs 1.0.1 (never released) ------------------------------ Started this changelog 27 July 2010. Before that this module originated in the `Komodo `_ product as ``applib.py`` and then as `applib/location.py `_ (used by `PyPM `_ in `ActivePython `_). This is basically a fork of applib.py 1.0.1 and applib/location.py 1.0.1.