12.2. "gzip" — Support for **gzip** files
*****************************************

**Source code:** Lib/gzip.py

======================================================================

This module provides a simple interface to compress and decompress
files just like the GNU programs **gzip** and **gunzip** would.

The data compression is provided by the "zlib" module.

The "gzip" module provides the "GzipFile" class which is modeled after
Python’s File Object. The "GzipFile" class reads and writes
**gzip**-format files, automatically compressing or decompressing the
data so that it looks like an ordinary file object.

Note that additional file formats which can be decompressed by the
**gzip** and **gunzip** programs, such  as those produced by
**compress** and **pack**, are not supported by this module.

The module defines the following items:

class gzip.GzipFile([filename[, mode[, compresslevel[, fileobj[, mtime]]]]])

   Constructor for the "GzipFile" class, which simulates most of the
   methods of a file object, with the exception of the "readinto()"
   and "truncate()" methods.  At least one of *fileobj* and *filename*
   must be given a non-trivial value.

   The new class instance is based on *fileobj*, which can be a
   regular file, a "StringIO" object, or any other object which
   simulates a file.  It defaults to "None", in which case *filename*
   is opened to provide a file object.

   When *fileobj* is not "None", the *filename* argument is only used
   to be included in the **gzip** file header, which may include the
   original filename of the uncompressed file.  It defaults to the
   filename of *fileobj*, if discernible; otherwise, it defaults to
   the empty string, and in this case the original filename is not
   included in the header.

   The *mode* argument can be any of "'r'", "'rb'", "'a'", "'ab'",
   "'w'", or "'wb'", depending on whether the file will be read or
   written.  The default is the mode of *fileobj* if discernible;
   otherwise, the default is "'rb'". If not given, the ‘b’ flag will
   be added to the mode to ensure the file is opened in binary mode
   for cross-platform portability.

   The *compresslevel* argument is an integer from "0" to "9"
   controlling the level of compression; "1" is fastest and produces
   the least compression, and "9" is slowest and produces the most
   compression. "0" is no compression. The default is "9".

   The *mtime* argument is an optional numeric timestamp to be written
   to the stream when compressing.  All **gzip** compressed streams
   are required to contain a timestamp.  If omitted or "None", the
   current time is used.  This module ignores the timestamp when
   decompressing; however, some programs, such as **gunzip**, make use
   of it. The format of the timestamp is the same as that of the
   return value of "time.time()" and of the "st_mtime" attribute of
   the object returned by "os.stat()".

   Calling a "GzipFile" object’s "close()" method does not close
   *fileobj*, since you might wish to append more material after the
   compressed data.  This also allows you to pass a "StringIO" object
   opened for writing as *fileobj*, and retrieve the resulting memory
   buffer using the "StringIO" object’s "getvalue()" method.

   "GzipFile" supports iteration and the "with" statement.

   Changed in version 2.7: Support for the "with" statement was added.

   Changed in version 2.7: Support for zero-padded files was added.

   New in version 2.7: The *mtime* argument.

gzip.open(filename[, mode[, compresslevel]])

   This is a shorthand for "GzipFile(filename," "mode,"
   "compresslevel)". The *filename* argument is required; *mode*
   defaults to "'rb'" and *compresslevel* defaults to "9".


12.2.1. Examples of usage
=========================

Example of how to read a compressed file:

   import gzip
   with gzip.open('file.txt.gz', 'rb') as f:
       file_content = f.read()

Example of how to create a compressed GZIP file:

   import gzip
   content = "Lots of content here"
   with gzip.open('file.txt.gz', 'wb') as f:
       f.write(content)

Example of how to GZIP compress an existing file:

   import gzip
   import shutil
   with open('file.txt', 'rb') as f_in, gzip.open('file.txt.gz', 'wb') as f_out:
       shutil.copyfileobj(f_in, f_out)

See also:

  Module "zlib"
     The basic data compression module needed to support the **gzip**
     file format.
