Availability: Unix.
This module is quite similar to the dbmmodule, but uses gdbm
instead to provide some additional
functionality. Please note that the file formats created by
gdbm
and dbm
are incompatible.
The gdbm module provides an interface to the GNU DBM
library. gdbm
objects behave like mappings
(dictionaries), except that keys and values are always strings.
Printing a gdbm
object doesn't print the keys and values, and
the items() and values() methods are not supported.
The module defines the following constant and functions:
gdbm
-specific errors, such as I/O errors.
KeyError is raised for general mapping errors like
specifying an incorrect key.
filename, [flag, [mode]]) |
gdbm
database and return a gdbm
object. The
filename argument is the name of the database file.
The optional flag argument can be
'r'
(to open an existing database for reading only -- default),
'w'
(to open an existing database for reading and writing),
'c'
(which creates the database if it doesn't exist), or
'n'
(which always creates a new empty database).
The following additional characters may be appended to the flag to control how the database is opened:
'f'
-- Open the database in fast mode. Writes to the database
will not be syncronized.
's'
-- Synchronized mode. This will cause changes to the database
will be immediately written to the file.
'u'
-- Do not lock database.
Not all flags are valid for all versions of gdbm
. The
module constant open_flags
is a string of supported flag
characters. The exception error is raised if an invalid
flag is specified.
The optional mode argument is the Unix mode of the file, used
only when the database has to be created. It defaults to octal
0666
.
In addition to the dictionary-like methods, gdbm
objects have the
following methods:
) |
gdbm
's internal hash values, and won't be sorted by the key
values. This method returns the starting key.
key) |
db
, without
having to create a list in memory that contains them all:
k = db.firstkey() while k != None: print k k = db.nextkey(k)
) |
gdbm
file, this routine will reorganize
the database. gdbm
will not shorten the length of a database
file except by using this reorganization; otherwise, deleted file
space will be kept and reused as new (key, value) pairs are added.
) |
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