Python - mechanism to identify compressed file type and uncompress

kumar_m_kiran picture kumar_m_kiran · Oct 24, 2012 · Viewed 19k times · Source

A compressed file can be classified into below logical groups
a. The operating system which you are working on (*ix, Win) etc.
b. Different types of compression algorithm (i.e .zip,.Z,.bz2,.rar,.gzip). Atleast from a standard list of mostly used compressed files.
c. Then we have tar ball mechanism - where I suppose there are no compression. But it acts more like a concatenation.

Now, if we start addressing the above set of compressed files,
a. Option (a) would be taken care by python since it is platform independent language.
b. Option (b) and (c) seems to have a problem.

What do I need
How do I identify the file type (compression type) and then UN-compress them?


Like:

fileType = getFileType(fileName)  
switch(fileType):  
case .rar:  unrar....
case .zip:  unzip....

etc  

So the fundamental question is how do we identify the compression algorithm based on the file (assuming the extension is not provided or incorrect)? Is there any specific way to do it in python?

Answer

Lauritz V. Thaulow picture Lauritz V. Thaulow · Oct 24, 2012

This page has a list of "magic" file signatures. Grab the ones you need and put them in a dict like below. Then we need a function that matches the dict keys with the start of the file. I've written a suggestion, though it can be optimized by preprocessing the magic_dict into e.g. one giant compiled regexp.

magic_dict = {
    "\x1f\x8b\x08": "gz",
    "\x42\x5a\x68": "bz2",
    "\x50\x4b\x03\x04": "zip"
    }

max_len = max(len(x) for x in magic_dict)

def file_type(filename):
    with open(filename) as f:
        file_start = f.read(max_len)
    for magic, filetype in magic_dict.items():
        if file_start.startswith(magic):
            return filetype
    return "no match"

This solution should be cross-plattform and is of course not dependent on file name extension, but it may give false positives for files with random content that just happen to start with some specific magic bytes.