On Tue, 26 Apr 2005 03:40:16 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hello Mike, > I have to know this topic otherwise my program has to check whether the > file / files are already deleted and this is a little bit messy.
I would be fairly confident in asserting that assuming the file is there, you have permissions, etc., basically that the call succeeds, that the file will be gone. os.remove, as the module name implies, tells the OS to do something. I would consider an OS that returned from a "remove" call, but still let you access that file, highly broken. You may be concerned that the OS may not write the fact that the file is deleted to the disk right away. This is very, very possible; OSs have been doing that for a while. If, for some reason, this is a major concern that the system might suddenly lose power and the file may not be truly deleted, you will need to either shut off this feature (it is called "write-behind caching", and shutting it off, or indeed even having the feature at all, is OS-dependent), or get a UPS so that the machine has time to shut down gracefully. HOWEVER... the only time this is a problem is if you are truly concerned about the power spontaneously shutting off. The kernel of your operating system, if indeed it does write-behind caching at all, will make it look to all programs on the system (not just your own) that the file is deleted; and thus, in every sense that matters barring spectacular power failure, it is. So I say, ever if you've heard of write-behind caching and you are perhaps worried about it, you do not need to be; it is intended to be fully transparent to you, and indeed, short of directly asking the OS whether the feature is on, there should be no practical way of figuring out whether it is on at all. All it means is significantly better performance to you programs if they do things like delete a lot of files at once; you don't need to worry that they might "still be there" even after the command is done. This reply somewhat longer than needed for the purposes of education :-) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list