On Friday, August 7, 2015 at 9:48:35 AM UTC-7, Peter Pearson wrote: > On Thu, 6 Aug 2015 13:06:36 -0700 (PDT), PK Khatri <pise...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I have a following script which extracts xyz.tgz and outputs to a > > folder which contains several sub-folders and files. > > > > source_dir = "c:\\TEST" > > dest_dir = "c:\\TEST" > > for src_name in glob.glob(os.path.join(source_dir, '*.tgz')): > > base = os.path.basename(src_name) > > dest_name = os.path.join(dest_dir, base[:-4]) > > with tarfile.open(src_name, 'r') as infile: > > infile.extractall(dest_dir) > > > > When above script is ran, the output is a single directory within that > > directory the structure looks like this: > > > > folder_1 > > folder_2 > > folder_n > > file_1 > > file_2 > > file_n > > > > In these folder, there are sub-folders and files. Among those file > > there are some data i am interested in to search and output to a file. > > > > For eg. Among the folders there is a file called > > **'localcli_network-ip-neighbor-list.txt**' which contains IP > > address(s) which I would like to output to a file. > > Are you asking how to determine whether the string > "localcli_network-ip-neighbor-list.txt" appears in a filename? > If so, the logical expression > > "localcli_network-ip-neighbor-list.txt" in filename > > will do the job. > > -- > To email me, substitute nowhere->runbox, invalid->com.
Thanks Peter. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list