Let's say you want to save a bunch of files somewhere, for instance in BLOBs. Let's say you want to dish these files out via a web page and have the client automatically open the correct application/viewer.
Assumption: The browser figures out which application/viewer to use by the mime-type (content-type?) header in the HTTP response.
Based on that assumption, in addition to the bytes of the file, you also want to save the MIME type.
How would you find the MIME type of a file? I'm currently on a Mac, but this should also work on Windows.
Does the browser add this information when posting the file to the web page?
Is there a neat python library for finding this information? A WebService or (even better) a downloadable database?
The python-magic method suggested by toivotuo is outdated. Python-magic's current trunk is at Github and based on the readme there, finding the MIME-type, is done like this.
# For MIME types
import magic
mime = magic.Magic(mime=True)
mime.from_file("testdata/test.pdf") # 'application/pdf'
The mimetypes module in the standard library will determine/guess the MIME type from a file extension.
If users are uploading files the HTTP post will contain the MIME type of the file alongside the data. For example, Django makes this data available as an attribute of the UploadedFile object.
import mimetypes
mimetypes.MimeTypes().guess_type(filename)[0]
mimetypes.guess_type(path_file_to_upload)[1]
python-magic
(as suggested in the top answer) to be even lower, as confirmed by github.com/s3tools/s3cmd/issues/198. So, mimetypes
seems a better candidate for me.
More reliable way than to use the mimetypes library would be to use the python-magic package.
import magic
m = magic.open(magic.MAGIC_MIME)
m.load()
m.file("/tmp/document.pdf")
This would be equivalent to using file(1).
On Django one could also make sure that the MIME type matches that of UploadedFile.content_type.
This seems to be very easy
>>> from mimetypes import MimeTypes
>>> import urllib
>>> mime = MimeTypes()
>>> url = urllib.pathname2url('Upload.xml')
>>> mime_type = mime.guess_type(url)
>>> print mime_type
('application/xml', None)
Please refer Old Post
Update - In python 3+ version, it's more convenient now:
import mimetypes
print(mimetypes.guess_type("sample.html"))
13 year later... Most of the answers on this page for python 3 were either outdated or incomplete. To get the mime type of a file I use:
import mimetypes
mt = mimetypes.guess_type("https://www.w3.org/WAI/ER/tests/xhtml/testfiles/resources/pdf/dummy.pdf")
if mt:
print("Mime Type:", mt[0])
else:
print("Cannot determine Mime Type")
# Mime Type: application/pdf
From Python docs:
mimetypes.guess_type
(url, strict=True)
Guess the type of a file based on its filename, path or URL, given by url. URL can be a string or a path-like object.
The return value is a tuple (type, encoding)
where type is None
if the type can’t be guessed (missing or unknown suffix) or a string of the form 'type/subtype'
, usable for a MIME content-type header.
encoding is None
for no encoding or the name of the program used to encode (e.g. compress or gzip). The encoding is suitable for use as a Content-Encoding header, not as a Content-Transfer-Encoding header. The mappings are table driven. Encoding suffixes are case sensitive; type suffixes are first tried case sensitively, then case insensitively.
The optional strict argument is a flag specifying whether the list of known MIME types is limited to only the official types registered with IANA. When strict is True
(the default), only the IANA types are supported; when strict is False
, some additional non-standard but commonly used MIME types are also recognized.
Changed in version 3.8: Added support for url being a path-like object.
Python bindings to libmagic
All the different answers on this topic are very confusing, so I’m hoping to give a bit more clarity with this overview of the different bindings of libmagic. Previously mammadori gave a short answer listing the available option.
libmagic
module name: magic
pypi: file-magic
source: https://github.com/file/file/tree/master/python
When determining a files mime-type, the tool of choice is simply called file
and its back-end is called libmagic
. (See the Project home page.) The project is developed in a private cvs-repository, but there is a read-only git mirror on github.
Now this tool, which you will need if you want to use any of the libmagic bindings with python, already comes with its own python bindings called file-magic
. There is not much dedicated documentation for them, but you can always have a look at the man page of the c-library: man libmagic
. The basic usage is described in the readme file:
import magic
detected = magic.detect_from_filename('magic.py')
print 'Detected MIME type: {}'.format(detected.mime_type)
print 'Detected encoding: {}'.format(detected.encoding)
print 'Detected file type name: {}'.format(detected.name)
Apart from this, you can also use the library by creating a Magic
object using magic.open(flags)
as shown in the example file.
Both toivotuo and ewr2san use these file-magic
bindings included in the file
tool. They mistakenly assume, they are using the python-magic
package. This seems to indicate, that if both file
and python-magic
are installed, the python module magic
refers to the former one.
python-magic
module name: magic
pypi: python-magic
source: https://github.com/ahupp/python-magic
This is the library that Simon Zimmermann talks about in his answer and which is also employed by Claude COULOMBE as well as Gringo Suave.
filemagic
module name: magic
pypi: filemagic
source: https://github.com/aliles/filemagic
Note: This project was last updated in 2013!
Due to being based on the same c-api, this library has some similarity with file-magic
included in libmagic
. It is only mentioned by mammadori and no other answer employs it.
2017 Update
No need to go to github, it is on PyPi under a different name:
pip3 install --user python-magic
# or:
sudo apt install python3-magic # Ubuntu distro package
The code can be simplified as well:
>>> import magic
>>> magic.from_file('/tmp/img_3304.jpg', mime=True)
'image/jpeg'
There are 3 different libraries that wraps libmagic.
2 of them are available on pypi (so pip install will work):
filemagic
python-magic
And another, similar to python-magic is available directly in the latest libmagic sources, and it is the one you probably have in your linux distribution.
In Debian the package python-magic is about this one and it is used as toivotuo said and it is not obsoleted as Simon Zimmermann said (IMHO).
It seems to me another take (by the original author of libmagic).
Too bad is not available directly on pypi.
pip install -e git://github.com/mammadori/magic-python.git#egg=Magic_file_extensions
in python 2.6:
import shlex
import subprocess
mime = subprocess.Popen("/usr/bin/file --mime " + shlex.quote(PATH), shell=True, \
stdout=subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
file
command is basically just a wrapper around libmagic. You may as well just use the python binding (python-magic), as in Simon's answer.
Popen("/usr/bin/file --mime ".escapeshellarg(PATH));
- for example your code would fail on files containing newlines or quotes, probably also $dollarsign, but it would also protect you against hackers doing PATH='; rm -rfv /
and such shell injection
You didn't state what web server you were using, but Apache has a nice little module called Mime Magic which it uses to determine the type of a file when told to do so. It reads some of the file's content and tries to figure out what type it is based on the characters found. And as Dave Webb Mentioned the MimeTypes Module under python will work, provided an extension is handy.
Alternatively, if you are sitting on a UNIX box you can use sys.popen('file -i ' + fileName, mode='r')
to grab the MIME type. Windows should have an equivalent command, but I'm unsure as to what it is.
@toivotuo 's method worked best and most reliably for me under python3. My goal was to identify gzipped files which do not have a reliable .gz extension. I installed python3-magic.
import magic
filename = "./datasets/test"
def file_mime_type(filename):
m = magic.open(magic.MAGIC_MIME)
m.load()
return(m.file(filename))
print(file_mime_type(filename))
for a gzipped file it returns: application/gzip; charset=binary
for an unzipped txt file (iostat data): text/plain; charset=us-ascii
for a tar file: application/x-tar; charset=binary
for a bz2 file: application/x-bzip2; charset=binary
and last but not least for me a .zip file: application/zip; charset=binary
python 3 ref: https://docs.python.org/3.2/library/mimetypes.html
mimetypes.guess_type(url, strict=True) Guess the type of a file based on its filename or URL, given by url. The return value is a tuple (type, encoding) where type is None if the type can’t be guessed (missing or unknown suffix) or a string of the form 'type/subtype', usable for a MIME content-type header. encoding is None for no encoding or the name of the program used to encode (e.g. compress or gzip). The encoding is suitable for use as a Content-Encoding header, not as a Content-Transfer-Encoding header. The mappings are table driven. Encoding suffixes are case sensitive; type suffixes are first tried case sensitively, then case insensitively. The optional strict argument is a flag specifying whether the list of known MIME types is limited to only the official types registered with IANA. When strict is True (the default), only the IANA types are supported; when strict is False, some additional non-standard but commonly used MIME types are also recognized.
import mimetypes
print(mimetypes.guess_type("sample.html"))
In Python 3.x and webapp with url to the file which couldn't have an extension or a fake extension. You should install python-magic, using
pip3 install python-magic
For Mac OS X, you should also install libmagic using
brew install libmagic
Code snippet
import urllib
import magic
from urllib.request import urlopen
url = "http://...url to the file ..."
request = urllib.request.Request(url)
response = urlopen(request)
mime_type = magic.from_buffer(response.readline())
print(mime_type)
alternatively you could put a size into the read
import urllib
import magic
from urllib.request import urlopen
url = "http://...url to the file ..."
request = urllib.request.Request(url)
response = urlopen(request)
mime_type = magic.from_buffer(response.read(128))
print(mime_type)
I try mimetypes library first. If it's not working, I use python-magic libary instead.
import mimetypes
def guess_type(filename, buffer=None):
mimetype, encoding = mimetypes.guess_type(filename)
if mimetype is None:
try:
import magic
if buffer:
mimetype = magic.from_buffer(buffer, mime=True)
else:
mimetype = magic.from_file(filename, mime=True)
except ImportError:
pass
return mimetype
I'm surprised that nobody has mentioned it but Pygments is able to make an educated guess about the mime-type of, particularly, text documents.
Pygments is actually a Python syntax highlighting library but is has a method that will make an educated guess about which of 500 supported document types your document is. i.e. c++ vs C# vs Python vs etc
import inspect
def _test(text: str):
from pygments.lexers import guess_lexer
lexer = guess_lexer(text)
mimetype = lexer.mimetypes[0] if lexer.mimetypes else None
print(mimetype)
if __name__ == "__main__":
# Set the text to the actual defintion of _test(...) above
text = inspect.getsource(_test)
print('Text:')
print(text)
print()
print('Result:')
_test(text)
Output:
Text:
def _test(text: str):
from pygments.lexers import guess_lexer
lexer = guess_lexer(text)
mimetype = lexer.mimetypes[0] if lexer.mimetypes else None
print(mimetype)
Result:
text/x-python
Now, it's not perfect, but if you need to be able to tell which of 500 document formats are being used, this is pretty darn useful.
The mimetypes module just recognise an file type based on file extension. If you will try to recover a file type of a file without extension, the mimetypes will not works.
For byte Array type data you can use magic.from_buffer(_byte_array,mime=True)
I 've tried a lot of examples but with Django mutagen plays nicely.
Example checking if files is mp3
from mutagen.mp3 import MP3, HeaderNotFoundError
try:
audio = MP3(file)
except HeaderNotFoundError:
raise ValidationError('This file should be mp3')
The downside is that your ability to check file types is limited, but it's a great way if you want not only check for file type but also to access additional information.
Success story sharing
import magic
but have incompatible contents. See stackoverflow.com/a/16203777/3189 for more.