For some reason I cannot get cPickle.load to work on the file-type object returned by ZipFile.open(). If I call read() on the file-type object returned by ZipFile.open() I can use cPickle.loads though.
Example ....
import zipfile
import cPickle
# the data we want to store
some_data = {1: 'one', 2: 'two', 3: 'three'}
#
# create a zipped pickle file
#
zf = zipfile.ZipFile('zipped_pickle.zip', 'w', zipfile.ZIP_DEFLATED)
zf.writestr('data.pkl', cPickle.dumps(some_data))
zf.close()
#
# cPickle.loads works
#
zf = zipfile.ZipFile('zipped_pickle.zip', 'r')
sd1 = cPickle.loads(zf.open('data.pkl').read())
zf.close()
#
# cPickle.load doesn't work
#
zf = zipfile.ZipFile('zipped_pickle.zip', 'r')
sd2 = cPickle.load(zf.open('data.pkl'))
zf.close()
Note: I don't want to zip just the pickle file but many files of other types. This is just an example.
It's due to an imperfection in the pseudofile object implemented by the
zipfile
module (for the.open
method of theZipFile
class introduced in Python 2.6). Consider:the sequence of
.read(1)
--.readline()
is what.loads
internally does (on a protocol-0 pickle, the default in Python 2, which is what you're using here). Unfortunatelyzipfile
's imperfection means this particular sequence doesn't work, producing a spurious "end of file" (.read returning an empty string) right after the first read/readline pair.Not sure offhand if this bug in Python's standard library is fixed in Python 2.7 -- I'm going to check.
Edit: just checked -- the bug is fixed in Python 2.7 rc1 (the release candidate that's currently the latest 2.7 version). I don't yet know whether it's fixed in the latest bug-fix release of 2.6 as well.
Edit again: the bug is still there in Python 2.6.5, the latest bug-fix release of Python 2.6 -- so if you can't upgrade to 2.7 and need better-behaving pseudofile objects from
ZipFile.open
, a backport of the 2.7 fix seems the only viable solution.Note that it's not certain you do need better-behaving pseudofile objects; if you control the dump calls and can use the latest-and-greatest protocol, everything will be fine:
it's only old crufty backwards-compatible "protocol 0" (the default) that requires proper pseudofile object behavior when mixing read and readline calls in the
load
(protocol 0 is also slower, and results in larger pickles, so it's definitely not recommended unless backwards compatibility with old Python versions, or the ascii-only nature of the pickles that 0 produces, are mandatory constraints in your application).