I need a way to determine the space remaining on a disk volume using python on linux, Windows and OS X. I'm currently parsing the output of the various system calls (df, dir) to accomplish this - is there a better way?
12 Answers
import ctypes
import os
import platform
import sys
def get_free_space_mb(dirname):
"""Return folder/drive free space (in megabytes)."""
if platform.system() == 'Windows':
free_bytes = ctypes.c_ulonglong(0)
ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetDiskFreeSpaceExW(ctypes.c_wchar_p(dirname), None, None, ctypes.pointer(free_bytes))
return free_bytes.value / 1024 / 1024
else:
st = os.statvfs(dirname)
return st.f_bavail * st.f_frsize / 1024 / 1024
Note that you must pass a directory name for GetDiskFreeSpaceEx() to work
(statvfs() works on both files and directories). You can get a directory name
from a file with os.path.dirname().
Also see the documentation for os.statvfs() and GetDiskFreeSpaceEx.
7 Comments
.f_bfree is total number of free blocks in the file system. It should be multiplied by .f_bsize to get number of bytes..f_bsize gives a much too large value as f_bsize is the preferred block size while .f_frsize is the fundamental block size and gives the correct value. On my linux test system both values are identical and thus .f_frsize should work all the time.Install psutil using pip install psutil. Then you can get the amount of free space in bytes using:
import psutil
print(psutil.disk_usage(".").free)
3 Comments
psutil. Since disk_usage.free typically returns a huge 64b integer, I suggest you also want to show people disk_usage.percent. psutil.disk_usage(".").percent < 99.9 seems clearer to me...You could use the wmi module for windows and os.statvfs for unix
for window
import wmi
c = wmi.WMI ()
for d in c.Win32_LogicalDisk():
print( d.Caption, d.FreeSpace, d.Size, d.DriveType)
for unix or linux
from os import statvfs
statvfs(path)
6 Comments
psutil handle it?ctypes is built-in! 😐If you're running python3:
Using shutil.disk_usage()with os.path.realpath('/') name-regularization works:
from os import path
from shutil import disk_usage
print([i / 1000000 for i in disk_usage(path.realpath('/'))])
Or
total_bytes, used_bytes, free_bytes = disk_usage(path.realpath('D:\\Users\\phannypack'))
print(total_bytes / 1000000) # for Mb
print(used_bytes / 1000000)
print(free_bytes / 1000000)
giving you the total, used, & free space in MB.
If you dont like to add another dependency you can for windows use ctypes to call the win32 function call directly.
import ctypes
free_bytes = ctypes.c_ulonglong(0)
ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetDiskFreeSpaceExW(ctypes.c_wchar_p(u'c:\\'), None, None, ctypes.pointer(free_bytes))
if free_bytes.value == 0:
print 'dont panic'
1 Comment
A good cross-platform way is using psutil: http://pythonhosted.org/psutil/#disks (Note that you'll need psutil 0.3.0 or above).
2 Comments
From Python 3.3 you can use shutil.disk_usage("/").free from standard library for both Windows and UNIX :)
Comments
You can use df as a cross-platform way. It is a part of GNU core utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every operating system. However, they are not installed on Windows by default (Here, GetGnuWin32 comes in handy).
df is a command-line utility, therefore a wrapper required for scripting purposes. For example:
from subprocess import PIPE, Popen
def free_volume(filename):
"""Find amount of disk space available to the current user (in bytes)
on the file system containing filename."""
stats = Popen(["df", "-Pk", filename], stdout=PIPE).communicate()[0]
return int(stats.splitlines()[1].split()[3]) * 1024
2 Comments
The os.statvfs() function is a better way to get that information for Unix-like platforms (including OS X). The Python documentation says "Availability: Unix" but it's worth checking whether it works on Windows too in your build of Python (ie. the docs might not be up to date).
Otherwise, you can use the pywin32 library to directly call the GetDiskFreeSpaceEx function.
1 Comment
I Don't know of any cross-platform way to achieve this, but maybe a good workaround for you would be to write a wrapper class that checks the operating system and uses the best method for each.
For Windows, there's the GetDiskFreeSpaceEx method in the win32 extensions.
Comments
Most previous answers are correct, I'm using Python 3.10 and shutil. My use case was Windows and C drive only ( but you should be able to extend this for you Linux and Mac as well (here is the documentation)
Here is the example for Windows:
import shutil
total, used, free = shutil.disk_usage("C:/")
print("Total: %d GiB" % (total // (2**30)))
print("Used: %d GiB" % (used // (2**30)))
print("Free: %d GiB" % (free // (2**30)))