The data compression provided by the zlib module is compatible with that used by the GNU compression program gzip. Accordingly, the gzip module provides the GzipFile class to read and write gzip-format files, automatically compressing or decompressing the data so it looks like an ordinary file object.
The module defines the following items:
The new class instance is based on fileobj, which can be a regular file, a StringIO object, or any other object which simulates a file. It defaults to None, in which case filename is opened to provide a file object.
When fileobj is not None, the filename argument is only used to be included in the gzip file header, which may includes the original filename of the uncompressed file. It defaults to the filename of fileobj, if discernible; otherwise, it defaults to the empty string, and in this case the original filename is not included in the header.
The mode argument can be either 'r' or 'w', depending on whether the file will be read or written. The default is the mode of fileobj if discernible; otherwise, the default is 'r'.
The compresslevel argument is an integer from 1 to 9 controlling the level of compression; 1 is fastest and produces the least compression, and 9 is slowest and produces the most compression. The default is 9.
Calling a GzipFile object's close() method does not close fileobj, since you might wish to append more material after the compressed data. This also allows you to pass a StringIO object opened for writing as fileobj, and retrieve the resulting memory buffer using the StringIO object's getvalue() method.
See Also:
Module zlib (the basic data compression module)