* @tail_uuid@ identifies the user or role group that receives the permission.
* @head_uuid@ identifies the Arvados object this permission grants access to.
-For details, refer to the "Permissions model documentation":{{ site.baseurl }}/api/permission-model.html. Managing permissions is just a matter of ensuring the desired links exist with the standard @create@, @update@, and @delete@ methods.
+For details, refer to the "Permissions model documentation":{{ site.baseurl }}/api/permission-model.html. Managing permissions is just a matter of ensuring the desired links exist using the standard @create@, @update@, and @delete@ methods.
h3(#grant-permission). Grant permission to an object
h3(#download-a-file-from-a-collection). Download a file from a collection
-Once you have a @Collection@ object, the "@Collection.open@ method":{{ site.baseurl }}/sdk/python/arvados/collection.html#arvados.collection.RichCollectionBase.open lets you open files from a collection the same way you would open files from disk using Python's built-in @open@ function. It returns a file-like object that you can use in many of the same ways you would use any other file object. You can pass it as a source to Python's standard "@shutil.copyfileobj@ function":https://docs.python.org/3/library/shutil.html#shutil.copyfileobj to download it. This code downloads @ExampleFile@ from your collection and saves it to the current working directory as @ExampleDownload@:
+Once you have a @Collection@ object, the "@Collection.open@ method":{{ site.baseurl }}/sdk/python/arvados/collection.html#arvados.collection.RichCollectionBase.open lets you open files from a collection the same way you would open files from disk using Python's built-in @open@ function. You pass a second mode argument like @'rb'@ to open the file in binary mode. It returns a file-like object that you can use in many of the same ways you would use any other file object. You can pass it as a source to Python's standard "@shutil.copyfileobj@ function":https://docs.python.org/3/library/shutil.html#shutil.copyfileobj to download it. This code downloads @ExampleFile@ from your collection and saves it to the current working directory as @ExampleDownload@:
{% codeblock as python %}
import arvados.collection
import shutil
collection = arvados.collection.Collection(...)
with (
- collection.open('ExampleFile') as src_file,
- open('ExampleDownload', 'w') as dst_file,
+ collection.open('ExampleFile', 'rb') as src_file,
+ open('ExampleDownload', 'wb') as dst_file,
):
shutil.copyfileobj(src_file, dst_file)
{% endcodeblock %}
collection = arvados.collection.Collection(...)
with collection.open('ExampleFile', 'w') as my_file:
# Write to my_file as desired.
- # This example writes "Hello, world!" to the file.
+ # This example writes "Hello, Arvados!" to the file.
print("Hello, Arvados!", file=my_file)
collection.save_new(...) # or collection.save() to update an existing collection
{% endcodeblock %}
import shutil
collection = arvados.collection.Collection(...)
with (
- open('ExampleFile') as src_file,
- collection.open('ExampleUpload', 'w') as dst_file,
+ open('ExampleFile', 'rb') as src_file,
+ collection.open('ExampleUpload', 'wb') as dst_file,
):
shutil.copyfileobj(src_file, dst_file)
collection.save_new(...) # or collection.save() to update an existing collection
pprint.pprint(mount_source.get('content'))
{% endcodeblock %}
-h3(#get-input-of-a-cwl-workflow). Get input of a container or CWL workflow run
+h3(#get-input-of-a-cwl-workflow). Get input of a CWL workflow run
When you run a CWL workflow, the CWL inputs are stored in the container request's @mounts@ field as a JSON mount named @/var/lib/cwl/cwl.input.json@.