I once did to make a sort of daemon process for a parser built in Python. I needed to watch a series of files and process them in Python, and it had to be a truly multi-OS solution (Windows & Linux in this case). I wrote a program that watches over a list of files by checking their modification time. The program sleeps for a while and then checks the modification time of the files being watched. If the modification time is newer than the one previously registered, then the file has changed and so stuff has to be done with this file.
Something like this:
import os
import time
path = os.path.dirname(__file__)
print "Looking for files in", path, "..."
# get interesting files
files = [{"file" : f} for f in os.listdir(path) if os.path.isfile(f) and os.path.splitext(f)[1].lower() == ".src"]
for f in files:
f["output"] = os.path.splitext(f["file"])[0] + ".out"
f["modtime"] = os.path.getmtime(f["file"]) - 10
print " watching:", f["file"]
while True:
# sleep for a while
time.sleep(0.5)
# check if anything changed
for f in files:
# is mod time of file is newer than the one registered?
if os.path.getmtime(f["file"]) > f["modtime"]:
# store new time and...
f["modtime"] = os.path.getmtime(f["file"])
print f["file"], "has changed..."
# do your stuff here
It does not look like top notch code, but it works quite well.
There are other SO questions about this, but I don't know if they'll provide a direct answer to your question:
How to implement a pythonic equivalent of tail -F?
How do I watch a file for changes?
How can I "watch" a file for modification / change?
Hope this helps!