STAT

Section: System Calls (2)
Index Return to Main Contents

BSD mandoc
BSD 4  

NAME

stat lstat fstat - get file status  

SYNOPSIS

Fd #include <sys/types.h> Fd #include <sys/stat.h> Ft int Fn stat const char *path struct stat *sb Ft int Fn lstat const char *path struct stat *sb Ft int Fn fstat int fd struct stat *sb  

DESCRIPTION

The Fn stat function obtains information about the file pointed to by Fa path . Read, write or execute permission of the named file is not required, but all directories listed in the path name leading to the file must be searchable.

Fn Lstat is like Fn stat except in the case where the named file is a symbolic link, in which case Fn lstat returns information about the link, while Fn stat returns information about the file the link references. Unlike other filesystem objects, symbolic links do not have an owner, group, access mode, times, etc. Instead, these attributes are taken from the directory that contains the link. The only attributes returned from an Fn lstat that refer to the symbolic link itself are the file type (S_IFLNK), size, blocks, and link count (always 1).

The Fn fstat obtains the same information about an open file known by the file descriptor Fa fd .

The Fa sb argument is a pointer to a Fn stat structure as defined by Aq Pa sys/stat.h (shown below) and into which information is placed concerning the file.

struct stat {
    dev_t    st_dev;    /* device inode resides on */
    ino_t    st_ino;    /* inode's number */
    mode_t   st_mode;   /* inode protection mode */
    nlink_t  st_nlink;  /* number or hard links to the file */
    uid_t    st_uid;    /* user-id of owner */
    gid_t    st_gid;    /* group-id of owner */
    dev_t    st_rdev;   /* device type, for special file inode */
    struct timespec st_atimespec;  /* time of last access */
    struct timespec st_mtimespec;  /* time of last data modification */
    struct timespec st_ctimespec;  /* time of last file status change */
    off_t    st_size;   /* file size, in bytes */
    quad_t   st_blocks; /* blocks allocated for file */
    u_long   st_blksize;/* optimal file sys I/O ops blocksize */
    u_long   st_flags;  /* user defined flags for file */
    u_long   st_gen;    /* file generation number */
};

The time-related fields of Fa struct stat are as follows:

st_atime
Time when file data last accessed. Changed by the mknod(2), utimes(2) and read(2) system calls.
st_mtime
Time when file data last modified. Changed by the mknod(2), utimes(2) and write(2) system calls.
st_ctime
Time when file status was last changed (inode data modification). Changed by the chmod(2), chown(2), link(2), mknod(2), rename(2), unlink(2), utimes(2) and write(2) system calls.

The size-related fields of the Fa struct stat are as follows:

st_blksize
The optimal I/O block size for the file.
st_blocks
The actual number of blocks allocated for the file in 512-byte units. As short symbolic links are stored in the inode, this number may be zero.

The status information word Fa st_mode has the following bits:

#define S_IFMT 0170000           /* type of file */
#define        S_IFIFO  0010000  /* named pipe (fifo) */
#define        S_IFCHR  0020000  /* character special */
#define        S_IFDIR  0040000  /* directory */
#define        S_IFBLK  0060000  /* block special */
#define        S_IFREG  0100000  /* regular */
#define        S_IFLNK  0120000  /* symbolic link */
#define        S_IFSOCK 0140000  /* socket */
#define S_ISUID 0004000  /* set user id on execution */
#define S_ISGID 0002000  /* set group id on execution */
#define S_ISVTX 0001000  /* save swapped text even after use */
#define S_IRUSR 0000400  /* read permission, owner */
#define S_IWUSR 0000200  /* write permission, owner */
#define S_IXUSR 0000100  /* execute/search permission, owner */

For a list of access modes, see Aq Pa sys/stat.h , access(2) and chmod(2).  

RETURN VALUES

Upon successful completion a value of 0 is returned. Otherwise, a value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.  

COMPATIBILITY

Previous versions of the system used different types for the st_dev st_uid st_gid st_rdev st_size st_blksize and st_blocks fields.  

ERRORS

Fn Stat and Fn lstat will fail if:

Bq Er ENOTDIR
A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
Bq Er ENAMETOOLONG
A component of a pathname exceeded {NAME_MAX} characters, or an entire path name exceeded {PATH_MAX} characters.
Bq Er ENOENT
The named file does not exist.
Bq Er EACCES
Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix.
Bq Er ELOOP
Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating the pathname.
Bq Er EFAULT
Fa Sb or name points to an invalid address.
Bq Er EIO
An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system.

Fn Fstat will fail if:

Bq Er EBADF
Fa fd is not a valid open file descriptor.
Bq Er EFAULT
Fa Sb points to an invalid address.
Bq Er EIO
An I/O error occurred while reading from or writing to the file system.

 

CAVEAT

The fields in the stat structure currently marked Fa st_spare1 , Fa st_spare2 , and Fa st_spare3 are present in preparation for inode time stamps expanding to 64 bits. This, however, can break certain programs that depend on the time stamps being contiguous (in calls to utimes(2)).  

SEE ALSO

chmod(2), chown(2), utimes(2) symlink(7)  

BUGS

Applying fstat to a socket (and thus to a pipe) returns a zero'd buffer, except for the blocksize field, and a unique device and inode number.  

STANDARDS

The Fn stat and Fn fstat function calls are expected to conform to St -p1003.1-88 .  

HISTORY

A Fn lstat function call appeared in BSD 4.2


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUES
COMPATIBILITY
ERRORS
CAVEAT
SEE ALSO
BUGS
STANDARDS
HISTORY

This document was created by man2html, using the manual pages.
Time: 16:28:59 GMT, April 18, 2022