C function to remove a directory [duplicate] - c

How to delete a non empty directory in C or C++? Is there any function? rmdir only deletes empty directory. Please provide a way without using any external library.
Also tell me how to delete a file in C or C++?

You want to write a function (a recursive function is easiest, but can easily run out of stack space on deep directories) that will enumerate the children of a directory. If you find a child that is a directory, you recurse on that. Otherwise, you delete the files inside. When you are done, the directory is empty and you can remove it via the syscall.
To enumerate directories on Unix, you can use opendir(), readdir(), and closedir(). To remove you use rmdir() on an empty directory (i.e. at the end of your function, after deleting the children) and unlink() on a file. Note that on many systems the d_type member in struct dirent is not supported; on these platforms, you will have to use stat() and S_ISDIR(stat.st_mode) to determine if a given path is a directory.
On Windows, you will use FindFirstFile()/FindNextFile() to enumerate, RemoveDirectory() on empty directories, and DeleteFile() to remove files.
Here's an example that might work on Unix (completely untested):
int remove_directory(const char *path) {
DIR *d = opendir(path);
size_t path_len = strlen(path);
int r = -1;
if (d) {
struct dirent *p;
r = 0;
while (!r && (p=readdir(d))) {
int r2 = -1;
char *buf;
size_t len;
/* Skip the names "." and ".." as we don't want to recurse on them. */
if (!strcmp(p->d_name, ".") || !strcmp(p->d_name, ".."))
continue;
len = path_len + strlen(p->d_name) + 2;
buf = malloc(len);
if (buf) {
struct stat statbuf;
snprintf(buf, len, "%s/%s", path, p->d_name);
if (!stat(buf, &statbuf)) {
if (S_ISDIR(statbuf.st_mode))
r2 = remove_directory(buf);
else
r2 = unlink(buf);
}
free(buf);
}
r = r2;
}
closedir(d);
}
if (!r)
r = rmdir(path);
return r;
}

Many unix-like systems (Linux, the BSDs, and OS X, at the very least) have the fts functions for directory traversal.
To recursively delete a directory, perform a depth-first traversal (without following symlinks) and remove every visited file:
int recursive_delete(const char *dir)
{
int ret = 0;
FTS *ftsp = NULL;
FTSENT *curr;
// Cast needed (in C) because fts_open() takes a "char * const *", instead
// of a "const char * const *", which is only allowed in C++. fts_open()
// does not modify the argument.
char *files[] = { (char *) dir, NULL };
// FTS_NOCHDIR - Avoid changing cwd, which could cause unexpected behavior
// in multithreaded programs
// FTS_PHYSICAL - Don't follow symlinks. Prevents deletion of files outside
// of the specified directory
// FTS_XDEV - Don't cross filesystem boundaries
ftsp = fts_open(files, FTS_NOCHDIR | FTS_PHYSICAL | FTS_XDEV, NULL);
if (!ftsp) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: fts_open failed: %s\n", dir, strerror(errno));
ret = -1;
goto finish;
}
while ((curr = fts_read(ftsp))) {
switch (curr->fts_info) {
case FTS_NS:
case FTS_DNR:
case FTS_ERR:
fprintf(stderr, "%s: fts_read error: %s\n",
curr->fts_accpath, strerror(curr->fts_errno));
break;
case FTS_DC:
case FTS_DOT:
case FTS_NSOK:
// Not reached unless FTS_LOGICAL, FTS_SEEDOT, or FTS_NOSTAT were
// passed to fts_open()
break;
case FTS_D:
// Do nothing. Need depth-first search, so directories are deleted
// in FTS_DP
break;
case FTS_DP:
case FTS_F:
case FTS_SL:
case FTS_SLNONE:
case FTS_DEFAULT:
if (remove(curr->fts_accpath) < 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "%s: Failed to remove: %s\n",
curr->fts_path, strerror(curr->fts_errno));
ret = -1;
}
break;
}
}
finish:
if (ftsp) {
fts_close(ftsp);
}
return ret;
}

If you are using a POSIX compliant OS, you could use nftw() for file tree traversal and remove (removes files or directories). If you are in C++ and your project uses boost, it is not a bad idea to use the Boost.Filesystem as suggested by Manuel.
In the code example below I decided not to traverse symbolic links and mount points (just to avoid a grand removal:) ):
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <ftw.h>
static int rmFiles(const char *pathname, const struct stat *sbuf, int type, struct FTW *ftwb)
{
if(remove(pathname) < 0)
{
perror("ERROR: remove");
return -1;
}
return 0;
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
if (argc != 2)
{
fprintf(stderr,"usage: %s path\n",argv[0]);
exit(1);
}
// Delete the directory and its contents by traversing the tree in reverse order, without crossing mount boundaries and symbolic links
if (nftw(argv[1], rmFiles,10, FTW_DEPTH|FTW_MOUNT|FTW_PHYS) < 0)
{
perror("ERROR: ntfw");
exit(1);
}
return 0;
}

The easiest way to do this is with remove_all function of the Boost.Filesystem library. Besides, the resulting code will be portable.
If you want to write something specific for Unix (rmdir) or for Windows (RemoveDirectory) then you'll have to write a function that deletes are subfiles and subfolders recursively.
EDIT
Looks like this question was already asked, in fact someone already recommended Boost's remove_all. So please don't upvote my answer.

C++17 has <experimental\filesystem> which is based on the boost version.
Use std::experimental::filesystem::remove_all to remove recursively.
If you need more control, try std::experimental::filesystem::recursive_directory_iterator.
You can also write your own recursion with the non-resursive version of the iterator.
namespace fs = std::experimental::filesystem;
void IterateRecursively(fs::path path)
{
if (fs::is_directory(path))
{
for (auto & child : fs::directory_iterator(path))
IterateRecursively(child.path());
}
std::cout << path << std::endl;
}

You can use opendir and readdir to read directory entries and unlink to delete them.

//======================================================
// Recursely Delete files using:
// Gnome-Glib & C++11
//======================================================
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <glib.h>
#include <glib/gstdio.h>
using namespace std;
int DirDelete(const string& path)
{
const gchar* p;
GError* gerr;
GDir* d;
int r;
string ps;
string path_i;
cout << "open:" << path << "\n";
d = g_dir_open(path.c_str(), 0, &gerr);
r = -1;
if (d) {
r = 0;
while (!r && (p=g_dir_read_name(d))) {
ps = string{p};
if (ps == "." || ps == "..") {
continue;
}
path_i = path + string{"/"} + p;
if (g_file_test(path_i.c_str(), G_FILE_TEST_IS_DIR) != 0) {
cout << "recurse:" << path_i << "\n";
r = DirDelete(path_i);
}
else {
cout << "unlink:" << path_i << "\n";
r = g_unlink(path_i.c_str());
}
}
g_dir_close(d);
}
if (r == 0) {
r = g_rmdir(path.c_str());
cout << "rmdir:" << path << "\n";
}
return r;
}

How to delete a non empty folder using unlinkat() in c?
Here is my work on it:
/*
* Program to erase the files/subfolders in a directory given as an input
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
void remove_dir_content(const char *path)
{
struct dirent *de;
char fname[300];
DIR *dr = opendir(path);
if(dr == NULL)
{
printf("No file or directory found\n");
return;
}
while((de = readdir(dr)) != NULL)
{
int ret = -1;
struct stat statbuf;
sprintf(fname,"%s/%s",path,de->d_name);
if (!strcmp(de->d_name, ".") || !strcmp(de->d_name, ".."))
continue;
if(!stat(fname, &statbuf))
{
if(S_ISDIR(statbuf.st_mode))
{
printf("Is dir: %s\n",fname);
printf("Err: %d\n",ret = unlinkat(dirfd(dr),fname,AT_REMOVEDIR));
if(ret != 0)
{
remove_dir_content(fname);
printf("Err: %d\n",ret = unlinkat(dirfd(dr),fname,AT_REMOVEDIR));
}
}
else
{
printf("Is file: %s\n",fname);
printf("Err: %d\n",unlink(fname));
}
}
}
closedir(dr);
}
void main()
{
char str[10],str1[20] = "../",fname[300]; // Use str,str1 as your directory path where it's files & subfolders will be deleted.
printf("Enter the dirctory name: ");
scanf("%s",str);
strcat(str1,str);
printf("str1: %s\n",str1);
remove_dir_content(str1); //str1 indicates the directory path
}

This code will open particular directory and iterate over all files and delete them which are under that directory. After that it will delete empty directory at the end.
/**
* #file RemoveDir.c
* #author Om Patel (ompatel1861#gmail.com)
* #brief This program will remove non empty directory.
* #version 0.1
* #date 2022-05-31
*
* #copyright Copyright (c) 2022
*
*/
#include<stdio.h>
#include<string.h>
#include<dirent.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main()
{
DIR* dir = opendir("OUTPUT/Aakash");
struct dirent* entity;
entity = readdir(dir);
while(entity != NULL){
char path[30] ="OUTPUT/Aakash/";
printf("%s\n",entity->d_name);
strcat(path,entity->d_name);
printf("PAth: %s\n",path);
remove(path);
entity = readdir(dir);
}
char path1[30] ="OUTPUT/Aakash";
rmdir(path1);
closedir(dir);
char out[20]="OUTPUT/";
char fol_file[30];
sprintf(fol_file,"%s\\",out);
printf("%s",fol_file);
return 0;
}

Related

Methods to iterate every file in a directory?

I've been looking around for methods by which a directory can be monitored for file creation/modification etc. however all the previous posts I've found for Windows are C++ specific.
Microsoft does list ReadDirectoryChangesW, but this too is for C++ (I haven't the knowledge to assess whether these are compatible for C). I've only knowledge with inotify for Linux, which is fairly straightforward, and wondered if there are any simple examples of the Windows equivalent? (I do not want to use inotify on Windows despite it technically being achievable).
If you are just looking for methods, maybe this will help a bit:
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/c-program-list-files-sub-directories-directory/
(just copy-pasted the code in case)
Tested it on linux machine and it seems to work. Not recursive though.
int main(void)
{
struct dirent *de; /* Pointer for directory entry */
/* opendir() returns a pointer of DIR type. */
DIR *dr = opendir(".");
if (dr == NULL) /* opendir returns NULL if couldn't open directory */
{
printf("Could not open current directory" );
return 0;
}
/* Refer http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/7990989775/xsh/readdir.html
for readdir() */
while ((de = readdir(dr)) != NULL)
printf("%s\n", de->d_name);
closedir(dr);
return 0;
}
Also, see this question if you need to check if a listed file is a directory:
Checking if a dir. entry returned by readdir is a directory, link or file
This method may not be as portable as it seems, but worth a try.
Cheers!
Using FindFirstFile to hit the first node of certain directory, then to call FindNextFile to iterate files one by one inside one directory layer.
Here is my sample code for your reference, there is a recursive funcion.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <string>
static void iterate_dir(std::string dir) {
WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
HANDLE hFind;
std::wstring fn_ws;
std::string fn;
int pos = 0;
int count_bg = 0;
int count_fg = 0;
std::string dir_bkp = dir;
std::string dir_sub;
std::string str_wide_char_for_any = "*.*";
std::string str_folder_node = "..";
if (dir.length() - dir.find_last_of("\\") > 1) //dir ends without "\\"
dir += "\\";
dir += str_wide_char_for_any;
std::wstring dir_wstr = std::wstring(dir.begin(), dir.end());
LPCWSTR dir_wc = dir_wstr.c_str();
hFind = FindFirstFile(dir_wc, &fd);
if (hFind == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
FindClose(hFind);
return;
}
while(true) {
if (!FindNextFile(hFind, &fd)) {
break;
}
if ((fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)) {
fn_ws = std::wstring(fd.cFileName);
fn = std::string(fn_ws.begin(), fn_ws.end());
if (fn.compare(str_folder_node) == 0) {
continue;
}
else {
if ((pos = dir.rfind(str_wide_char_for_any)) != std::string::npos) {
dir_sub = dir;
dir_sub = dir_sub.replace(dir_sub.begin()+pos, dir_sub.end(), fn.begin(), fn.end());
}
else if (dir.length() - (pos = dir.rfind("\\")) > 1) {
dir_sub = dir;
dir_sub += "\\";
dir_sub += fn;
}
else {
dir_sub = dir;
dir_sub += fn;
}
printf("[%s][directory]:%s\n", __func__, dir.c_str());
iterate_dir(dir_sub);
continue;
}
}
else if (fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_ARCHIVE) {
fn_ws = std::wstring(fd.cFileName);
fn = std::string(fn_ws.begin(), fn_ws.end());
printf("[%s][file]:%s\n", __func__, fn.c_str());
}
else {
fn_ws = std::wstring(fd.cFileName);
fn = std::string(fn_ws.begin(), fn_ws.end());
printf("[%s][unspecified attribute file]:%s\n", __func__, fn.c_str());
}
}
FindClose(hFind);
return;
}
You can have a main.cpp like:
int main() {
std::string dir_name("C:\\test");
iterate_dir(dir);
return 0;
}

Return list of strings containing the list of files in a directory in C [duplicate]

How can I determine the list of files in a directory from inside my C or C++ code?
I'm not allowed to execute the ls command and parse the results from within my program.
UPDATE 2017:
In C++17 there is now an official way to list files of your file system: std::filesystem. There is an excellent answer from Shreevardhan below with this source code:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main()
{
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
Old Answer:
In small and simple tasks I do not use boost, I use dirent.h. It is available as a standard header in UNIX, and also available for Windows via a compatibility layer created by Toni Ronkko.
DIR *dir;
struct dirent *ent;
if ((dir = opendir ("c:\\src\\")) != NULL) {
/* print all the files and directories within directory */
while ((ent = readdir (dir)) != NULL) {
printf ("%s\n", ent->d_name);
}
closedir (dir);
} else {
/* could not open directory */
perror ("");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
It is just a small header file and does most of the simple stuff you need without using a big template-based approach like boost (no offence, I like boost!).
C++17 now has a std::filesystem::directory_iterator, which can be used as
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
Also, std::filesystem::recursive_directory_iterator can iterate the subdirectories as well.
Unfortunately the C++ standard does not define a standard way of working with files and folders in this way.
Since there is no cross platform way, the best cross platform way is to use a library such as the boost filesystem module.
Cross platform boost method:
The following function, given a directory path and a file name, recursively searches the directory and its sub-directories for the file name, returning a bool, and if successful, the path to the file that was found.
bool find_file(const path & dir_path, // in this directory,
const std::string & file_name, // search for this name,
path & path_found) // placing path here if found
{
if (!exists(dir_path))
return false;
directory_iterator end_itr; // default construction yields past-the-end
for (directory_iterator itr(dir_path); itr != end_itr; ++itr)
{
if (is_directory(itr->status()))
{
if (find_file(itr->path(), file_name, path_found))
return true;
}
else if (itr->leaf() == file_name) // see below
{
path_found = itr->path();
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
Source from the boost page mentioned above.
For Unix/Linux based systems:
You can use opendir / readdir / closedir.
Sample code which searches a directory for entry ``name'' is:
len = strlen(name);
dirp = opendir(".");
while ((dp = readdir(dirp)) != NULL)
if (dp->d_namlen == len && !strcmp(dp->d_name, name)) {
(void)closedir(dirp);
return FOUND;
}
(void)closedir(dirp);
return NOT_FOUND;
Source code from the above man pages.
For a windows based systems:
You can use the Win32 API FindFirstFile / FindNextFile / FindClose functions.
The following C++ example shows you a minimal use of FindFirstFile.
#include <windows.h>
#include <tchar.h>
#include <stdio.h>
void _tmain(int argc, TCHAR *argv[])
{
WIN32_FIND_DATA FindFileData;
HANDLE hFind;
if( argc != 2 )
{
_tprintf(TEXT("Usage: %s [target_file]\n"), argv[0]);
return;
}
_tprintf (TEXT("Target file is %s\n"), argv[1]);
hFind = FindFirstFile(argv[1], &FindFileData);
if (hFind == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
printf ("FindFirstFile failed (%d)\n", GetLastError());
return;
}
else
{
_tprintf (TEXT("The first file found is %s\n"),
FindFileData.cFileName);
FindClose(hFind);
}
}
Source code from the above msdn pages.
One function is enough, you don't need to use any 3rd-party library (for Windows).
#include <Windows.h>
vector<string> get_all_files_names_within_folder(string folder)
{
vector<string> names;
string search_path = folder + "/*.*";
WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
HANDLE hFind = ::FindFirstFile(search_path.c_str(), &fd);
if(hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
do {
// read all (real) files in current folder
// , delete '!' read other 2 default folder . and ..
if(! (fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) ) {
names.push_back(fd.cFileName);
}
}while(::FindNextFile(hFind, &fd));
::FindClose(hFind);
}
return names;
}
PS: as mentioned by #Sebastian, you could change *.* to *.ext in order to get only the EXT-files (i.e. of a specific type) in that directory.
For a C only solution, please check this out. It only requires an extra header:
https://github.com/cxong/tinydir
tinydir_dir dir;
tinydir_open(&dir, "/path/to/dir");
while (dir.has_next)
{
tinydir_file file;
tinydir_readfile(&dir, &file);
printf("%s", file.name);
if (file.is_dir)
{
printf("/");
}
printf("\n");
tinydir_next(&dir);
}
tinydir_close(&dir);
Some advantages over other options:
It's portable - wraps POSIX dirent and Windows FindFirstFile
It uses readdir_r where available, which means it's (usually) threadsafe
Supports Windows UTF-16 via the same UNICODE macros
It is C90 so even very ancient compilers can use it
I recommend using glob with this reusable wrapper. It generates a vector<string> corresponding to file paths that fit the glob pattern:
#include <glob.h>
#include <vector>
using std::vector;
vector<string> globVector(const string& pattern){
glob_t glob_result;
glob(pattern.c_str(),GLOB_TILDE,NULL,&glob_result);
vector<string> files;
for(unsigned int i=0;i<glob_result.gl_pathc;++i){
files.push_back(string(glob_result.gl_pathv[i]));
}
globfree(&glob_result);
return files;
}
Which can then be called with a normal system wildcard pattern such as:
vector<string> files = globVector("./*");
I think, below snippet can be used to list all the files.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
list_dir("myFolderName");
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
static void list_dir(const char *path) {
struct dirent *entry;
DIR *dir = opendir(path);
if (dir == NULL) {
return;
}
while ((entry = readdir(dir)) != NULL) {
printf("%s\n",entry->d_name);
}
closedir(dir);
}
This is the structure used (present in dirent.h):
struct dirent {
ino_t d_ino; /* inode number */
off_t d_off; /* offset to the next dirent */
unsigned short d_reclen; /* length of this record */
unsigned char d_type; /* type of file */
char d_name[256]; /* filename */
};
Here is a very simple code in C++11 using boost::filesystem library to get file names in a directory (excluding folder names):
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost::filesystem;
int main()
{
path p("D:/AnyFolder");
for (auto i = directory_iterator(p); i != directory_iterator(); i++)
{
if (!is_directory(i->path())) //we eliminate directories
{
cout << i->path().filename().string() << endl;
}
else
continue;
}
}
Output is like:
file1.txt
file2.dat
Why not use glob()?
#include <glob.h>
glob_t glob_result;
glob("/your_directory/*",GLOB_TILDE,NULL,&glob_result);
for(unsigned int i=0; i<glob_result.gl_pathc; ++i){
cout << glob_result.gl_pathv[i] << endl;
}
Try boost for x-platform method
http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_38_0/libs/filesystem/doc/index.htm
or just use your OS specific file stuff.
Check out this class which uses the win32 api. Just construct an instance by providing the foldername from which you want the listing then call the getNextFile method to get the next filename from the directory. I think it needs windows.h and stdio.h.
class FileGetter{
WIN32_FIND_DATAA found;
HANDLE hfind;
char folderstar[255];
int chk;
public:
FileGetter(char* folder){
sprintf(folderstar,"%s\\*.*",folder);
hfind = FindFirstFileA(folderstar,&found);
//skip .
FindNextFileA(hfind,&found);
}
int getNextFile(char* fname){
//skips .. when called for the first time
chk=FindNextFileA(hfind,&found);
if (chk)
strcpy(fname, found.cFileName);
return chk;
}
};
GNU Manual FTW
http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Simple-Directory-Lister.html#Simple-Directory-Lister
Also, sometimes it's good to go right to the source (pun intended). You can learn a lot by looking at the innards of some of the most common commands in Linux. I've set up a simple mirror of GNU's coreutils on github (for reading).
https://github.com/homer6/gnu_coreutils/blob/master/src/ls.c
Maybe this doesn't address Windows, but a number of cases of using Unix variants can be had by using these methods.
Hope that helps...
Shreevardhan answer works great. But if you want to use it in c++14 just make a change namespace fs = experimental::filesystem;
i.e.,
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = experimental::filesystem;
int main()
{
string path = "C:\\splits\\";
for (auto & p : fs::directory_iterator(path))
cout << p << endl;
int n;
cin >> n;
}
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
I hope this code help you.
#include <windows.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
string wchar_t2string(const wchar_t *wchar)
{
string str = "";
int index = 0;
while(wchar[index] != 0)
{
str += (char)wchar[index];
++index;
}
return str;
}
wchar_t *string2wchar_t(const string &str)
{
wchar_t wchar[260];
int index = 0;
while(index < str.size())
{
wchar[index] = (wchar_t)str[index];
++index;
}
wchar[index] = 0;
return wchar;
}
vector<string> listFilesInDirectory(string directoryName)
{
WIN32_FIND_DATA FindFileData;
wchar_t * FileName = string2wchar_t(directoryName);
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile(FileName, &FindFileData);
vector<string> listFileNames;
listFileNames.push_back(wchar_t2string(FindFileData.cFileName));
while (FindNextFile(hFind, &FindFileData))
listFileNames.push_back(wchar_t2string(FindFileData.cFileName));
return listFileNames;
}
void main()
{
vector<string> listFiles;
listFiles = listFilesInDirectory("C:\\*.txt");
for each (string str in listFiles)
cout << str << endl;
}
char **getKeys(char *data_dir, char* tablename, int *num_keys)
{
char** arr = malloc(MAX_RECORDS_PER_TABLE*sizeof(char*));
int i = 0;
for (;i < MAX_RECORDS_PER_TABLE; i++)
arr[i] = malloc( (MAX_KEY_LEN+1) * sizeof(char) );
char *buf = (char *)malloc( (MAX_KEY_LEN+1)*sizeof(char) );
snprintf(buf, MAX_KEY_LEN+1, "%s/%s", data_dir, tablename);
DIR* tableDir = opendir(buf);
struct dirent* getInfo;
readdir(tableDir); // ignore '.'
readdir(tableDir); // ignore '..'
i = 0;
while(1)
{
getInfo = readdir(tableDir);
if (getInfo == 0)
break;
strcpy(arr[i++], getInfo->d_name);
}
*(num_keys) = i;
return arr;
}
This implementation realizes your purpose, dynamically filling an array of strings with the content of the specified directory.
int exploreDirectory(const char *dirpath, char ***list, int *numItems) {
struct dirent **direntList;
int i;
errno = 0;
if ((*numItems = scandir(dirpath, &direntList, NULL, alphasort)) == -1)
return errno;
if (!((*list) = malloc(sizeof(char *) * (*numItems)))) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error in list allocation for file list: dirpath=%s.\n", dirpath);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
for (i = 0; i < *numItems; i++) {
(*list)[i] = stringDuplication(direntList[i]->d_name);
}
for (i = 0; i < *numItems; i++) {
free(direntList[i]);
}
free(direntList);
return 0;
}
This works for me. I'm sorry if I cannot remember the source. It is probably from a man page.
#include <ftw.h>
int AnalizeDirectoryElement (const char *fpath,
const struct stat *sb,
int tflag,
struct FTW *ftwbuf) {
if (tflag == FTW_F) {
std::string strFileName(fpath);
DoSomethingWith(strFileName);
}
return 0;
}
void WalkDirectoryTree (const char * pchFileName) {
int nFlags = 0;
if (nftw(pchFileName, AnalizeDirectoryElement, 20, nFlags) == -1) {
perror("nftw");
}
}
int main() {
WalkDirectoryTree("some_dir/");
}
you can get all direct of files in your root directory by using std::experimental:: filesystem::directory_iterator(). Then, read the name of these pathfiles.
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
#include <string>
#include <direct.h>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = std::experimental::filesystem;
void ShowListFile(string path)
{
for(auto &p: fs::directory_iterator(path)) /*get directory */
cout<<p.path().filename()<<endl; // get file name
}
int main() {
ShowListFile("C:/Users/dell/Pictures/Camera Roll/");
getchar();
return 0;
}
This answer should work for Windows users that have had trouble getting this working with Visual Studio with any of the other answers.
Download the dirent.h file from the github page. But is better to just use the Raw dirent.h file and follow my steps below (it is how I got it to work).
Github page for dirent.h for Windows: Github page for dirent.h
Raw Dirent File: Raw dirent.h File
Go to your project and Add a new Item (Ctrl+Shift+A). Add a header file (.h) and name it dirent.h.
Paste the Raw dirent.h File code into your header.
Include "dirent.h" in your code.
Put the below void filefinder() method in your code and call it from your main function or edit the function how you want to use it.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "dirent.h"
string path = "C:/folder"; //Put a valid path here for folder
void filefinder()
{
DIR *directory = opendir(path.c_str());
struct dirent *direntStruct;
if (directory != NULL) {
while (direntStruct = readdir(directory)) {
printf("File Name: %s\n", direntStruct->d_name); //If you are using <stdio.h>
//std::cout << direntStruct->d_name << std::endl; //If you are using <iostream>
}
}
closedir(directory);
}
I tried to follow the example given in both answers and it might be worth noting that it appears as though std::filesystem::directory_entry has been changed to not have an overload of the << operator. Instead of std::cout << p << std::endl; I had to use the following to be able to compile and get it working:
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
#include <string>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for(const auto& p : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << p.path() << std::endl;
}
trying to pass p on its own to std::cout << resulted in a missing overload error.
Peter Parker's solution, but without using for:
#include <algorithm>
#include <filesystem>
#include <ranges>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
int main() {
vector<filesystem::path> filePaths;
ranges::transform(filesystem::directory_iterator("."),
back_inserter(filePaths), [](const auto& dirFile){return dirFile.path();} );
}
System call it!
system( "dir /b /s /a-d * > file_names.txt" );
Then just read the file.
EDIT: This answer should be considered a hack, but it really does work (albeit in a platform specific way) if you don't have access to more elegant solutions.
Since files and sub directories of a directory are generally stored in a tree structure, an intuitive way is to use DFS algorithm to recursively traverse each of them.
Here is an example in windows operating system by using basic file functions in io.h. You can replace these functions in other platform. What I want to express is that the basic idea of DFS perfectly meets this problem.
#include<io.h>
#include<iostream.h>
#include<string>
using namespace std;
void TraverseFilesUsingDFS(const string& folder_path){
_finddata_t file_info;
string any_file_pattern = folder_path + "\\*";
intptr_t handle = _findfirst(any_file_pattern.c_str(),&file_info);
//If folder_path exsist, using any_file_pattern will find at least two files "." and "..",
//of which "." means current dir and ".." means parent dir
if (handle == -1){
cerr << "folder path not exist: " << folder_path << endl;
exit(-1);
}
//iteratively check each file or sub_directory in current folder
do{
string file_name=file_info.name; //from char array to string
//check whtether it is a sub direcotry or a file
if (file_info.attrib & _A_SUBDIR){
if (file_name != "." && file_name != ".."){
string sub_folder_path = folder_path + "\\" + file_name;
TraverseFilesUsingDFS(sub_folder_path);
cout << "a sub_folder path: " << sub_folder_path << endl;
}
}
else
cout << "file name: " << file_name << endl;
} while (_findnext(handle, &file_info) == 0);
//
_findclose(handle);
}
Building on what herohuyongtao posted and a few other posts:
http://www.cplusplus.com/forum/general/39766/
What is the expected input type of FindFirstFile?
How to convert wstring into string?
This is a Windows solution.
Since I wanted to pass in std::string and return a vector of strings I had to make a couple conversions.
#include <string>
#include <Windows.h>
#include <vector>
#include <locale>
#include <codecvt>
std::vector<std::string> listFilesInDir(std::string path)
{
std::vector<std::string> names;
//Convert string to wstring
std::wstring search_path = std::wstring_convert<std::codecvt_utf8<wchar_t>>().from_bytes(path);
WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile(search_path.c_str(), &fd);
if (hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
do
{
// read all (real) files in current folder
// , delete '!' read other 2 default folder . and ..
if (!(fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY))
{
//convert from wide char to narrow char array
char ch[260];
char DefChar = ' ';
WideCharToMultiByte(CP_ACP, 0, fd.cFileName, -1, ch, 260, &DefChar, NULL);
names.push_back(ch);
}
}
while (::FindNextFile(hFind, &fd));
::FindClose(hFind);
}
return names;
}
Based on the answers above
#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <algorithm>
#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h>
std::vector<std::string> files_in_directory(std::string path)
{
std::vector<std::string> files;
// check directory exists
char fullpath[MAX_PATH];
GetFullPathName(path.c_str(), MAX_PATH, fullpath, 0);
std::string fp(fullpath);
if (GetFileAttributes(fp.c_str()) != FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)
return files;
// get file names
WIN32_FIND_DATA findfiledata;
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile((LPCSTR)(fp + "\\*").c_str(), &findfiledata);
if (hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
do
{
files.push_back(findfiledata.cFileName);
}
while (FindNextFile(hFind, &findfiledata));
FindClose(hFind);
}
// delete current and parent directories
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), "."));
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), ".."));
// sort in alphabetical order
std::sort(files.begin(), files.end());
return files;
}
#else
#include <dirent.h>
std::vector<std::string> files_in_directory(std::string directory)
{
std::vector<std::string> files;
// open directory
DIR *dir;
dir = opendir(directory.c_str());
if (dir == NULL)
return files;
// get file names
struct dirent *ent;
while ((ent = readdir(dir)) != NULL)
files.push_back(ent->d_name);
closedir(dir);
// delete current and parent directories
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), "."));
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), ".."));
// sort in alphabetical order
std::sort(files.begin(), files.end());
return files;
}
#endif // _WIN32
Shreevardhan's design also works great for traversing subdirectories:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = filesystem;
int main()
{
string path = "\\path\\to\\directory";
// string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (auto & p : fs::recursive_directory_iterator(path))
cout << p.path() << endl;
}
Compilation: cl /EHsc /W4 /WX /std:c++17 ListFiles.cpp
Simply in Linux use following ASCI C style code
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
#include <dirent.h>
using namespace std;
int main(){
DIR *dpdf;
struct dirent *epdf;
dpdf = opendir("./");
if (dpdf != NULL){
while (epdf = readdir(dpdf)){
cout << epdf->d_name << std::endl;
}
}
closedir(dpdf);
return 0;
}
Hope this helps!
Just something that I want to share and thank you for the reading material. Play around with the function for a bit to understand it. You may like it. e stood for extension, p is for path, and s is for path separator.
If the path is passed without ending separator, a separator will be appended to the path. For the extension, if an empty string is inputted then the function will return any file that does not have an extension in its name. If a single star was inputted than all files in the directory will be returned. If e length is greater than 0 but is not a single * then a dot will be prepended to e if e had not contained a dot at the zero position.
For a returning value. If a zero-length map is returned then nothing was found but the directory was open okay. If index 999 is available from the return value but the map size is only 1 then that meant there was a problem with opening the directory path.
Note that for efficiency, this function can be split into 3 smaller functions. On top of that, you can create a caller function that will detect which function it is going to call based on the input. Why is that more efficient? Said if you are going to grab everything that is a file, doing that method the subfunction that built for grabbing all the files will just grab all that are files and does not need to evaluate any other unnecessary condition everytime it found a file.
That would also apply to when you grab files that do not have an extension. A specific built function for that purpose would only evaluate for weather if the object found is a file and then whether or not if the name of the file has a dot in it.
The saving may not be much if you only read directories with not so much files. But if you are reading a mass amount of directory or if the directory has couple hundred thousands of files, it could be a huge saving.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <map>
std::map<int, std::string> getFile(std::string p, std::string e = "", unsigned char s = '/'){
if ( p.size() > 0 ){
if (p.back() != s) p += s;
}
if ( e.size() > 0 ){
if ( e.at(0) != '.' && !(e.size() == 1 && e.at(0) == '*') ) e = "." + e;
}
DIR *dir;
struct dirent *ent;
struct stat sb;
std::map<int, std::string> r = {{999, "FAILED"}};
std::string temp;
int f = 0;
bool fd;
if ( (dir = opendir(p.c_str())) != NULL ){
r.erase (999);
while ((ent = readdir (dir)) != NULL){
temp = ent->d_name;
fd = temp.find(".") != std::string::npos? true : false;
temp = p + temp;
if (stat(temp.c_str(), &sb) == 0 && S_ISREG(sb.st_mode)){
if ( e.size() == 1 && e.at(0) == '*' ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
} else {
if (e.size() == 0){
if ( fd == false ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
}
continue;
}
if (e.size() > temp.size()) continue;
if ( temp.substr(temp.size() - e.size()) == e ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
}
}
}
}
closedir(dir);
return r;
} else {
return r;
}
}
void printMap(auto &m){
for (const auto &p : m) {
std::cout << "m[" << p.first << "] = " << p.second << std::endl;
}
}
int main(){
std::map<int, std::string> k = getFile("./", "");
printMap(k);
return 0;
}
#include<iostream>
#include <dirent.h>
using namespace std;
char ROOT[]={'.'};
void listfiles(char* path){
DIR * dirp = opendir(path);
dirent * dp;
while ( (dp = readdir(dirp)) !=NULL ) {
cout << dp->d_name << " size " << dp->d_reclen<<std::endl;
}
(void)closedir(dirp);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
char* path;
if (argc>1) path=argv[1]; else path=ROOT;
cout<<"list files in ["<<path<<"]"<<std::endl;
listfiles(path);
return 0;
}

List files from directory C/C++ [duplicate]

How can I determine the list of files in a directory from inside my C or C++ code?
I'm not allowed to execute the ls command and parse the results from within my program.
UPDATE 2017:
In C++17 there is now an official way to list files of your file system: std::filesystem. There is an excellent answer from Shreevardhan below with this source code:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main()
{
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
Old Answer:
In small and simple tasks I do not use boost, I use dirent.h. It is available as a standard header in UNIX, and also available for Windows via a compatibility layer created by Toni Ronkko.
DIR *dir;
struct dirent *ent;
if ((dir = opendir ("c:\\src\\")) != NULL) {
/* print all the files and directories within directory */
while ((ent = readdir (dir)) != NULL) {
printf ("%s\n", ent->d_name);
}
closedir (dir);
} else {
/* could not open directory */
perror ("");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
It is just a small header file and does most of the simple stuff you need without using a big template-based approach like boost (no offence, I like boost!).
C++17 now has a std::filesystem::directory_iterator, which can be used as
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
Also, std::filesystem::recursive_directory_iterator can iterate the subdirectories as well.
Unfortunately the C++ standard does not define a standard way of working with files and folders in this way.
Since there is no cross platform way, the best cross platform way is to use a library such as the boost filesystem module.
Cross platform boost method:
The following function, given a directory path and a file name, recursively searches the directory and its sub-directories for the file name, returning a bool, and if successful, the path to the file that was found.
bool find_file(const path & dir_path, // in this directory,
const std::string & file_name, // search for this name,
path & path_found) // placing path here if found
{
if (!exists(dir_path))
return false;
directory_iterator end_itr; // default construction yields past-the-end
for (directory_iterator itr(dir_path); itr != end_itr; ++itr)
{
if (is_directory(itr->status()))
{
if (find_file(itr->path(), file_name, path_found))
return true;
}
else if (itr->leaf() == file_name) // see below
{
path_found = itr->path();
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
Source from the boost page mentioned above.
For Unix/Linux based systems:
You can use opendir / readdir / closedir.
Sample code which searches a directory for entry ``name'' is:
len = strlen(name);
dirp = opendir(".");
while ((dp = readdir(dirp)) != NULL)
if (dp->d_namlen == len && !strcmp(dp->d_name, name)) {
(void)closedir(dirp);
return FOUND;
}
(void)closedir(dirp);
return NOT_FOUND;
Source code from the above man pages.
For a windows based systems:
You can use the Win32 API FindFirstFile / FindNextFile / FindClose functions.
The following C++ example shows you a minimal use of FindFirstFile.
#include <windows.h>
#include <tchar.h>
#include <stdio.h>
void _tmain(int argc, TCHAR *argv[])
{
WIN32_FIND_DATA FindFileData;
HANDLE hFind;
if( argc != 2 )
{
_tprintf(TEXT("Usage: %s [target_file]\n"), argv[0]);
return;
}
_tprintf (TEXT("Target file is %s\n"), argv[1]);
hFind = FindFirstFile(argv[1], &FindFileData);
if (hFind == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
printf ("FindFirstFile failed (%d)\n", GetLastError());
return;
}
else
{
_tprintf (TEXT("The first file found is %s\n"),
FindFileData.cFileName);
FindClose(hFind);
}
}
Source code from the above msdn pages.
One function is enough, you don't need to use any 3rd-party library (for Windows).
#include <Windows.h>
vector<string> get_all_files_names_within_folder(string folder)
{
vector<string> names;
string search_path = folder + "/*.*";
WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
HANDLE hFind = ::FindFirstFile(search_path.c_str(), &fd);
if(hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
do {
// read all (real) files in current folder
// , delete '!' read other 2 default folder . and ..
if(! (fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) ) {
names.push_back(fd.cFileName);
}
}while(::FindNextFile(hFind, &fd));
::FindClose(hFind);
}
return names;
}
PS: as mentioned by #Sebastian, you could change *.* to *.ext in order to get only the EXT-files (i.e. of a specific type) in that directory.
For a C only solution, please check this out. It only requires an extra header:
https://github.com/cxong/tinydir
tinydir_dir dir;
tinydir_open(&dir, "/path/to/dir");
while (dir.has_next)
{
tinydir_file file;
tinydir_readfile(&dir, &file);
printf("%s", file.name);
if (file.is_dir)
{
printf("/");
}
printf("\n");
tinydir_next(&dir);
}
tinydir_close(&dir);
Some advantages over other options:
It's portable - wraps POSIX dirent and Windows FindFirstFile
It uses readdir_r where available, which means it's (usually) threadsafe
Supports Windows UTF-16 via the same UNICODE macros
It is C90 so even very ancient compilers can use it
I recommend using glob with this reusable wrapper. It generates a vector<string> corresponding to file paths that fit the glob pattern:
#include <glob.h>
#include <vector>
using std::vector;
vector<string> globVector(const string& pattern){
glob_t glob_result;
glob(pattern.c_str(),GLOB_TILDE,NULL,&glob_result);
vector<string> files;
for(unsigned int i=0;i<glob_result.gl_pathc;++i){
files.push_back(string(glob_result.gl_pathv[i]));
}
globfree(&glob_result);
return files;
}
Which can then be called with a normal system wildcard pattern such as:
vector<string> files = globVector("./*");
I think, below snippet can be used to list all the files.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
list_dir("myFolderName");
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
static void list_dir(const char *path) {
struct dirent *entry;
DIR *dir = opendir(path);
if (dir == NULL) {
return;
}
while ((entry = readdir(dir)) != NULL) {
printf("%s\n",entry->d_name);
}
closedir(dir);
}
This is the structure used (present in dirent.h):
struct dirent {
ino_t d_ino; /* inode number */
off_t d_off; /* offset to the next dirent */
unsigned short d_reclen; /* length of this record */
unsigned char d_type; /* type of file */
char d_name[256]; /* filename */
};
Here is a very simple code in C++11 using boost::filesystem library to get file names in a directory (excluding folder names):
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
using namespace std;
using namespace boost::filesystem;
int main()
{
path p("D:/AnyFolder");
for (auto i = directory_iterator(p); i != directory_iterator(); i++)
{
if (!is_directory(i->path())) //we eliminate directories
{
cout << i->path().filename().string() << endl;
}
else
continue;
}
}
Output is like:
file1.txt
file2.dat
Why not use glob()?
#include <glob.h>
glob_t glob_result;
glob("/your_directory/*",GLOB_TILDE,NULL,&glob_result);
for(unsigned int i=0; i<glob_result.gl_pathc; ++i){
cout << glob_result.gl_pathv[i] << endl;
}
Try boost for x-platform method
http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_38_0/libs/filesystem/doc/index.htm
or just use your OS specific file stuff.
Check out this class which uses the win32 api. Just construct an instance by providing the foldername from which you want the listing then call the getNextFile method to get the next filename from the directory. I think it needs windows.h and stdio.h.
class FileGetter{
WIN32_FIND_DATAA found;
HANDLE hfind;
char folderstar[255];
int chk;
public:
FileGetter(char* folder){
sprintf(folderstar,"%s\\*.*",folder);
hfind = FindFirstFileA(folderstar,&found);
//skip .
FindNextFileA(hfind,&found);
}
int getNextFile(char* fname){
//skips .. when called for the first time
chk=FindNextFileA(hfind,&found);
if (chk)
strcpy(fname, found.cFileName);
return chk;
}
};
GNU Manual FTW
http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/manual/html_node/Simple-Directory-Lister.html#Simple-Directory-Lister
Also, sometimes it's good to go right to the source (pun intended). You can learn a lot by looking at the innards of some of the most common commands in Linux. I've set up a simple mirror of GNU's coreutils on github (for reading).
https://github.com/homer6/gnu_coreutils/blob/master/src/ls.c
Maybe this doesn't address Windows, but a number of cases of using Unix variants can be had by using these methods.
Hope that helps...
Shreevardhan answer works great. But if you want to use it in c++14 just make a change namespace fs = experimental::filesystem;
i.e.,
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = experimental::filesystem;
int main()
{
string path = "C:\\splits\\";
for (auto & p : fs::directory_iterator(path))
cout << p << endl;
int n;
cin >> n;
}
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (const auto & entry : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << entry.path() << std::endl;
}
I hope this code help you.
#include <windows.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
string wchar_t2string(const wchar_t *wchar)
{
string str = "";
int index = 0;
while(wchar[index] != 0)
{
str += (char)wchar[index];
++index;
}
return str;
}
wchar_t *string2wchar_t(const string &str)
{
wchar_t wchar[260];
int index = 0;
while(index < str.size())
{
wchar[index] = (wchar_t)str[index];
++index;
}
wchar[index] = 0;
return wchar;
}
vector<string> listFilesInDirectory(string directoryName)
{
WIN32_FIND_DATA FindFileData;
wchar_t * FileName = string2wchar_t(directoryName);
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile(FileName, &FindFileData);
vector<string> listFileNames;
listFileNames.push_back(wchar_t2string(FindFileData.cFileName));
while (FindNextFile(hFind, &FindFileData))
listFileNames.push_back(wchar_t2string(FindFileData.cFileName));
return listFileNames;
}
void main()
{
vector<string> listFiles;
listFiles = listFilesInDirectory("C:\\*.txt");
for each (string str in listFiles)
cout << str << endl;
}
char **getKeys(char *data_dir, char* tablename, int *num_keys)
{
char** arr = malloc(MAX_RECORDS_PER_TABLE*sizeof(char*));
int i = 0;
for (;i < MAX_RECORDS_PER_TABLE; i++)
arr[i] = malloc( (MAX_KEY_LEN+1) * sizeof(char) );
char *buf = (char *)malloc( (MAX_KEY_LEN+1)*sizeof(char) );
snprintf(buf, MAX_KEY_LEN+1, "%s/%s", data_dir, tablename);
DIR* tableDir = opendir(buf);
struct dirent* getInfo;
readdir(tableDir); // ignore '.'
readdir(tableDir); // ignore '..'
i = 0;
while(1)
{
getInfo = readdir(tableDir);
if (getInfo == 0)
break;
strcpy(arr[i++], getInfo->d_name);
}
*(num_keys) = i;
return arr;
}
This implementation realizes your purpose, dynamically filling an array of strings with the content of the specified directory.
int exploreDirectory(const char *dirpath, char ***list, int *numItems) {
struct dirent **direntList;
int i;
errno = 0;
if ((*numItems = scandir(dirpath, &direntList, NULL, alphasort)) == -1)
return errno;
if (!((*list) = malloc(sizeof(char *) * (*numItems)))) {
fprintf(stderr, "Error in list allocation for file list: dirpath=%s.\n", dirpath);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
for (i = 0; i < *numItems; i++) {
(*list)[i] = stringDuplication(direntList[i]->d_name);
}
for (i = 0; i < *numItems; i++) {
free(direntList[i]);
}
free(direntList);
return 0;
}
This works for me. I'm sorry if I cannot remember the source. It is probably from a man page.
#include <ftw.h>
int AnalizeDirectoryElement (const char *fpath,
const struct stat *sb,
int tflag,
struct FTW *ftwbuf) {
if (tflag == FTW_F) {
std::string strFileName(fpath);
DoSomethingWith(strFileName);
}
return 0;
}
void WalkDirectoryTree (const char * pchFileName) {
int nFlags = 0;
if (nftw(pchFileName, AnalizeDirectoryElement, 20, nFlags) == -1) {
perror("nftw");
}
}
int main() {
WalkDirectoryTree("some_dir/");
}
you can get all direct of files in your root directory by using std::experimental:: filesystem::directory_iterator(). Then, read the name of these pathfiles.
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
#include <string>
#include <direct.h>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = std::experimental::filesystem;
void ShowListFile(string path)
{
for(auto &p: fs::directory_iterator(path)) /*get directory */
cout<<p.path().filename()<<endl; // get file name
}
int main() {
ShowListFile("C:/Users/dell/Pictures/Camera Roll/");
getchar();
return 0;
}
This answer should work for Windows users that have had trouble getting this working with Visual Studio with any of the other answers.
Download the dirent.h file from the github page. But is better to just use the Raw dirent.h file and follow my steps below (it is how I got it to work).
Github page for dirent.h for Windows: Github page for dirent.h
Raw Dirent File: Raw dirent.h File
Go to your project and Add a new Item (Ctrl+Shift+A). Add a header file (.h) and name it dirent.h.
Paste the Raw dirent.h File code into your header.
Include "dirent.h" in your code.
Put the below void filefinder() method in your code and call it from your main function or edit the function how you want to use it.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include "dirent.h"
string path = "C:/folder"; //Put a valid path here for folder
void filefinder()
{
DIR *directory = opendir(path.c_str());
struct dirent *direntStruct;
if (directory != NULL) {
while (direntStruct = readdir(directory)) {
printf("File Name: %s\n", direntStruct->d_name); //If you are using <stdio.h>
//std::cout << direntStruct->d_name << std::endl; //If you are using <iostream>
}
}
closedir(directory);
}
I tried to follow the example given in both answers and it might be worth noting that it appears as though std::filesystem::directory_entry has been changed to not have an overload of the << operator. Instead of std::cout << p << std::endl; I had to use the following to be able to compile and get it working:
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
#include <string>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main() {
std::string path = "/path/to/directory";
for(const auto& p : fs::directory_iterator(path))
std::cout << p.path() << std::endl;
}
trying to pass p on its own to std::cout << resulted in a missing overload error.
Peter Parker's solution, but without using for:
#include <algorithm>
#include <filesystem>
#include <ranges>
#include <vector>
using namespace std;
int main() {
vector<filesystem::path> filePaths;
ranges::transform(filesystem::directory_iterator("."),
back_inserter(filePaths), [](const auto& dirFile){return dirFile.path();} );
}
System call it!
system( "dir /b /s /a-d * > file_names.txt" );
Then just read the file.
EDIT: This answer should be considered a hack, but it really does work (albeit in a platform specific way) if you don't have access to more elegant solutions.
Since files and sub directories of a directory are generally stored in a tree structure, an intuitive way is to use DFS algorithm to recursively traverse each of them.
Here is an example in windows operating system by using basic file functions in io.h. You can replace these functions in other platform. What I want to express is that the basic idea of DFS perfectly meets this problem.
#include<io.h>
#include<iostream.h>
#include<string>
using namespace std;
void TraverseFilesUsingDFS(const string& folder_path){
_finddata_t file_info;
string any_file_pattern = folder_path + "\\*";
intptr_t handle = _findfirst(any_file_pattern.c_str(),&file_info);
//If folder_path exsist, using any_file_pattern will find at least two files "." and "..",
//of which "." means current dir and ".." means parent dir
if (handle == -1){
cerr << "folder path not exist: " << folder_path << endl;
exit(-1);
}
//iteratively check each file or sub_directory in current folder
do{
string file_name=file_info.name; //from char array to string
//check whtether it is a sub direcotry or a file
if (file_info.attrib & _A_SUBDIR){
if (file_name != "." && file_name != ".."){
string sub_folder_path = folder_path + "\\" + file_name;
TraverseFilesUsingDFS(sub_folder_path);
cout << "a sub_folder path: " << sub_folder_path << endl;
}
}
else
cout << "file name: " << file_name << endl;
} while (_findnext(handle, &file_info) == 0);
//
_findclose(handle);
}
Building on what herohuyongtao posted and a few other posts:
http://www.cplusplus.com/forum/general/39766/
What is the expected input type of FindFirstFile?
How to convert wstring into string?
This is a Windows solution.
Since I wanted to pass in std::string and return a vector of strings I had to make a couple conversions.
#include <string>
#include <Windows.h>
#include <vector>
#include <locale>
#include <codecvt>
std::vector<std::string> listFilesInDir(std::string path)
{
std::vector<std::string> names;
//Convert string to wstring
std::wstring search_path = std::wstring_convert<std::codecvt_utf8<wchar_t>>().from_bytes(path);
WIN32_FIND_DATA fd;
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile(search_path.c_str(), &fd);
if (hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
do
{
// read all (real) files in current folder
// , delete '!' read other 2 default folder . and ..
if (!(fd.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY))
{
//convert from wide char to narrow char array
char ch[260];
char DefChar = ' ';
WideCharToMultiByte(CP_ACP, 0, fd.cFileName, -1, ch, 260, &DefChar, NULL);
names.push_back(ch);
}
}
while (::FindNextFile(hFind, &fd));
::FindClose(hFind);
}
return names;
}
Based on the answers above
#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <algorithm>
#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h>
std::vector<std::string> files_in_directory(std::string path)
{
std::vector<std::string> files;
// check directory exists
char fullpath[MAX_PATH];
GetFullPathName(path.c_str(), MAX_PATH, fullpath, 0);
std::string fp(fullpath);
if (GetFileAttributes(fp.c_str()) != FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY)
return files;
// get file names
WIN32_FIND_DATA findfiledata;
HANDLE hFind = FindFirstFile((LPCSTR)(fp + "\\*").c_str(), &findfiledata);
if (hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
do
{
files.push_back(findfiledata.cFileName);
}
while (FindNextFile(hFind, &findfiledata));
FindClose(hFind);
}
// delete current and parent directories
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), "."));
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), ".."));
// sort in alphabetical order
std::sort(files.begin(), files.end());
return files;
}
#else
#include <dirent.h>
std::vector<std::string> files_in_directory(std::string directory)
{
std::vector<std::string> files;
// open directory
DIR *dir;
dir = opendir(directory.c_str());
if (dir == NULL)
return files;
// get file names
struct dirent *ent;
while ((ent = readdir(dir)) != NULL)
files.push_back(ent->d_name);
closedir(dir);
// delete current and parent directories
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), "."));
files.erase(std::find(files.begin(), files.end(), ".."));
// sort in alphabetical order
std::sort(files.begin(), files.end());
return files;
}
#endif // _WIN32
Shreevardhan's design also works great for traversing subdirectories:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
using namespace std;
namespace fs = filesystem;
int main()
{
string path = "\\path\\to\\directory";
// string path = "/path/to/directory";
for (auto & p : fs::recursive_directory_iterator(path))
cout << p.path() << endl;
}
Compilation: cl /EHsc /W4 /WX /std:c++17 ListFiles.cpp
Simply in Linux use following ASCI C style code
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
#include <dirent.h>
using namespace std;
int main(){
DIR *dpdf;
struct dirent *epdf;
dpdf = opendir("./");
if (dpdf != NULL){
while (epdf = readdir(dpdf)){
cout << epdf->d_name << std::endl;
}
}
closedir(dpdf);
return 0;
}
Hope this helps!
Just something that I want to share and thank you for the reading material. Play around with the function for a bit to understand it. You may like it. e stood for extension, p is for path, and s is for path separator.
If the path is passed without ending separator, a separator will be appended to the path. For the extension, if an empty string is inputted then the function will return any file that does not have an extension in its name. If a single star was inputted than all files in the directory will be returned. If e length is greater than 0 but is not a single * then a dot will be prepended to e if e had not contained a dot at the zero position.
For a returning value. If a zero-length map is returned then nothing was found but the directory was open okay. If index 999 is available from the return value but the map size is only 1 then that meant there was a problem with opening the directory path.
Note that for efficiency, this function can be split into 3 smaller functions. On top of that, you can create a caller function that will detect which function it is going to call based on the input. Why is that more efficient? Said if you are going to grab everything that is a file, doing that method the subfunction that built for grabbing all the files will just grab all that are files and does not need to evaluate any other unnecessary condition everytime it found a file.
That would also apply to when you grab files that do not have an extension. A specific built function for that purpose would only evaluate for weather if the object found is a file and then whether or not if the name of the file has a dot in it.
The saving may not be much if you only read directories with not so much files. But if you are reading a mass amount of directory or if the directory has couple hundred thousands of files, it could be a huge saving.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <iostream>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <map>
std::map<int, std::string> getFile(std::string p, std::string e = "", unsigned char s = '/'){
if ( p.size() > 0 ){
if (p.back() != s) p += s;
}
if ( e.size() > 0 ){
if ( e.at(0) != '.' && !(e.size() == 1 && e.at(0) == '*') ) e = "." + e;
}
DIR *dir;
struct dirent *ent;
struct stat sb;
std::map<int, std::string> r = {{999, "FAILED"}};
std::string temp;
int f = 0;
bool fd;
if ( (dir = opendir(p.c_str())) != NULL ){
r.erase (999);
while ((ent = readdir (dir)) != NULL){
temp = ent->d_name;
fd = temp.find(".") != std::string::npos? true : false;
temp = p + temp;
if (stat(temp.c_str(), &sb) == 0 && S_ISREG(sb.st_mode)){
if ( e.size() == 1 && e.at(0) == '*' ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
} else {
if (e.size() == 0){
if ( fd == false ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
}
continue;
}
if (e.size() > temp.size()) continue;
if ( temp.substr(temp.size() - e.size()) == e ){
r[f] = temp;
f++;
}
}
}
}
closedir(dir);
return r;
} else {
return r;
}
}
void printMap(auto &m){
for (const auto &p : m) {
std::cout << "m[" << p.first << "] = " << p.second << std::endl;
}
}
int main(){
std::map<int, std::string> k = getFile("./", "");
printMap(k);
return 0;
}
#include<iostream>
#include <dirent.h>
using namespace std;
char ROOT[]={'.'};
void listfiles(char* path){
DIR * dirp = opendir(path);
dirent * dp;
while ( (dp = readdir(dirp)) !=NULL ) {
cout << dp->d_name << " size " << dp->d_reclen<<std::endl;
}
(void)closedir(dirp);
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
char* path;
if (argc>1) path=argv[1]; else path=ROOT;
cout<<"list files in ["<<path<<"]"<<std::endl;
listfiles(path);
return 0;
}

working with directories in POSIX with C

I will go ahead and say this is a homework assignment for an intro to Linux class. I would not be posting it without extensive attempts on my own, and seeing as I am a distance student this semester, I cannot make it to campus for tutoring. I need some help finding out what the issue is.
Essentially the assignment asks us to make a program that serves the same basic function as the pwd command in POSIX, to show the absolute path for the current directory. We are to use three functions along with main. We are not to use the getcwd command as well. I'll list them and their purpose
inum_to_filename: Accepts three arguments (inode number to translate, a pointer to a buffer where the name is written, and the size of the buffer). Returns nothing. It is to:
Open the current directory,
Read the first directory entry,
If the inode of the current directory matches the one passed in, copy name to buffer and return.
Otherwise read the next directory entry and repeat the previous step.
filename_to_inum: Accepts one argument (a char * representing the filename). It returns the corresponding inode number. It is to:
Read the information from the files inode into a structure in memory.
If there is any problem, display the appropriate error.
Return the inode number from the structure.
display_path: Accepts one argument (inode from the current working directory). It returns nothing. It is to:
Create an array of characters to use as a buffer for the name of the directory.
Get the inode for the parent directory using filename_to_inode.
If the parent inode is equal to the current inode, we have reached root and can return.
Otherwise, change to the parent directory and use inum_to_filename to find the name for the inode that was passed into the function. Use the buffer from step 1 to store it.
Recursively call display_path to display the absolute path.
Here is the code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
void inum_to_filename (int inode_arg, char *pathBuffer, int size_arg) {
DIR *dir_ptr = opendir(".");
struct dirent *dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr);
int counter = 0;
while (counter != 1) {
if (inode_arg == dirent_ptr->d_ino) {
strcat(pathBuffer, "/");
strcat(pathBuffer, dirent_ptr->d_name);
counter = counter + 1;
return;
} else {
dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr);
}
}
closedir(dir_ptr);
}
int filename_to_inum (char *src) {
int res = 0;
struct stat info;
int result = stat(src, &info);
if (result != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Cannot stat ");
perror(src);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
} else {
res = info.st_ino;
}
return res;
}
void display_path (int ino_src) {
int bufSize = 4096;
char pathBuffer[bufSize];
int ino_prnt = filename_to_inum("..");
if (ino_src == ino_prnt) {
//print for test
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
printf("%s", pathBuffer);
return;
} else {
//print for test
chdir("..");
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
display_path(ino_prnt);
printf("%s", pathBuffer);
}
}
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
int c_ino = filename_to_inum(".");
display_path(c_ino);
printf("\n");
}
As of right now it is displaying "/./MyName" with MyName being my personal named directory on the server. It is the directory I am running the program from. When using pwd I return "/home/MyName". I'm not really sure what my next step to getting the absolute path correct is.
The code is mostly set up to print one name at a time in the correct order, so the primary problem is the use of strcat() rather than strcpy(). Also, detecting when you're in the root directory at the start is important; if you don't, you can end up with /. or something similar (depending on exactly how you coordinate the printing) when the current directory is the root directory.
This version of your code has:
Squished the loop in inum_to_filename(), but also added error reporting. Remember, a process can be run in a directory which it does not have permission to get to (it requires a setuid program, usually — although permissions could be changed after the program is launched). In that case, it may fail to open .. (or .).
Lost variable count; it wasn't serving a useful purpose. Using the assign-and-test idiom allows the code to contain a single call to readdir().
Use strcpy() instead of strcat().
Use type ino_t to store inode numbers. Use size_t for sizes.
Reduce number of intermediate variables in filename_to_inum().
Note that the code in the if (ino_src == ino_prnt) statement body is for the root directory; in the absence of the testing print, it would do nothing.
Note that the printing in the else part is a major part of the operations, not just test printing.
Error check chdir("..");
Detect root in main().
Observe that this code is not directly suitable for rewriting into a function because it changes the process's current directory to / when it succeeds.
Revised code:
#include <assert.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <unistd.h>
static void inum_to_filename(ino_t inode_arg, char *pathBuffer, size_t size_arg)
{
assert(size_arg > 0);
DIR *dir_ptr = opendir(".");
if (dir_ptr == 0)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to open directory '.' (%d: %s)\n", errno, strerror(errno));
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
struct dirent *dirent_ptr;
while ((dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr)) != 0)
{
if (inode_arg == dirent_ptr->d_ino)
{
if (strlen(dirent_ptr->d_name) >= size_arg)
{
fprintf(stderr, "File name %s too long (%zu vs %zu max)\n",
dirent_ptr->d_name, strlen(dirent_ptr->d_name), size_arg);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
strcpy(pathBuffer, dirent_ptr->d_name);
break;
}
}
closedir(dir_ptr);
}
static ino_t filename_to_inum(char *src)
{
struct stat info;
if (stat(src, &info) != 0)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Cannot stat ");
perror(src);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
return info.st_ino;
}
static void display_path(ino_t ino_src)
{
size_t bufSize = 4096;
char pathBuffer[bufSize];
ino_t ino_prnt = filename_to_inum("..");
if (ino_src == ino_prnt)
{
// print for test
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
printf("%s", "(root): /\n");
}
else
{
// print for real
if (chdir("..") != 0)
{
fprintf(stderr, "Failed to chdir to .. (%d: %s)\n",
errno, strerror(errno));
}
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
display_path(ino_prnt);
printf("/%s", pathBuffer);
}
}
int main(void)
{
ino_t c_ino = filename_to_inum(".");
ino_t r_ino = filename_to_inum("/");
if (r_ino == c_ino)
putchar('/');
else
display_path(c_ino);
printf("\n");
}
There are undoubtedly other ways to fix this.
Caveat: this is giving me some grief when working in /Volumes/CRUZER/Sub-Directory which is a memory stick. It fails to find the inode (1, which is surprising) when scanning /Volumes, and I've not worked out why. One of my programs — a getpwd implementation — is working fine; another is having a different problem. I expect I'll get to the bottom of it all. Testing on Mac OS X 10.10.5 with GCC 5.1.0.
this is really nice assignment :).
I read and tried your code, and it is almost correct. There were two small issues which were causing the incorrect behaviour.
First issue
When display_path reaches the root folder you don't need to call inum_to_filename and print the name of the folder because you have already printed the first folder of the path in the previous iteration. This prevents your code from showing a "./" in the beginning of the path.
That is, the if condition becomes:
if (ino_src == ino_prnt) {
return;
} else {
chdir("..");
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
display_path(ino_prnt);
printf("%s", pathBuffer);
}
Second Issue:
You're not initializing propertly the buffer where you save the name of the directory. This causes random values to be displayed. To solve this issue you can just set the initial value of the buffer to zero by using memset.
void inum_to_filename (int inode_arg, char *pathBuffer, int size_arg) {
DIR *dir_ptr = opendir(".");
struct dirent *dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr);
int counter = 0;
memset(pathBuffer, 0, size_arg);
while (counter != 1) {
...
}
closedir(dir_ptr);
}
Full code working :
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <dirent.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
void inum_to_filename (int inode_arg, char *pathBuffer, int size_arg) {
DIR *dir_ptr = opendir(".");
struct dirent *dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr);
int counter = 0;
memset(pathBuffer, 0, size_arg);
while (counter != 1) {
if (inode_arg == dirent_ptr->d_ino) {
strcat(pathBuffer, "/");
strcat(pathBuffer, dirent_ptr->d_name);
counter = counter + 1;
return;
} else {
dirent_ptr = readdir(dir_ptr);
}
}
closedir(dir_ptr);
}
int filename_to_inum (char *src) {
int res = 0;
struct stat info;
int result = stat(src, &info);
if (result != 0) {
fprintf(stderr, "Cannot stat ");
perror(src);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
} else {
res = info.st_ino;
}
return res;
}
/*
- Create an array of characters to use as a buffer for the name of the directory.
- Get the inode for the parent directory using filename_to_inode.
- If the parent inode is equal to the current inode, we have reached root and can return.
- Otherwise, change to the parent directory and use inum_to_filename to find the name for
the inode that was passed into the function. Use the buffer from step 1 to store it.
- Recursively call display_path to display the absolute path.
*/
void display_path (int ino_src) {
int bufSize = 4096;
char pathBuffer[bufSize];
int ino_prnt = filename_to_inum("..");
if (ino_src == ino_prnt) {
return;
} else {
chdir("..");
inum_to_filename(ino_src, pathBuffer, bufSize);
display_path(ino_prnt);
printf("%s", pathBuffer);
}
}
int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
int c_ino = filename_to_inum(".");
display_path(c_ino);
printf("\n");
}
Output :
ubuntu#ubuntu-VirtualBox:~/dev$ vi pwd.c
ubuntu#ubuntu-VirtualBox:~/dev$ gcc pwd.c
ubuntu#ubuntu-VirtualBox:~/dev$ ./a.out
/home/ubuntu/dev
ubuntu#ubuntu-VirtualBox:~/dev$ pwd
/home/ubuntu/dev
ubuntu#ubuntu-VirtualBox:~/dev$

Search for a file in $PATH on Linux in C

I would like to test whether GNUPlot is installed on the system on which my program is running.
For that, I figured I'll test for the existence of the gnuplot executable in the user's install locations through stat() call.
However, I don't know how to read the $PATH environment variable in C so I can test for the existence of the file in those locations.
Use the getenv() function.
char *paths = getenv("PATH");
To loop through the parts of the column-separated list of paths, use strchr():
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
char *dup = strdup(getenv("PATH"));
char *s = dup;
char *p = NULL;
do {
p = strchr(s, ':');
if (p != NULL) {
p[0] = 0;
}
printf("Path in $PATH: %s\n", s);
s = p + 1;
} while (p != NULL);
free(dup);
Use getenv() to inspect the value of a particular environment variable.
To read the PATH environment variable, use getenv("PATH").
However, if you just want to run gnuplot if it's available, and perform some fallback action if it's not, then you should just try to run it (e.g. with fork and execvp or posix_spawnp) and handle the failure case.
Let which do the work for you
if (system("which gnuplot"))
/* not installed or not in path or not executable or some other error */
If you need the full path for some reason, run which with popen.
Or run gnuplot with some flag which makes it return immediately with 0 */
if (system("gnuplot --version"))
/* not installed ... */
I had a similar need and resolved it by copying libc execvp code source. I did in the most cross platform I could think of(I have no guatanty and tested just on linux). If it's not such a matter to you and you care about performances, you should use acess or _acess. Note that there is no error check whatsoever and it will just return NULL or a founded openable file in path.
The accepted answer is sometime not acceptable, when you are willing to run the same small binary over and over, redoing the path search every time by calling execvp can be non negligable overhead.
So here is the code and associated tests, you will be mainely interested in the search_in_path_openable_file function.
.h file:
bool is_openable_file(char* path);
/*Return true if path is a readable file. You can call perror if return false to check what happened*/
char* search_in_path_openable_file(char* file_name);
/*Search into PATH env variable a file_name and return the full path of the first that is openable, NULL if not in path*/
char* search_executable(char* file_name);
/*Search file, if not openable and not absolute path(contain /), look for opennable file in the path. If nothing is openable, return NULL. If something is openable, return it as it is (not guaratented to have a full path, but garatanted to be openable)*/
.c file:
#include "file_info.h"
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h> //strcpy
/*I wanted to do a really cross platform way. access or _acess may be better*/
bool is_openable_file(char *path) {
FILE *fp = fopen(path, "r");
if (fp) {
// exists
fclose(fp);
return true;
}
return false;
}
bool is_openable_file_until(char *path_begin, size_t until) {
char old = path_begin[until];
path_begin[until] = 0;
bool res = is_openable_file(path_begin);
path_begin[until] = old;
return res;
}
/*You may thinks that libc would have done this function and use it to implement execp function family, but you would be wrong. They just hardcoded the search in every execp function. Unbelievable.
*
* So this function is a modification of their execvp function.
*
* */
char* search_in_path_openable_file(char* file){
char *path = getenv("PATH");
if (path == NULL)
return NULL;
size_t pathlen = strlen(path);
size_t len = strlen(file) + 1;
int total_max_size=pathlen + len;
char* buf=malloc(sizeof(char)*total_max_size);
if (*file == '\0') {
return NULL;
}
char *name, *p;
/* Copy the file name at the top. */
name = memcpy(buf + pathlen + 1, file, len);
/* And add the slash. */
*--name = '/';
p = path;
do {
char *startp;
path = p;
//Let's avoid this GNU extension.
//p = strchrnul (path, ':');
p = strchr(path, ':');
if (!p)
p = strchr(path, '\0');
if (p == path)
/* Two adjacent colons, or a colon at the beginning or the end
of `PATH' means to search the current directory. */
startp = name + 1;
else
startp = memcpy(name - (p - path), path, p - path);
/* Try to execute this name. If it works, execv will not return. */
if (is_openable_file(startp))
return startp;
} while (*p++ != '\0');
/* We tried every element and none of them worked. */
return NULL;
}
char* search_executable(char* file_name){
if (is_openable_file(file_name)){//See realpath manual bug. Watch out
return file_name;
}
if (strchr (file_name, '/') != NULL) //Don't search when it contains a slash.
return NULL;
return search_in_path_openable_file(file_name);
}
tests (As you see I did not test a lot this function, there may exist some problem, use at your risk):
#include "file_info.h"
#include "munit.h"
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <unistd.h>
static void generate_search_executable(char* test_str, char* expected){
char* res= search_executable(test_str);
if (res==NULL)
munit_assert_ptr(expected,==,NULL );
else
munit_assert_string_equal(expected,res);
}
static void generate_openable(char* test_str, bool expected){
bool res= is_openable_file(test_str);
munit_assert_true(expected==res);
}
static void generate_path_search(char* test_str, char* expected_res){
char* res= search_in_path_openable_file(test_str);
if (res==NULL)
munit_assert_ptr(expected_res,==,NULL );
else
munit_assert_string_equal(expected_res,res);
}
//TODO do for other platform, better test would also set path to a custom folder that we control
#define EXISTING_FILE_NOT_IN_PATH "/usr/include/stdlib.h"
#define EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH "ls"
#define EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH_FULL "/bin/ls"
#define NOT_EXISTING_FILE "/usrarfzsvdvwxv/ixvxwvnxcvcelgude/ssdvtdbool.h"
int main() {
generate_openable(EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH, false);
generate_openable(EXISTING_FILE_NOT_IN_PATH, true);
generate_openable(NOT_EXISTING_FILE, false);
generate_path_search(EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH, EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH_FULL);
generate_path_search(NOT_EXISTING_FILE, NULL);
generate_path_search(EXISTING_FILE_NOT_IN_PATH, NULL);
generate_search_executable(EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH, EXISTING_FILE_IN_PATH_FULL);
generate_search_executable(NOT_EXISTING_FILE, NULL);
generate_search_executable(EXISTING_FILE_NOT_IN_PATH, EXISTING_FILE_NOT_IN_PATH);
generate_search_executable("", NULL );
//test current folder existence(maybe it just depend on path containing .,I am not sure, in that case we should remove thoses tests
generate_search_executable("file_info_test", "file_info_test" );
}
To build on one of the previous answers, you can use getenv to get the contents of PATH and then iterate over its components. Instead of using strchr you can use strsep:
#include <string.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
bool exists(const char fname[])
{
return access(fname, F_OK | X_OK) != -1;
}
bool find_in_path(const char name[], char *fullpath, size_t sz) {
char *paths = strdup(getenv("PATH"));
char *tmp = paths; // to use in free
const char *item;
bool found = false;
while ((item = strsep(&paths, ":")) != NULL) {
snprintf(fullpath, sz, "%s/%s", item, name);
if (exists(fullpath)) {
found = true;
break;
}
}
free(tmp);
return found;
}
int main() {
char fullpath[512];
bool found = find_in_path("uname", fullpath, sizeof(fullpath));
if (found) {
printf("found: %s\n", fullpath);
}
return 0;
}
Using C++17 to get a vector of path elements.
% a.out ls
/bin/ls
#include <iostream>
#include <vector>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <cstring>
#include <unistd.h>
using namespace std;
vector<string> get_paths (string str)
{
vector<string> result;
while(!str.empty())
{
if (auto pos { str.find_first_of (':') }; pos == string::npos)
{
result.push_back(str);
break;
}
else
{
result.emplace_back(str.substr(0, pos));
str.erase(0, pos + 1);
}
}
return move(result);
}
bool exist(const string& fname, int perm=F_OK) { return access(fname.c_str(), perm) == 0; }
int main (int argc, char *argv[])
{
auto result { get_paths(getenv("PATH")) };
for (auto pp : result)
{
string npath { pp };
if (*npath.rbegin() != '/')
npath += '/';
npath += argv[1];
if (exist(npath))
cout << npath << endl;
}
return 0;
}

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