Split a file name from a path in C - c

I am new to C but skilled in python. I am looking for a functional equivalent of the string.split("/")[-1] function in C. So far I have been able to make a character array that has my whole path. I want to split that string so I only have the file name. Below I have included a sample
char input_file_path [1024]
strcpy(input_file_path, "/this/is/my/file/path.txt")
I want some function that will take input_file_path and just split out the path.txt from it. Thanks!

You're looking for basename(3):
The basename() function returns the last component from the pathname
pointed to by path, deleting any trailing '/' characters.
Example:
#include <libgen.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
char path[] = "/this/is/my/file/path.txt";
char *file = basename(path);
printf("%s\n", file);
return 0;
}
Build & run:
$ make example && ./example
cc example.c -o example
path.txt

Try strtok().
Look it up with the command man strtok. The man pages are a great guide to learn C without having to exit the safety of your command line.

http://en.cppreference.com/w/c/string/byte/strtok
Check here. This is also a good reference for C and C++ code.

In addition to basename on Posix you can also use splitpath on Windows to support multiple platforms conditionally.

Related

How to refer to string content when using ls

I'm working with IRAF, based on SPP, kind of a mix between Fortran and C. I'm looking for a way of referring to a string content when using ls. For example, I can type ls *hola* if I want to list every file containing the word hola in my directory. Supose I have an string called id whose content is the world hola. How could I refer to the content in id? I'm looking for some sort of ls id (I know that construction won't work) which returns the same result as in ls *hola*.
Thank you in advance.
EDIT: SPP is somehow hidden on the Internet but here you have a reference manual https://www.mn.uio.no/astro/english/services/it/help/visualization/iraf/SPPManual.pdf although I haven't found any information there related to this topic.
Using the C side of your SPP thing, if you have access to the C headers, the simple is use something like
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(void)
{
char* command = "ls";
char* args = "*.c";
char line[80];
sprintf( line, " %s %s\n", command, args );
system(line);
};
But in C you have dirent.h where you can find the functions that does this things. Try man opendir on your machine
OPENDIR(3) Linux Programmer's Manual OPENDIR(3)
NAME
opendir, fdopendir - open a directory
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <dirent.h>
DIR *opendir(const char *name);
DIR *fdopendir(int fd);
Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)):
fdopendir():
Since glibc 2.10:
_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200809L
Before glibc 2.10:
_GNU_SOURCE
DESCRIPTION
The opendir() function opens a directory stream corresponding to the directory name, and returns a pointer to
the directory stream. The stream is positioned at the first entry in the directory.
The fdopendir() function is like opendir(), but returns a directory stream for the directory referred to by
the open file descriptor fd. After a successful call to fdopendir(), fd is used internally by the implementa‐
tion, and should not otherwise be used by the application.
RETURN VALUE
...
First, I would recommend not to use SPP (and IRAF) at all. IRAF is out of official maintainance now, and writing new code for a deprecated software is probably a dead end.
Concerning your question: SPP comes with a function fntopnb() for IRAF style access to filename templates. They are documented at pages 101ff. of the SPP manual. A usage example can be found in the sources of pkg/system/files.x of IRAF:
call salloc (fname, SZ_FNAME, TY_CHAR)
list = fntopnb ("*id*", NO)
while (fntgfnb (list, Memc[fname], SZ_FNAME) != EOF) {
call printf ("%s\n")
call pargstr (Memc[fname])
}
call fntclsb (list)

Get program's directory on windows [duplicate]

Is there a platform-agnostic and filesystem-agnostic method to obtain the full path of the directory from where a program is running using C/C++? Not to be confused with the current working directory. (Please don't suggest libraries unless they're standard ones like clib or STL.)
(If there's no platform/filesystem-agnostic method, suggestions that work in Windows and Linux for specific filesystems are welcome too.)
Here's code to get the full path to the executing app:
Variable declarations:
char pBuf[256];
size_t len = sizeof(pBuf);
Windows:
int bytes = GetModuleFileName(NULL, pBuf, len);
return bytes ? bytes : -1;
Linux:
int bytes = MIN(readlink("/proc/self/exe", pBuf, len), len - 1);
if(bytes >= 0)
pBuf[bytes] = '\0';
return bytes;
If you fetch the current directory when your program first starts, then you effectively have the directory your program was started from. Store the value in a variable and refer to it later in your program. This is distinct from the directory that holds the current executable program file. It isn't necessarily the same directory; if someone runs the program from a command prompt, then the program is being run from the command prompt's current working directory even though the program file lives elsewhere.
getcwd is a POSIX function and supported out of the box by all POSIX compliant platforms. You would not have to do anything special (apart from incliding the right headers unistd.h on Unix and direct.h on windows).
Since you are creating a C program it will link with the default c run time library which is linked to by ALL processes in the system (specially crafted exceptions avoided) and it will include this function by default. The CRT is never considered an external library because that provides the basic standard compliant interface to the OS.
On windows getcwd function has been deprecated in favour of _getcwd. I think you could use it in this fashion.
#include <stdio.h> /* defines FILENAME_MAX */
#ifdef WINDOWS
#include <direct.h>
#define GetCurrentDir _getcwd
#else
#include <unistd.h>
#define GetCurrentDir getcwd
#endif
char cCurrentPath[FILENAME_MAX];
if (!GetCurrentDir(cCurrentPath, sizeof(cCurrentPath)))
{
return errno;
}
cCurrentPath[sizeof(cCurrentPath) - 1] = '\0'; /* not really required */
printf ("The current working directory is %s", cCurrentPath);
This is from the cplusplus forum
On windows:
#include <string>
#include <windows.h>
std::string getexepath()
{
char result[ MAX_PATH ];
return std::string( result, GetModuleFileName( NULL, result, MAX_PATH ) );
}
On Linux:
#include <string>
#include <limits.h>
#include <unistd.h>
std::string getexepath()
{
char result[ PATH_MAX ];
ssize_t count = readlink( "/proc/self/exe", result, PATH_MAX );
return std::string( result, (count > 0) ? count : 0 );
}
On HP-UX:
#include <string>
#include <limits.h>
#define _PSTAT64
#include <sys/pstat.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <unistd.h>
std::string getexepath()
{
char result[ PATH_MAX ];
struct pst_status ps;
if (pstat_getproc( &ps, sizeof( ps ), 0, getpid() ) < 0)
return std::string();
if (pstat_getpathname( result, PATH_MAX, &ps.pst_fid_text ) < 0)
return std::string();
return std::string( result );
}
If you want a standard way without libraries: No. The whole concept of a directory is not included in the standard.
If you agree that some (portable) dependency on a near-standard lib is okay: Use Boost's filesystem library and ask for the initial_path().
IMHO that's as close as you can get, with good karma (Boost is a well-established high quality set of libraries)
I know it is very late at the day to throw an answer at this one but I found that none of the answers were as useful to me as my own solution. A very simple way to get the path from your CWD to your bin folder is like this:
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
std::string argv_str(argv[0]);
std::string base = argv_str.substr(0, argv_str.find_last_of("/"));
}
You can now just use this as a base for your relative path. So for example I have this directory structure:
main
----> test
----> src
----> bin
and I want to compile my source code to bin and write a log to test I can just add this line to my code.
std::string pathToWrite = base + "/../test/test.log";
I have tried this approach on Linux using full path, alias etc. and it works just fine.
NOTE:
If you are on windows you should use a '\' as the file separator not '/'. You will have to escape this too for example:
std::string base = argv[0].substr(0, argv[0].find_last_of("\\"));
I think this should work but haven't tested, so comment would be appreciated if it works or a fix if not.
Filesystem TS is now a standard ( and supported by gcc 5.3+ and clang 3.9+ ), so you can use current_path() function from it:
std::string path = std::experimental::filesystem::current_path();
In gcc (5.3+) to include Filesystem you need to use:
#include <experimental/filesystem>
and link your code with -lstdc++fs flag.
If you want to use Filesystem with Microsoft Visual Studio, then read this.
No, there's no standard way. I believe that the C/C++ standards don't even consider the existence of directories (or other file system organizations).
On Windows the GetModuleFileName() will return the full path to the executable file of the current process when the hModule parameter is set to NULL. I can't help with Linux.
Also you should clarify whether you want the current directory or the directory that the program image/executable resides. As it stands your question is a little ambiguous on this point.
On Windows the simplest way is to use the _get_pgmptr function in stdlib.h to get a pointer to a string which represents the absolute path to the executable, including the executables name.
char* path;
_get_pgmptr(&path);
printf(path); // Example output: C:/Projects/Hello/World.exe
Maybe concatenate the current working directory with argv[0]? I'm not sure if that would work in Windows but it works in linux.
For example:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
char the_path[256];
getcwd(the_path, 255);
strcat(the_path, "/");
strcat(the_path, argv[0]);
printf("%s\n", the_path);
return 0;
}
When run, it outputs:
jeremy#jeremy-desktop:~/Desktop$ ./test
/home/jeremy/Desktop/./test
For Win32 GetCurrentDirectory should do the trick.
You can not use argv[0] for that purpose, usually it does contain full path to the executable, but not nessesarily - process could be created with arbitrary value in the field.
Also mind you, the current directory and the directory with the executable are two different things, so getcwd() won't help you either.
On Windows use GetModuleFileName(), on Linux read /dev/proc/procID/.. files.
Just my two cents, but doesn't the following code portably work in C++17?
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
std::cout << "Path is " << fs::path(argv[0]).parent_path() << '\n';
}
Seems to work for me on Linux at least.
Based on the previous idea, I now have:
std::filesystem::path prepend_exe_path(const std::string& filename, const std::string& exe_path = "");
With implementation:
fs::path prepend_exe_path(const std::string& filename, const std::string& exe_path)
{
static auto exe_parent_path = fs::path(exe_path).parent_path();
return exe_parent_path / filename;
}
And initialization trick in main():
(void) prepend_exe_path("", argv[0]);
Thanks #Sam Redway for the argv[0] idea. And of course, I understand that C++17 was not around for many years when the OP asked the question.
Just to belatedly pile on here,...
there is no standard solution, because the languages are agnostic of underlying file systems, so as others have said, the concept of a directory based file system is outside the scope of the c / c++ languages.
on top of that, you want not the current working directory, but the directory the program is running in, which must take into account how the program got to where it is - ie was it spawned as a new process via a fork, etc. To get the directory a program is running in, as the solutions have demonstrated, requires that you get that information from the process control structures of the operating system in question, which is the only authority on this question. Thus, by definition, its an OS specific solution.
#include <windows.h>
using namespace std;
// The directory path returned by native GetCurrentDirectory() no end backslash
string getCurrentDirectoryOnWindows()
{
const unsigned long maxDir = 260;
char currentDir[maxDir];
GetCurrentDirectory(maxDir, currentDir);
return string(currentDir);
}
For Windows system at console you can use system(dir) command. And console gives you information about directory and etc. Read about the dir command at cmd. But for Unix-like systems, I don't know... If this command is run, read bash command. ls does not display directory...
Example:
int main()
{
system("dir");
system("pause"); //this wait for Enter-key-press;
return 0;
}
Works with starting from C++11, using experimental filesystem, and C++14-C++17 as well using official filesystem.
application.h:
#pragma once
//
// https://en.cppreference.com/w/User:D41D8CD98F/feature_testing_macros
//
#ifdef __cpp_lib_filesystem
#include <filesystem>
#else
#include <experimental/filesystem>
namespace std {
namespace filesystem = experimental::filesystem;
}
#endif
std::filesystem::path getexepath();
application.cpp:
#include "application.h"
#ifdef _WIN32
#include <windows.h> //GetModuleFileNameW
#else
#include <limits.h>
#include <unistd.h> //readlink
#endif
std::filesystem::path getexepath()
{
#ifdef _WIN32
wchar_t path[MAX_PATH] = { 0 };
GetModuleFileNameW(NULL, path, MAX_PATH);
return path;
#else
char result[PATH_MAX];
ssize_t count = readlink("/proc/self/exe", result, PATH_MAX);
return std::string(result, (count > 0) ? count : 0);
#endif
}
For relative paths, here's what I did. I am aware of the age of this question, I simply want to contribute a simpler answer that works in the majority of cases:
Say you have a path like this:
"path/to/file/folder"
For some reason, Linux-built executables made in eclipse work fine with this. However, windows gets very confused if given a path like this to work with!
As stated above there are several ways to get the current path to the executable, but the easiest way I find works a charm in the majority of cases is appending this to the FRONT of your path:
"./path/to/file/folder"
Just adding "./" should get you sorted! :) Then you can start loading from whatever directory you wish, so long as it is with the executable itself.
EDIT: This won't work if you try to launch the executable from code::blocks if that's the development environment being used, as for some reason, code::blocks doesn't load stuff right... :D
EDIT2: Some new things I have found is that if you specify a static path like this one in your code (Assuming Example.data is something you need to load):
"resources/Example.data"
If you then launch your app from the actual directory (or in Windows, you make a shortcut, and set the working dir to your app dir) then it will work like that.
Keep this in mind when debugging issues related to missing resource/file paths. (Especially in IDEs that set the wrong working dir when launching a build exe from the IDE)
A library solution (although I know this was not asked for).
If you happen to use Qt:
QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath()
Path to the current .exe
#include <Windows.h>
std::wstring getexepathW()
{
wchar_t result[MAX_PATH];
return std::wstring(result, GetModuleFileNameW(NULL, result, MAX_PATH));
}
std::wcout << getexepathW() << std::endl;
// -------- OR --------
std::string getexepathA()
{
char result[MAX_PATH];
return std::string(result, GetModuleFileNameA(NULL, result, MAX_PATH));
}
std::cout << getexepathA() << std::endl;
On POSIX platforms, you can use getcwd().
On Windows, you may use _getcwd(), as use of getcwd() has been deprecated.
For standard libraries, if Boost were standard enough for you, I would have suggested Boost::filesystem, but they seem to have removed path normalization from the proposal. You may have to wait until TR2 becomes readily available for a fully standard solution.
Boost Filesystem's initial_path() behaves like POSIX's getcwd(), and neither does what you want by itself, but appending argv[0] to either of them should do it.
You may note that the result is not always pretty--you may get things like /foo/bar/../../baz/a.out or /foo/bar//baz/a.out, but I believe that it always results in a valid path which names the executable (note that consecutive slashes in a path are collapsed to one).
I previously wrote a solution using envp (the third argument to main() which worked on Linux but didn't seem workable on Windows, so I'm essentially recommending the same solution as someone else did previously, but with the additional explanation of why it is actually correct even if the results are not pretty.
As Minok mentioned, there is no such functionality specified ini C standard or C++ standard. This is considered to be purely OS-specific feature and it is specified in POSIX standard, for example.
Thorsten79 has given good suggestion, it is Boost.Filesystem library. However, it may be inconvenient in case you don't want to have any link-time dependencies in binary form for your program.
A good alternative I would recommend is collection of 100% headers-only STLSoft C++ Libraries Matthew Wilson (author of must-read books about C++). There is portable facade PlatformSTL gives access to system-specific API: WinSTL for Windows and UnixSTL on Unix, so it is portable solution. All the system-specific elements are specified with use of traits and policies, so it is extensible framework. There is filesystem library provided, of course.
The linux bash command
which progname will report a path to program.
Even if one could issue the which command from within your program and direct the output to a tmp file and the program
subsequently reads that tmp file, it will not tell you if that program is the one executing. It only tells you where a program having that name is located.
What is required is to obtain your process id number, and to parse out the path to the name
In my program I want to know if the program was
executed from the user's bin directory or from another in the path
or from /usr/bin. /usr/bin would contain the supported version.
My feeling is that in Linux there is the one solution that is portable.
Use realpath() in stdlib.h like this:
char *working_dir_path = realpath(".", NULL);
The following worked well for me on macOS 10.15.7
brew install boost
main.cpp
#include <iostream>
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
int main(int argc, char* argv[]){
boost::filesystem::path p{argv[0]};
p = absolute(p).parent_path();
std::cout << p << std::endl;
return 0;
}
Compiling
g++ -Wall -std=c++11 -l boost_filesystem main.cpp
This question was asked 15 years ago, so the existing answers are now incorrect. If you're using C++17 or greater, the solution is very straightforward today:
#include <filesystem>
std::cout << std::filesystem::current_path();
See cppreference.com for more information.

Getting directory of binary in C

How do I get the absolute path to the directory of the currently executing command in C? I'm looking for something similar to the command dirname "$(readlink -f "$0")" in a shell script. For instance, if the C binary is /home/august/foo/bar and it's executed as foo/bar I want to get the result /home/august/foo.
Maybe try POSIX realpath() with argv[0]; something like the following (works on my machine):
#include <limits.h> /* PATH_MAX */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
char buf[PATH_MAX];
char *res = realpath(argv[0], buf);
(void)argc; /* make compiler happy */
if (res) {
printf("Binary is at %s.\n", buf);
} else {
perror("realpath");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
return 0;
}
One alternative to argv[0] and realpath(3) on Linux is to use /proc/self/exe, which is a symbolic link pointing to the executable. You can use readlink(2) to get the pathname from it. See proc(5) for more information.
argv[0] is allowed to be NULL by the way (though this usually wouldn't happen in practice). It is also not guaranteed to contain the path used to run the command, though it will when starting programs from the shell.
I have come to the conclusion that there is no portable way for a commpiled executable to get the path to its directory. The obvious alternative is to pass an environment variable to the executable telling it where it is located.

How can a C program determine and print the location of its own executable?

I want to write a a C program that prints its location.
For example if i put the program exe file to D:\myfolder\myc_prog, it should print the same location D:\myfolder\myc_prog and if I put that exe file to the location E:\mynewfold\ , it should print the updated location E:\mynewfold.
Actually, I have no idea how to do it that's why I'm not able to provide much details for this question.
Since you're using Windows, GetModuleFileName should do the trick. Just pass NULL for the hModule parameter. Be sure to read the documentation carefully if you want to handle long file names (and you typically do). You'll also have to strip the name of the executable to get the directory path. A quick-and-dirty way to do so is to remove everything after the last \.
#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]){
char buff[256];
if(GetCurrentDirectory(256, buff)){//get current directory
printf("%s\n", buff);
}
return 0;
}

unix command result to a variable - char*

How can I assign "pwd" (or any other command in that case) result (present working dir) to a variable which is char*?
command can be anything. Not bounded to just "pwd".
Thanks.
Start with popen. That will let you run a command with its standard output directed to a FILE * that your parent can read. From there it's just a matter of reading its output like you would any normal file (e.g., with fgets, getchar, etc.)
Generally, however, you'd prefer to avoid running an external program for that -- you should have getcwd available, which will give the same result much more directly.
Why not just call getcwd()? It's not part of C's standard library, but it is POSIX, and it's very widely supported.
Anyway, if pwd was just an example, have a look at popen(). That will run an external command and give you a FILE* with which to read its output.
There is a POSIX function, getcwd() for this - I'd use that.
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
char *dir;
dir = getcwd(NULL, 0);
printf("Current directory is: %s\n", dir);
free(dir);
return 0;
}
I'm lazy, and like the NULL, 0 parameters, which is a GNU extension to allocate as large a buffer as necessary to hold the full pathname. (It can probably still fail, if you're buried a few hundred thousand characters deep.)
Because it is allocated for you, you need to free(3) it when you're done. I'm done with it quickly, so I free(3) it quickly, but that might not be how you need to use it.
You can fork and use one of the execv* functions to call pwd from your C program, but getting the result of that would be messy at best.
The proper way to get the current working directory in a C program is to call char* getcwd(char* name, size_t size);

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