1STAT(2)                       System Calls Manual                      STAT(2)
2
3
4

NAME

6       stat, lstat, fstat - get file status
7

SYNOPSIS

9       #include <sys/types.h>
10       #include <sys/stat.h>
11
12       stat(path, buf)
13       char *path;
14       struct stat *buf;
15
16       lstat(path, buf)
17       char *path;
18       struct stat *buf;
19
20       fstat(fd, buf)
21       int fd;
22       struct stat *buf;
23

DESCRIPTION

25       Stat  obtains  information about the file path.  Read, write or execute
26       permission of the named file  is  not  required,  but  all  directories
27       listed in the path name leading to the file must be reachable.
28
29       Lstat  is  like  stat except in the case where the named file is a sym‐
30       bolic link, in which case lstat returns  information  about  the  link,
31       while stat returns information about the file the link references.
32
33       Fstat obtains the same information about an open file referenced by the
34       argument descriptor, such as would be obtained by an open call.
35
36       Buf is a pointer to a stat structure into which information  is  placed
37       concerning the file.  The contents of the structure pointed to by buf
38
39            struct stat {
40                 dev_t  st_dev; /* device inode resides on */
41                 ino_t  st_ino; /* this inode's number */
42                 u_short        st_mode;/* protection */
43                 short  st_nlink;/* number or hard links to the file */
44                 short  st_uid; /* user-id of owner */
45                 short  st_gid; /* group-id of owner */
46                 dev_t  st_rdev;/* the device type, for inode that is device */
47                 off_t  st_size;/* total size of file */
48                 time_t st_atime;/* file last access time */
49                 int    st_spare1;
50                 time_t st_mtime;/* file last modify time */
51                 int    st_spare2;
52                 time_t st_ctime;/* file last status change time */
53                 int    st_spare3;
54                 long   st_blksize;/* optimal blocksize for file system i/o ops */
55                 long   st_blocks;/* actual number of blocks allocated */
56                 long   st_spare4[2];
57           };
58
59       st_atime    Time  when file data was last read or modified.  Changed by
60                   the following system calls: mknod(2),  utimes(2),  read(2),
61                   and  write(2).   For reasons of efficiency, st_atime is not
62                   set when a directory is searched, although  this  would  be
63                   more logical.
64
65       st_mtime    Time when data was last modified.  It is not set by changes
66                   of owner, group, link count, or mode.  Changed by the  fol‐
67                   lowing system calls: mknod(2), utimes(2), write(2).
68
69       st_ctime    Time  when  file  status  was last changed.  It is set both
70                   both by writing and changing the i-node.   Changed  by  the
71                   following   system   calls:   chmod(2)  chown(2),  link(2),
72                   mknod(2), rename(2), unlink(2), utimes(2), write(2).
73
74       The status information word st_mode has bits:
75            #define S_IFMT  0170000  /* type of file */
76            #define    S_IFDIR       0040000/* directory */
77            #define    S_IFCHR       0020000/* character special */
78            #define    S_IFBLK       0060000/* block special */
79            #define    S_IFREG       0100000/* regular */
80            #define    S_IFLNK       0120000/* symbolic link */
81            #define    S_IFSOCK      0140000/* socket */
82            #define S_ISUID 0004000  /* set user id on execution */
83            #define S_ISGID 0002000  /* set group id on execution */
84            #define S_ISVTX 0001000  /* save swapped text even after use */
85            #define S_IREAD 0000400  /* read permission, owner */
86            #define S_IWRITE         0000200/* write permission, owner */
87            #define S_IEXEC 0000100  /* execute/search permission, owner */
88
89       The mode bits 0000070 and 0000007 encode group and  others  permissions
90       (see chmod(2)).
91

RETURN VALUE

93       Upon  successful  completion  a  value  of 0 is returned.  Otherwise, a
94       value of -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
95

ERRORS

97       Stat and lstat will fail if one or more of the following are true:
98
99       [ENOTDIR]      A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
100
101       [EINVAL]       The pathname contains a character  with  the  high-order
102                      bit set.
103
104       [ENAMETOOLONG] A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or an
105                      entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.
106
107       [ENOENT]       The named file does not exist.
108
109       [EACCES]       Search permission is denied for a component of the  path
110                      prefix.
111
112       [ELOOP]        Too  many symbolic links were encountered in translating
113                      the pathname.
114
115       [EFAULT]       Buf or name points to an invalid address.
116
117       [EIO]          An I/O error occurred while reading from or  writing  to
118                      the file system.
119
120       Fstat will fail if one or both of the following are true:
121
122       [EBADF]        Fildes is not a valid open file descriptor.
123
124       [EFAULT]       Buf points to an invalid address.
125
126       [EIO]          An  I/O  error occurred while reading from or writing to
127                      the file system.
128

CAVEAT

130       The fields in the stat structure currently marked st_spare1, st_spare2,
131       and  st_spare3 are present in preparation for inode time stamps expand‐
132       ing to 64 bits.  This, however, can break certain programs that  depend
133       on the time stamps being contiguous (in calls to utimes(2)).
134

SEE ALSO

136       chmod(2), chown(2), utimes(2)
137

BUGS

139       Applying  fstat  to a socket (and thus to a pipe) returns a zero'd buf‐
140       fer, except for the blocksize field, and a unique device and inode num‐
141       ber.
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1454th Berkeley Distribution        May 12, 1986                          STAT(2)
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