Checking if a directory exists in Unix (system call) Checking if a directory exists in Unix (system call) unix unix

Checking if a directory exists in Unix (system call)


There are two relevant functions on POSIX systems: stat() and lstat(). These are used to find out whether a pathname refers to an actual object that you have permission to access, and if so, the data returned tells you what type of object it is. The difference between stat() and lstat() is that if the name you give is a symbolic link, stat() follows the symbolic link (or links if they are chained together) and reports on the object at the end of the chain of links, whereas lstat() reports on the symbolic link itself.

#include <sys/stat.h>struct stat sb;if (stat(pathname, &sb) == 0 && S_ISDIR(sb.st_mode)){    ...it is a directory...}

If the function indicates it was successful, you use the S_ISDIR() macro from <sys/stat.h> to determine whether the file is actually a directory.

You can also check for other file types using other S_IS* macros:

  • S_ISDIR — directory
  • S_ISREG — regular file
  • S_ISCHR — character device
  • S_ISBLK — block device
  • S_ISFIFO — FIFO
  • S_ISLNK — symbolic link
  • S_ISSOCK — socket

(Some systems provide a few other file types too; S_ISDOOR is available on Solaris, for example.)


You can make use of the stat system call by passing it the name of the directory as the first argument. If the directory exists a 0 is returned else -1 is returned and errno will be set to ENOENT

EDIT:

If the return value is 0 you would need an additional check to ensure that the argument is actually a directory and not a file/symlink/char special file/blk special file/FIFO file. You can make use of the st_mode field of the stat structure for this.


If you don't really care about type of this filesystem object, access(name, F_OK) checks for exsistence of something with this name.If you need to be sure this is directory, use stat() and check type with S_ISDIR() macro.