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STAT(2)			      System Calls Manual		       STAT(2)

NAME
       stat, lstat, fstat, fstatat -- get file status

LIBRARY
       Standard	C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<sys/stat.h>

       int
       stat(const char * restrict path,	struct stat * restrict sb);

       int
       lstat(const char	* restrict path, struct	stat * restrict	sb);

       int
       fstat(int fd, struct stat *sb);

       int
       fstatat(int fd, const char *path, struct	stat *sb, int flag);

DESCRIPTION
       The stat() system call obtains information about	the file pointed to by
       path.   Read,  write or execute permission of the named file is not re-
       quired, but all directories listed in the path name leading to the file
       must be searchable.

       The lstat() system call is like stat() except when the named file is  a
       symbolic	 link,	in  which  case	 lstat() returns information about the
       link, while stat() returns information about the	file the  link	refer-
       ences.

       The fstat() system call obtains the same	information about an open file
       known by	the file descriptor fd.

       The  fstatat()  system  call is equivalent to stat() and	lstat()	except
       when the	path specifies a relative path.	 For  fstatat()	 and  relative
       path, the status	is retrieved from a file relative to the directory as-
       sociated	with the file descriptor fd instead of the current working di-
       rectory.

       The  values  for	 the flag are constructed by a bitwise-inclusive OR of
       flags from this list, defined in	<fcntl.h>:

       AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW
	       If path names a symbolic	link, the status of the	symbolic  link
	       is returned.

       AT_RESOLVE_BENEATH
	       Only walk paths below the starting directory.  See the descrip-
	       tion of the O_RESOLVE_BENEATH flag in the open(2) manual	page.

       AT_EMPTY_PATH
	       If the path argument is an empty	string,	operate	on the file or
	       directory  referenced  by the descriptor	fd.  If	fd is equal to
	       AT_FDCWD, operate on the	current	working	directory.

       If fstatat() is passed the special value	AT_FDCWD in the	fd  parameter,
       the  current working directory is used and the behavior is identical to
       a call to stat()	or lstat() respectively, depending on whether  or  not
       the AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW bit is set in flag.

       When fstatat() is called	with an	absolute path, it ignores the fd argu-
       ment.

       The  sb	argument  is  a	 pointer  to  a	 stat  structure as defined by
       <sys/stat.h> and	into which information is placed concerning the	file.

       The fields of struct stat related to the	file system are:

       st_dev	 Numeric ID of the device containing the file.

       st_ino	 The file's inode number.

       st_nlink	 Number	of hard	links to the file.

       st_flags	 Flags enabled for the file.  See chflags(2) for the  list  of
		 flags and their description.

       The st_dev and st_ino fields together identify the file uniquely	within
       the system.

       The time-related	fields of struct stat are:

       st_atim	    Time when file data	was last accessed.  Changed implicitly
		    by	syscalls  such as read(2) and readv(2),	and explicitly
		    by utimes(2).

       st_mtim	    Time when file data	was last modified.  Changed implicitly
		    by syscalls	such as	truncate(2), write(2), and  writev(2),
		    and	explicitly by utimes(2).  Also,	any syscall which mod-
		    ifies  directory  content  changes the st_mtim for the af-
		    fected  directory.	 For  instance,	 creat(2),   mkdir(2),
		    rename(2), link(2),	and unlink(2).

       st_ctim	    Time when file status was last changed (inode data modifi-
		    cation).   Changed	implicitly by any syscall that affects
		    file metadata,  including  st_mtim,	 such  as  chflags(2),
		    chmod(2),  chown(2), truncate(2), utimes(2), and write(2).
		    Also, any syscall which modifies directory content changes
		    the	st_ctim	for the	 affected  directory.	For  instance,
		    creat(2), mkdir(2),	rename(2), link(2), and	unlink(2).

       st_birthtim  Time when the inode	was created.

       These time-related macros are defined for compatibility:

       #define st_atime		       st_atim.tv_sec
       #define st_mtime		       st_mtim.tv_sec
       #define st_ctime		       st_ctim.tv_sec
       #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE
       #define st_birthtime	       st_birthtim.tv_sec
       #endif

       #ifndef _POSIX_SOURCE
       #define st_atimespec	       st_atim
       #define st_mtimespec	       st_mtim
       #define st_ctimespec	       st_ctim
       #define st_birthtimespec	       st_birthtim
       #endif

       Size-related fields of the struct stat are:

       st_size	   File	size in	bytes.

       st_blksize  Optimal I/O block size for the file.

       st_blocks   Actual  number of blocks allocated for the file in 512-byte
		   units.  As short symbolic links are stored  in  the	inode,
		   this	number may be zero.

       The access-related fields of struct stat	are:

       st_uid	User ID	of the file's owner.

       st_gid	Group ID of the	file.

       st_mode	Status of the file (see	below).

       The status information word st_mode has these bits:

       #define S_IFMT	0170000	 /* type of file mask */
       #define S_IFIFO	0010000	 /* named pipe (fifo) */
       #define S_IFCHR	0020000	 /* character special */
       #define S_IFDIR	0040000	 /* directory */
       #define S_IFBLK	0060000	 /* block special */
       #define S_IFREG	0100000	 /* regular */
       #define S_IFLNK	0120000	 /* symbolic link */
       #define S_IFSOCK	0140000	 /* socket */
       #define S_IFWHT	0160000	 /* whiteout */
       #define S_ISUID	0004000	 /* set	user id	on execution */
       #define S_ISGID	0002000	 /* set	group id on execution */
       #define S_ISVTX	0001000	 /* save swapped text even after use */
       #define S_IRWXU	0000700	 /* RWX	mask for owner */
       #define S_IRUSR	0000400	 /* read permission, owner */
       #define S_IWUSR	0000200	 /* write permission, owner */
       #define S_IXUSR	0000100	 /* execute/search permission, owner */
       #define S_IRWXG	0000070	 /* RWX	mask for group */
       #define S_IRGRP	0000040	 /* read permission, group */
       #define S_IWGRP	0000020	 /* write permission, group */
       #define S_IXGRP	0000010	 /* execute/search permission, group */
       #define S_IRWXO	0000007	 /* RWX	mask for other */
       #define S_IROTH	0000004	 /* read permission, other */
       #define S_IWOTH	0000002	 /* write permission, other */
       #define S_IXOTH	0000001	 /* execute/search permission, other */

       For  a  list of access modes, see <sys/stat.h>, access(2) and chmod(2).
       These macros are	available to test whether a st_mode  value  passed  in
       the m argument corresponds to a file of the specified type:

       S_ISBLK(m)   Test for a block special file.

       S_ISCHR(m)   Test for a character special file.

       S_ISDIR(m)   Test for a directory.

       S_ISFIFO(m)  Test for a pipe or FIFO special file.

       S_ISLNK(m)   Test for a symbolic	link.

       S_ISREG(m)   Test for a regular file.

       S_ISSOCK(m)  Test for a socket.

       S_ISWHT(m)   Test for a whiteout.

       The  macros  evaluate to	a non-zero value if the	test is	true or	to the
       value 0 if the test is false.

RETURN VALUES
       Upon successful completion, the value  0	 is  returned;	otherwise  the
       value  -1  is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate
       the error.

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

ERRORS
       The stat() and lstat() system calls will	fail if:

       [EACCES]		  Search  permission  is denied	for a component	of the
			  path prefix.

       [EFAULT]		  The sb or path argument points  to  an  invalid  ad-
			  dress.

       [EIO]		  An  I/O error	occurred while reading from or writing
			  to the file system.

       [EINTEGRITY]	  Corrupted data was detected while reading  from  the
			  file system.

       [ELOOP]		  Too  many  symbolic links were encountered in	trans-
			  lating the pathname.

       [ENAMETOOLONG]	  A component of a pathname exceeded  255  characters,
			  or an	entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.

       [ENOENT]		  The named file does not exist.

       [ENOTDIR]	  A component of the path prefix is not	a directory.

       [EOVERFLOW]	  The  file  size  in bytes cannot be represented cor-
			  rectly in the	structure pointed to by	sb.

       The fstat() system call will fail if:

       [EBADF]		  The fd argument is not a valid open file descriptor.

       [EFAULT]		  The sb argument points to an invalid address.

       [EIO]		  An I/O error occurred	while reading from or  writing
			  to the file system.

       [EINTEGRITY]	  Corrupted  data  was detected	while reading from the
			  file system.

       [EOVERFLOW]	  The file size	in bytes cannot	 be  represented  cor-
			  rectly in the	structure pointed to by	sb.

       In  addition  to	 the errors returned by	the lstat(), the fstatat() may
       fail if:

       [EBADF]		  The path argument does not specify an	absolute  path
			  and  the fd argument is neither AT_FDCWD nor a valid
			  file descriptor open for searching.

       [EINVAL]		  The value of the flag	argument is not	valid.

       [ENOTDIR]	  The path argument is not an absolute path and	fd  is
			  neither  AT_FDCWD  nor  a file descriptor associated
			  with a directory.

       [ENOTCAPABLE]	  path is an absolute path, or contained a ".."	compo-
			  nent leading to a directory outside of the directory
			  hierarchy specified by fd, and the process is	in ca-
			  pability mode	or  the	 AT_RESOLVE_BENEATH  flag  was
			  specified.

SEE ALSO
       access(2),   chmod(2),	chown(2),   fhstat(2),	statfs(2),  utimes(2),
       sticky(7), symlink(7)

STANDARDS
       The stat() and fstat() system calls are expected	to conform to  ISO/IEC
       9945-1:1990  ("POSIX.1").   The	fstatat() system call follows The Open
       Group Extended API Set 2	specification.

HISTORY
       The stat() and fstat() system calls appeared in Version	1  AT&T	 UNIX.
       The  lstat() system call	appeared in 4.2BSD.  The fstatat() system call
       appeared	in FreeBSD 8.0.

BUGS
       Applying	fstat()	to a socket returns a zeroed buffer,  except  for  the
       blocksize field,	and a unique device and	inode number.

FreeBSD	13.2			March 30, 2021			       STAT(2)

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

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