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File System Navigation

 

The latest version of this topic can be found at File System Navigation.

The <filesystem> header implements the C++ File System Technical Specification ISO/IEC TS 18822:2015 (Final draft: ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22/WG 21 N4100) and has types and functions that enable you to write platform-independent code for navigating the file system. Because it is cross-platform, it contains APIs that are not relevant for Windows systems. For example, this means that is_fifo(const path&) always returns false on Windows. The header is based on a draft Technical Specification that was not voted into the C++17 standard as of Visual Studio 2015 RTM. Its members are found in the std::experimental::filesystem::v1 namespace.

Overview

Use the <filesystem> APIs for the following tasks:

  • iterate over files and directories under a specified path

  • get information about files including the time created, size, extension, and root directory

  • compose, decompose, and compare paths

  • create, copy and delete directories

  • copy and delete files

For more information about File IO using the Standard Library, see iostream Programming.

Paths

Constructing and composing paths

Paths in Windows (since XP) are stored natively in Unicode. The path class automatically performs all necessary string conversions. It accepts arguments of both wide and narrow character arrays, as well as std::string and std::wstring types formatted as UTF8 or UTF16. The path class also automatically normalizes path separators. You can use a single forward slash as a directory separator in constructor arguments. This enables you to use the same strings to store paths in both Windows and UNIX environments:

path pathToDisplay(L"/FileSystemTest/SubDir3");

// OK!  
path pathToDisplay2(L"\\FileSystemTest\\SubDir3");

// Still OK as always  
path pathToDisplay3(LR"(\FileSystemTest\SubDir3)");

// Raw string literals are OK, too.  

To concatenate two paths, you can use the overloaded / and /= operators, which are analogous to the + and += operators on std::string and std::wstring. The path object will conveniently supply the separators if you don’t.

path myRoot("C:/FileSystemTest");

// no trailing separator, no problem!  
myRoot /= path("SubDirRoot");

// C:/FileSystemTest/SubDirRoot  

Examining paths

The path class has several methods that return information about various parts of the path itself, as distinct from the file system entity it might refer to. You can get the root, the relative path, the file name, the file extension, and more. You can iterate over a path object to examine all the folders in the hierarchy. The following example shows how to iterate over a path (not the directory it refers to), and to retrieve information about its parts.

  
#include <string>  
#include <iostream>  
#include <sstream>  
#include <filesystem>  
  
using namespace std;  
using namespace std::experimental::filesystem::v1;  
  
wstring  DisplayPathInfo()  
{  
    // This path may or may not refer to an existing file. We are   
    // examining this path string, not file system objects.  
    path pathToDisplay(L"C:/FileSystemTest/SubDir3/SubDirLevel2/File2.txt ");  
  
    wostringstream wos;  
    int i = 0;  
    wos << L"Displaying path info for: " << pathToDisplay << endl;  
    for (path::iterator itr = pathToDisplay.begin(); itr != pathToDisplay.end(); ++itr)  
    {  
        wos << L"path part: " << i++ << L" = " << *itr << endl;  
    }  
  
    wos << L"root_name() = " << pathToDisplay.root_name() << endl  
        << L"root_path() = " << pathToDisplay.root_path() << endl  
        << L"relative_path() = " << pathToDisplay.relative_path() << endl  
        << L"parent_path() = " << pathToDisplay.parent_path() << endl  
        << L"filename() = " << pathToDisplay.filename() << endl  
        << L"stem() = " << pathToDisplay.stem() << endl  
        << L"extension() = " << pathToDisplay.extension() << endl;  
  
    return wos.str();  
}  
  
void main(int argc, char* argv[])  
{  
    wcout << DisplayPathInfo() << endl;  
    // wcout << ComparePaths() << endl; // see following example  
    wcout << endl << L"Press Enter to exit" << endl;  
    wstring input;  
    getline(wcin, input);  
}  

The code produces this output:

Displaying path info for: C:\FileSystemTest\SubDir3\SubDirLevel2\File2.txt  
path part: 0 = C:  
path part: 1 = \  
path part: 2 = FileSystemTest  
path part: 3 = SubDir3  
path part: 4 = SubDirLevel2  
path part: 5 = File2.txt  
root_name() = C:  
root_path() = C:\  
relative_path() = FileSystemTest\SubDir3\SubDirLevel2\File2.txt  
parent_path() = C:\FileSystemTest\SubDir3\SubDirLevel2  
filename() = File2.txt  
stem() = File2  
extension() = .txt  

Comparing paths

The path class overloads the same comparison operators as std::string and std::wstring. When you compare two paths, you are performing a string comparison after the separators have been normalized. If a trailing slash (or backslash) is missing it is not added and affects the comparison. The following example demonstrates how path values compare:

 
wstring ComparePaths()  
{  
    path p0(L"C:/Documents");

// no trailing separator  
    path p1(L"C:/Documents/");

//p0 <p1  
    path p2(L"C:/Documents/2013/");

// p1 <p2      
    path p3(L"C:/Documents/2013/Reports/");

// p2 <p3  
    path p4(L"C:/Documents/2014/");
// p3 <p4   
    path p5(L"D:/Documents/2013/Reports/");

// p4 <p5  
 
    wostringstream wos;  
    wos <<boolalpha <<
    p0.wstring() <<L" <" <<p1.wstring() <<L": " <<(p0 <p1) <<endl <<
    p1.wstring() <<L" <" <<p2.wstring() <<L": " <<(p1 <p2) <<endl <<
    p2.wstring() <<L" <" <<p3.wstring() <<L": " <<(p2 <p3) <<endl <<
    p3.wstring() <<L" <" <<p4.wstring() <<L": " <<(p3 <p4) <<endl <<
    p4.wstring() <<L" <" <<p5.wstring() <<L": " <<(p4 <p5) <<endl;  
    return wos.str();

}  
/* Output:  
C:\Documents <C:\Documents\: true  
C:\Documents\ <C:\Documents\2013\: true  
C:\Documents\2013\ <C:\Documents\2013\Reports\: true  
C:\Documents\2013\Reports\ <C:\Documents\2014\: true  
C:\Documents\2014\ <D:\Documents\2013\Reports\: true  
*/  

To run this code, paste it into the full example above and uncomment the line that calls it in main.

Converting between path and string types

A path object is implicitly convertible to std::wstring or std::string. This means you can pass a path to functions such as wofstream::open, as shown in this example:

wchar_t* p = L"C:/test";  
    path filePath(p);

    filePath /= L"NewFile.txt";  
 // Open, write to, and close the file.  
    wofstream myFile;  
    myFile.open(filePath);

 myFile <<L"Lorem ipsum...";  
    myFile.close 

Iterating directories and files

The <filesystem> header provides the directory_iterator type to iterate over single directories, and the recursive_directory_iterator class to iterate recursively over a directory and its subdirectories. After you construct an iterator by passing it a path object, the iterator points to the first directory_entry in the path. Create the end iterator by calling the default constructor.

When iterating through a directory, there are several kinds of items you might encounter, including but not limited to directories, files, symbolic links, and socket files. The directory_iterator returns its items as directory_entry