Let's create a complementary question to this one. What is the most common way to get the file size in C++? Before answering, make sure it is portable (may be executed on Unix, Mac and Windows), reliable, easy to understand and without library dependencies (no boost or qt, but for instance glib is ok since it is portable library).
7 Answers
#include <fstream>
std::ifstream::pos_type filesize(const char* filename)
{
std::ifstream in(filename, std::ifstream::ate | std::ifstream::binary);
return in.tellg();
}
See http://www.cplusplus.com/doc/tutorial/files/ for more information on files in C++.
edit: this answer is not correct since tellg() does not necessarily return the right value. See http://stackoverflow.com/a/22986486/1835769
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10Based on @jterm suggestion, opening the stream would be
std::ifstream in(filename, std::ios::binary | std::ios::ate);
Just to ease everybody's life ;)– jmpcmNov 18, 2014 at 11:41 -
5
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25This answer to a question on SO says that tellg does not report the size of the file, nor the offset from the beginning in bytes. Oct 26, 2015 at 20:38
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4As mentioned above I don't think tellg() is guaranteed to return size, although it always has for me on linux systems I've done it on (so use at your own risk). Jan 26, 2017 at 18:43
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8this is missleading answer, since there is no way to convert pos_type to int/long Jan 25, 2018 at 10:28
Using the C++ filesystem library:
#include <filesystem>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
std::filesystem::path p{argv[1]};
std::cout << "The size of " << p.u8string() << " is " <<
std::filesystem::file_size(p) << " bytes.\n";
}
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3
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3
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5@MohamadElnaqeeb just benchmarked this on g++8; it is slightly faster and it is correct, unlike seekg and tellg. Aug 16, 2020 at 2:04
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1
While not necessarily the most popular method, I've heard that the ftell, fseek method may not always give accurate results in some circumstances. Specifically, if an already opened file is used and the size needs to be worked out on that and it happens to be opened as a text file, then it's going to give out wrong answers.
The following methods should always work as stat is part of the c runtime library on Windows, Mac and Linux.
#include <sys/stat.h>
long GetFileSize(std::string filename)
{
struct stat stat_buf;
int rc = stat(filename.c_str(), &stat_buf);
return rc == 0 ? stat_buf.st_size : -1;
}
or
long FdGetFileSize(int fd)
{
struct stat stat_buf;
int rc = fstat(fd, &stat_buf);
return rc == 0 ? stat_buf.st_size : -1;
}
If you need this for very large files (>2GB) you may want to look at calling stat64
and fstat64
if available.
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4
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3+1 For the mention of opening the stream in binary mode. That fixed an issue I was having using the fseek()+ftell() size with read().– T.E.D.Nov 7, 2014 at 20:14
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12I needed to add #include <sys/stat.h> and GetFileSize(...) works for me. Jan 26, 2017 at 18:40
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4be aware of the fact that long is 4 byte in Visual Studio, so you have to use f.e. long long to get correct file size for big files on Windows– zbosonJan 16, 2019 at 15:55
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It is also possible to find that out using the fopen(),fseek() and ftell() function.
int get_file_size(std::string filename) // path to file
{
FILE *p_file = NULL;
p_file = fopen(filename.c_str(),"rb");
fseek(p_file,0,SEEK_END);
int size = ftell(p_file);
fclose(p_file);
return size;
}
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4You do not need
<fstream>
and<iostream>
, you do need<string>
and you need error checking. (fseek
segfaults when using a NULL file, ftell returns -1 on error)– rveApr 30, 2011 at 16:48 -
4Initializing p_file and overwriting it in the next line is pointless and and makes many lints complain about "unused assignment".– JensMay 27, 2012 at 19:26
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5" Library implementations are allowed to not meaningfully support SEEK_END (therefore, code using it has no real standard portability)"– stephenMay 20, 2015 at 14:26
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1
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2This answer is missleading and should be downvoted imho:wiki.sei.cmu.edu/confluence/display/c/… Nov 8, 2018 at 19:00
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
FILE *f;
f = fopen("mainfinal.c" , "r");
fseek(f, 0, SEEK_END);
unsigned long len = (unsigned long)ftell(f);
printf("%ld\n", len);
fclose(f);
}
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Extra points for not getting completely sucked into the idea that it has to be done with modern constructs. Feb 10, 2023 at 20:34
In c++ you can use following function, it will return the size of you file in bytes.
#include <fstream>
int fileSize(const char *add){
ifstream mySource;
mySource.open(add, ios_base::binary);
mySource.seekg(0,ios_base::end);
int size = mySource.tellg();
mySource.close();
return size;
}
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1@StepanYakovenko take a look at this url cplusplus.com/reference/istream/istream/tellg Jan 26, 2018 at 18:55
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4@HadiRasekh please stop using
cplusplus.com
for C++ reference, it's outdated beyond usability. Not only it lacks the newer stuff from C++14, C++17, C++20 and experimental TS, it also has some considerable errors in some articles. Sep 6, 2018 at 12:50
The code snippet below exactly addresses the question in this post :)
///
/// Get me my file size in bytes (long long to support any file size supported by your OS.
///
long long Logger::getFileSize()
{
std::streampos fsize = 0;
std::ifstream myfile ("myfile.txt", ios::in); // File is of type const char*
fsize = myfile.tellg(); // The file pointer is currently at the beginning
myfile.seekg(0, ios::end); // Place the file pointer at the end of file
fsize = myfile.tellg() - fsize;
myfile.close();
static_assert(sizeof(fsize) >= sizeof(long long), "Oops.");
cout << "size is: " << fsize << " bytes.\n";
return fsize;
}
fstat()
is standardized in POSIX, but Windows chose to deviate from that standard by calling the funciton_fstat()
.fstat()
is not portable, because you need an#ifdef _WIN32
to use it.