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I am running the following program, which checks if a file exists or not using stat(). But, when I am passing a path say, $HOME/file.sh, it fails with ENOENT error. But when I pass the expanded path i.e. /root/file.sh, stat() returns success i.e. exit code 0.

int main ()
{
    struct stat statbuf;
    char path [1024];
    strcpy(path,"$HOME/file.sh");

    int rc = stat(path,&statbuf);

    if (rc == -1 )
    {
        printf ("File not found !!\n");
    }
    else
        printf("Found it !!\n");

    return 0;
}
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    $HOME has meaning to shell scripts, but not C programs. You are asking stat to look for a file named file.sh in a directory named $HOME which is below your current working directory.
    – Scooter
    Sep 18, 2012 at 14:07

1 Answer 1

4

strcpy() will not expand the environment variable $HOME to its value, but will copy the extract string literal as specified. You can obtain the value of $HOME using getenv().

Change your failure message to:

printf("File not found: %s\n", path);

for confirmation.

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  • Yes, but that is not my concern. I could have directly passed $HOME/file.sh to stat. but my question is do I need to pass an absolute path to stat ?
    – trax_code
    Sep 18, 2012 at 13:27
  • @trax_code, no you do not. If the path is not absolute then the path is treated as a relative path and it will be relative to the current directory of the process.
    – hmjd
    Sep 18, 2012 at 13:31
  • ok. one question. By current directory, you mean the directory from where i am running the executable ?
    – trax_code
    Sep 18, 2012 at 13:43
  • @trax_code, yes. You can obtain the current directory of your process using getcwd() if you would like to display for diagnostic purpose.
    – hmjd
    Sep 18, 2012 at 13:47
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    stat() doesn't expand the env/ var/ $HOME neither. Expansion is done by the shell, and stat() won't use the shell. @trax_code
    – alk
    Sep 18, 2012 at 14:12

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