Is there any way to check whether a file is locked without using a try catch block? Right now, the only way I know of is to just open the file and catch any System.IO.IOException.

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The trouble is that an IOException could be thrown for many reasons other than a locked file. – JohnFx Feb 9 '10 at 16:48
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9 Answers

up vote 51 down vote accepted

No, unfortunately, and if you think about it, that information would be worthless anyway since the file could become locked the very next second (read: short timespan).

Why specifically do you need to know if the file is locked anyway? Knowing that might give us some other way of giving you good advice.

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If file is locked, we can wait some time and try again. If it is another kind of issue with file access then we should just propagate exception. – DixonD Oct 8 '10 at 5:11
Yes, but the standalone check for whether a file is locked is useless, the only correct way to do this is to try to open the file for the purpose you need the file, and then handle the lock problem at that point. And then, as you say, wait, or deal with it in another way. – Lasse V. Karlsen Oct 8 '10 at 8:06
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When I'll faced with similar problem I finished with next code:

public class FileManager
{
    private string _fileName;

    private int _numberOfTries;

    private int _timeIntervalBetweenTries;

    private FileStream GetStream(FileAccess fileAccess)
    {
        var tries = 0;
        while (true)
        {
            try
            {
                return File.Open(_fileName, FileMode.Open, fileAccess, Fileshare.None); 
            }
            catch (IOException e)
            {
                if (!IsFileLocked(e))
                    throw;
                if (++tries > _numberOfTries)
                    throw new MyCustomException("The file is locked too long: " + e.Message, e);
                Thread.Sleep(_timeIntervalBetweenTries);
            }
        }
    }

    private static bool IsFileLocked(IOException exception)
    {
        int errorCode = Marshal.GetHRForException(exception) & ((1 << 16) - 1);
        return errorCode == 32 || errorCode == 33;
    }

    // other code

}
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+1 Just what i needed for my issue :-) – Fedearne Oct 28 '10 at 7:20
Oh, it seems that I haven't read that question has part "...without using a try catch block"( – DixonD Dec 15 '10 at 15:45
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Thanks for the code! it helps me :D – cyrene Jun 16 '11 at 9:40
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@lubos, Yes, but if you think about it, the information would be useless, except for reporting that at timeindex so and so, the file was locked or not.

If your code would look like this:

if not locked then
open and update file

Then between the two lines, another process could easily lock the file, giving you the same problem you were trying to avoid to begin with: exceptions.

That Windows Explorer takes forever to delete this file is different however, as Explorer enters a sleep-loop to see if the file becomes eligible for deletion within a given timeframe. Explorer itself is told immediately that the file cannot be deleted so that it hangs around for a while is purely in the design of that application.

I will venture that unless an operating system has a way to execute a piece of code in a transactional manner, no operating system will have this feature.

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Instead of using interop you can use the .NET FileStream class methods Lock and Unlock:

FileStream.Lock http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.filestream.lock.aspx

FileStream.Unlock http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.filestream.unlock.aspx

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This is really the correct answer, as it gives the user the ability to not just lock/unlock files but sections of the files as well. All of the "You can't do that without transactions" comments may raise a valid concern, but are not useful since they're pretending that the functionality isn't there or is somehow hidden when it's not. – BrainSlugs83 Oct 13 '11 at 21:49
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Actually, this is not a solution because you cannot create an instance of FileStream if the file is locked. (an exception will be thrown) – Zé Carlos Jan 27 at 17:54
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You can also check if any process is using this file and show a list of programs you must close to continue like an installer does.

public static string GetFileProcessName(string filePath)
    {

            Process[] procs = Process.GetProcesses();
            string fileName = Path.GetFileName(filePath);

            foreach (Process proc in procs)
            {
                if (proc.MainWindowHandle != new IntPtr(0) && !proc.HasExited)
                {
                    ProcessModule[] arr = new ProcessModule[proc.Modules.Count];
                    foreach (ProcessModule pm in proc.Modules)
                    {
                        if (pm.ModuleName == fileName)
                            return proc.ProcessName;
                    }
                }
            }


        return null;
    }
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Then between the two lines, another process could easily lock the file, giving you the same problem you were trying to avoid to begin with: exceptions.

However, this way, you would know that the problem is temporary, and to retry later. (E.g., you could write a thread that, if encountering a lock while trying to write, keeps retrying until the lock is gone.)

The IOException, on the other hand, is not by itself specific enough that locking is the cause of the IO failure. There could be reasons that aren't temporary.

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You could call LockFile via interop on the region of file you are interested in. This will not throw an exception, if it succeeds you will have a lock on that portion of the file (which is held by your process), that lock will be held until you call UnlockFile or your process dies.

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It's not necessarily worthless information. I'm automating some stuff with Word documents - I need to know when Word has closed and finished with the document - it holds a lock for the duration of the session. Word doesn't provide any other way to determine when it is done (there's a beforeClose event in the COM interop, but no Closed etc), and I can't check whether the process is running as it could be running with a different document. There is no concern that another process or word may grab the lock back after it is released.

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You can see if the file is locked by trying to read or lock it yourself first.

Please see my answer here for more information.

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