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I want to read the stat of all the files within a directory in C. (linux: Fedora)

i have declared this structure:

struct stat st = {0};  

Then I check for the existence of the directory.

if(stat("/home/gadre/Source",&st) == -1)
{
    status = mkdir("/home/gadre/Source", 0777);             
}
syslog(LOG_INFO, "Source Directory stage completed\n");     

where stat is:

struct stat {
    dev_t     st_dev;     /* ID of device containing file */
    ino_t     st_ino;     /* inode number */
    mode_t    st_mode;    /* protection */
    nlink_t   st_nlink;   /* number of hard links */
    uid_t     st_uid;     /* user ID of owner */
    gid_t     st_gid;     /* group ID of owner */
    dev_t     st_rdev;    /* device ID (if special file) */
    off_t     st_size;    /* total size, in bytes */
    blksize_t st_blksize; /* blocksize for file system I/O */
    blkcnt_t  st_blocks;  /* number of 512B blocks allocated */
    time_t    st_atime;   /* time of last access */
    time_t    st_mtime;   /* time of last modification */
    time_t    st_ctime;   /* time of last status change */
};

now once i enter the directory I would want to check the last modification time st_mtime of each file.

Any ideas what data structure I should be using...should store the fd in a list first and then iterate over it checking... what is the efficient approach.

Thanks.

1 Answer 1

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The generic approach is looping without any list like containers,

  1. Open fullpath of your dir dp = opendir(fullpath)) and get the directory pointer
  2. Loop by reading dp like this while ( (dirp = readdir(dp)) != NULL )
  3. Get the file names from the dirent structure dirp->d_name
  4. Construct a new full path for the filepahts i.e. smth like this filepath = fullpath + "/" + dirp->d_name
  5. and finally perform lstat to get the time-stamp info

P.S. I would prefer to use lstat because one of the files in your directory might be a symbolic link, in this case lstat will return the timestamp of the symbolic link itself and not the timestamp of the file to which it points to

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  • hi, that worked thanks, any idea how I can verify if the file was upadated after a previous access. For eg: 23-09-2014 File was updated (modified) so st_atime, st_mtime would have changed to 23-09-2014. but st_ctime not..because inode information would remain same. on 25-09-2014 the file was modified and hence atime and mtime were changed. But, for a program reading this stat information on 26-09-2014 how should it know that it was modified Sep 26, 2014 at 8:10
  • good to know that is was a solution, then probably you can accept the answer. Regarding to your second question, as much as I remember st_atim is the last access time of file data, i.e. it indicates when it has been read, and st_mtim is the last modification time of file data, i.e. when it has been written. So if you are opening the file only with write attribute is should modify only the st_mtim.
    – deimus
    Sep 26, 2014 at 8:46

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