How do I check for the existence of a file?
23 Answers
Consider opening or reading the file directly, to avoid race conditions:
const fs = require('fs');
fs.open('foo.txt', 'r', (err, fd) => {
// ...
});
fs.readFile('foo.txt', (err, data) => {
if (!err && data) {
// ...
}
})
Using fs.existsSync
:
if (fs.existsSync('foo.txt')) {
// ...
}
Using fs.stat
:
fs.stat('foo.txt', function(err, stat) {
if (err == null) {
console.log('File exists');
} else if (err.code === 'ENOENT') {
// file does not exist
fs.writeFile('log.txt', 'Some log\n');
} else {
console.log('Some other error: ', err.code);
}
});
Deprecated:
fs.exists
is deprecated.
Using path.exists
:
const path = require('path');
path.exists('foo.txt', function(exists) {
if (exists) {
// ...
}
});
Using path.existsSync
:
if (path.existsSync('foo.txt')) {
// ...
}
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20
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64Anyone reading this now (Node.js v0.12.x) keep in mind that
fs.exists
andfs.existsSync
have also been deprecated. The best way to check file existence isfs.stat
, as demoed above. Mar 29, 2015 at 18:46 -
10From Node js documentation, seems like the best way to go if you plan on opening the file after checking its existence, is to actually open it and handle the errors if it doesn't exists. Because your file could be removed between your exists check and the open function...– newprogApr 13, 2015 at 10:40
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27@Antrikshy
fs.existsSync
is no longer depricated, thoughfs.exists
still is.– RyanZimOct 12, 2017 at 20:50 -
2pls remove the 1st part of the answer, which works only for node < 0.12 (way too old)– MariusDec 29, 2021 at 13:30
Edit:
Since node v10.0.0
we could use fs.promises.access(...)
Example async code that checks if file exists:
function checkFileExists(file) {
return fs.promises.access(file, fs.constants.F_OK)
.then(() => true)
.catch(() => false)
}
An alternative for stat might be using the new fs.access(...)
:
minified short promise function for checking:
s => new Promise(r=>fs.access(s, fs.constants.F_OK, e => r(!e)))
Sample usage:
let checkFileExists = s => new Promise(r=>fs.access(s, fs.constants.F_OK, e => r(!e)))
checkFileExists("Some File Location")
.then(bool => console.log(´file exists: ${bool}´))
expanded Promise way:
// returns a promise which resolves true if file exists:
function checkFileExists(filepath){
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fs.access(filepath, fs.constants.F_OK, error => {
resolve(!error);
});
});
}
or if you wanna do it synchronously:
function checkFileExistsSync(filepath){
let flag = true;
try{
fs.accessSync(filepath, fs.constants.F_OK);
}catch(e){
flag = false;
}
return flag;
}
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6Upvoted, this is definitely the most modern (2018) way to detect if a file exists in Node.js– AKMorrisFeb 15, 2018 at 22:00
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2Yes this is the official recommended method to simply check if the file exists and manipulation afterwards is not expected. Otherwise use open/write/read and handle the error. nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_stat_path_callback– JustinApr 16, 2018 at 13:05
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1In the documentation I find
fs.constants.F_OK
etc. Is it also possible to access them likefs.F_OK
? Weird. Also terse, which is nice.– samsonApr 20, 2018 at 2:56 -
1Could try doing it with
fs.promises.access(path, fs.constants.F_OK);
to simply make it a Promise instead of creating a Promise. Jun 20, 2020 at 13:50 -
8This code is so ugly compared to the simple
fs.exists
one...really wonder why they force us to use such alternatives :'-(– TOPKATJun 20, 2021 at 10:15
A easier way to do this synchronously.
if (fs.existsSync('/etc/file')) {
console.log('Found file');
}
The API doc says how existsSync
work:
Test whether or not the given path exists by checking with the file system.
-
27@Imeurs but nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_existssync_path say: Note that fs.exists() is deprecated, but fs.existsSync() is not.– HaveFDec 9, 2016 at 3:01
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13
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2Synchronous is "easier", but it's also categorically worse because you block the whole process waiting for I/O and other tasks can't make progress. Embrace promises and asynchrony, which the app probably has to use anyway if it's nontrivial.– ggorlenJul 22, 2021 at 17:44
Modern async/await way ( Node 12.8.x )
const fileExists = async path => !!(await fs.promises.stat(path).catch(e => false));
const main = async () => {
console.log(await fileExists('/path/myfile.txt'));
}
main();
We need to use fs.stat() or fs.access()
because fs.exists(path, callback)
now is deprecated
Another good way is fs-extra
-
10A couple characters shorter and maybe easier to read:
const fileExists = path => fs.promises.stat(path).then(() => true, () => false);
– ggorlenJul 22, 2021 at 17:51 -
If you import
fs
withconst fs = require("node:fs/promises"):
then you can remove.promises
from the code too.– ggorlenDec 5, 2023 at 5:47
fs.exists(path, callback)
and fs.existsSync(path)
are deprecated now, see https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_exists_path_callback and https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_existssync_path.
To test the existence of a file synchronously one can use ie. fs.statSync(path)
. An fs.Stats
object will be returned if the file exists, see https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_class_fs_stats, otherwise an error is thrown which will be catched by the try / catch statement.
var fs = require('fs'),
path = '/path/to/my/file',
stats;
try {
stats = fs.statSync(path);
console.log("File exists.");
}
catch (e) {
console.log("File does not exist.");
}
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15The link you provided for fs.existsync clearly stats that it is NOT deprecated "Note that fs.exists() is deprecated, but fs.existsSync() is not. (The callback parameter to fs.exists() accepts parameters that are inconsistent with other Node.js callbacks. fs.existsSync() does not use a callback.)" May 8, 2017 at 15:45
-
the first (from the top) answer, which mentioned where the
fs
variable comes from– d.kJun 21, 2017 at 18:35 -
At the time this answer was written, the info was correct; however,
fs.existsSync()
is no longer deprecated.– RyanZimOct 12, 2017 at 20:52 -
I'm sorry, but what does say that "
existsSync
" is deprecated exactly?– ArtfaithSep 6, 2021 at 4:00
A concise solution in async await style:
import { stat } from 'fs/promises';
const exists = await stat('foo.txt')
.then(() => true)
.catch(() => false);
-
4
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1Because we we want to exsits to be a boolean. and we don't want to get an ecception thrown if the file dosen't exsist. Mar 31, 2023 at 10:40
Aug 2021
After reading all posts:
let filePath = "./directory1/file1.txt";
if (fs.existsSync(filePath)) {
console.log("The file exists");
} else {
console.log("The file does not exist");
}
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1According to the documentation: "fs.exists() is deprecated, but fs.existsSync() is not. The callback parameter to fs.exists() accepts parameters that are inconsistent with other Node.js callbacks. fs.existsSync() does not use a callback." Feb 23, 2022 at 0:17
Old Version before V6: here's the documentation
const fs = require('fs');
fs.exists('/etc/passwd', (exists) => {
console.log(exists ? 'it\'s there' : 'no passwd!');
});
// or Sync
if (fs.existsSync('/etc/passwd')) {
console.log('it\'s there');
}
UPDATE
New versions from V6: documentation for fs.stat
fs.stat('/etc/passwd', function(err, stat) {
if(err == null) {
//Exist
} else if(err.code == 'ENOENT') {
// NO exist
}
});
There are a lot of inaccurate comments about fs.existsSync()
being deprecated; it is not.
https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_existssync_path
Note that fs.exists() is deprecated, but fs.existsSync() is not.
@Fox: great answer! Here's a bit of an extension with some more options. It's what I've been using lately as a go-to solution:
var fs = require('fs');
fs.lstat( targetPath, function (err, inodeStatus) {
if (err) {
// file does not exist-
if (err.code === 'ENOENT' ) {
console.log('No file or directory at',targetPath);
return;
}
// miscellaneous error (e.g. permissions)
console.error(err);
return;
}
// Check if this is a file or directory
var isDirectory = inodeStatus.isDirectory();
// Get file size
//
// NOTE: this won't work recursively for directories-- see:
// http://stackoverflow.com/a/7550430/486547
//
var sizeInBytes = inodeStatus.size;
console.log(
(isDirectory ? 'Folder' : 'File'),
'at',targetPath,
'is',sizeInBytes,'bytes.'
);
}
P.S. check out fs-extra if you aren't already using it-- it's pretty sweet. https://github.com/jprichardson/node-fs-extra)
fs.exists
has been deprecated since 1.0.0. You can use fs.stat
instead of that.
var fs = require('fs');
fs.stat(path, (err, stats) => {
if ( !stats.isFile(filename) ) { // do this
}
else { // do this
}});
Here is the link for the documentation fs.stats
-
1
Simple one-liner with Node.js fs/promises
import fs from 'node:fs/promises';
let exists = await fs.access('file.txt').then(() => true).catch(() => false);
exists
will be true
if the file exists, or false
if it doesn't.
See also:
For those who ❤️ async-await
import fsp from 'fs/promises';
async function doesFileExist(path) {
try {
return (await fsp.stat(path)).isFile();
} catch (e) {
return false;
}
}
const path = './dir/file.pdf';
console.log(await doesFileExist(path));
async/await
version using util.promisify
as of Node 8:
const fs = require('fs');
const { promisify } = require('util');
const stat = promisify(fs.stat);
describe('async stat', () => {
it('should not throw if file does exist', async () => {
try {
const stats = await stat(path.join('path', 'to', 'existingfile.txt'));
assert.notEqual(stats, null);
} catch (err) {
// shouldn't happen
}
});
});
describe('async stat', () => {
it('should throw if file does not exist', async () => {
try {
const stats = await stat(path.join('path', 'to', 'not', 'existingfile.txt'));
} catch (err) {
assert.notEqual(err, null);
}
});
});
fs.statSync(path, function(err, stat){
if(err == null) {
console.log('File exists');
//code when all ok
}else if (err.code == "ENOENT") {
//file doesn't exist
console.log('not file');
}
else {
console.log('Some other error: ', err.code);
}
});
After a bit of experimentation, I found the following example using fs.stat
to be a good way to asynchronously check whether a file exists. It also checks that your "file" is "really-is-a-file" (and not a directory).
This method uses Promises, assuming that you are working with an asynchronous codebase:
const fileExists = path => {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
try {
fs.stat(path, (error, file) => {
if (!error && file.isFile()) {
return resolve(true);
}
if (error && error.code === 'ENOENT') {
return resolve(false);
}
});
} catch (err) {
reject(err);
}
});
};
If the file does not exist, the promise still resolves, albeit false
. If the file does exist, and it is a directory, then is resolves true
. Any errors attempting to read the file will reject
the promise the error itself.
For asynchronous version! And with the promise version! Here the clean simple way!
try {
await fsPromise.stat(filePath);
/**
* File exists!
*/
// do something
} catch (err) {
if (err.code = 'ENOENT') {
/**
* File not found
*/
} else {
// Another error!
}
}
A more practical snippet from my code to illustrate better:
try {
const filePath = path.join(FILES_DIR, fileName);
await fsPromise.stat(filePath);
/**
* File exists!
*/
const readStream = fs.createReadStream(
filePath,
{
autoClose: true,
start: 0
}
);
return {
success: true,
readStream
};
} catch (err) {
/**
* Mapped file doesn't exists
*/
if (err.code = 'ENOENT') {
return {
err: {
msg: 'Mapped file doesn\'t exists',
code: EErrorCode.MappedFileNotFound
}
};
} else {
return {
err: {
msg: 'Mapped file failed to load! File system error',
code: EErrorCode.MappedFileFileSystemError
}
};
}
}
The example above is just for demonstration! I could have used the error event of the read stream! To catch any errors! And skip the two calls!
Well I did it this way, as seen on https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_access_path_mode_callback
fs.access('./settings', fs.constants.F_OK | fs.constants.R_OK | fs.constants.W_OK, function(err){
console.log(err ? 'no access or dir doesnt exist' : 'R/W ok');
if(err && err.code === 'ENOENT'){
fs.mkdir('settings');
}
});
Is there any problem with this?
Using typescript and fs/promises in node14
import * as fsp from 'fs/promises';
try{
const = await fsp.readFile(fullFileName)
...
} catch(e) { ...}
It is better to use fsp.readFile
than fsp.stat
or fsp.access
for two reasons:
- The least important reason - it is one less access.
- It is possible that
fsp.stat
andfsp.readFile
would give different answers. Either due to subtle differences in the questions they ask, or because the files status changed between the calls. So the coder would have to code for two conditional branches instead of one, and the user might see more behaviors.
in old days before sit down I always check if chair is there then I sit else I have an alternative plan like sit on a coach. Now node.js site suggest just go (no needs to check) and the answer looks like this:
fs.readFile( '/foo.txt', function( err, data )
{
if(err)
{
if( err.code === 'ENOENT' )
{
console.log( 'File Doesn\'t Exist' );
return;
}
if( err.code === 'EACCES' )
{
console.log( 'No Permission' );
return;
}
console.log( 'Unknown Error' );
return;
}
console.log( data );
} );
code taken from http://fredkschott.com/post/2014/03/understanding-error-first-callbacks-in-node-js/ from March 2014, and slightly modified to fit computer. It checks for permission as well - remove permission for to test chmod a-r foo.txt
vannilla Nodejs callback
function fileExists(path, cb){
return fs.access(path, fs.constants.F_OK,(er, result)=> cb(!err && result)) //F_OK checks if file is visible, is default does no need to be specified.
}
the docs say you should use access()
as a replacement for deprecated exists()
Nodejs with build in promise (node 7+)
function fileExists(path, cb){
return new Promise((accept,deny) =>
fs.access(path, fs.constants.F_OK,(er, result)=> cb(!err && result))
);
}
Popular javascript framework
var fs = require('fs-extra')
await fs.pathExists(filepath)
As you see much simpler. And the advantage over promisify is that you have complete typings with this package (complete intellisense/typescript)! Most of the cases you will have already included this library because (+-10.000) other libraries depend on it.
-
2
You can use fs.stat
to check if target is a file or directory and you can use fs.access
to check if you can write/read/execute the file. (remember to use path.resolve
to get full path for the target)
Documentation:
Full example (TypeScript)
import * as fs from 'fs';
import * as path from 'path';
const targetPath = path.resolve(process.argv[2]);
function statExists(checkPath): Promise<fs.Stats> {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
fs.stat(checkPath, (err, result) => {
if (err) {
return resolve(undefined);
}
return resolve(result);
});
});
}
function checkAccess(checkPath: string, mode: number = fs.constants.F_OK): Promise<boolean> {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
fs.access(checkPath, mode, (err) => {
resolve(!err);
});
});
}
(async function () {
const result = await statExists(targetPath);
const accessResult = await checkAccess(targetPath, fs.constants.F_OK);
const readResult = await checkAccess(targetPath, fs.constants.R_OK);
const writeResult = await checkAccess(targetPath, fs.constants.W_OK);
const executeResult = await checkAccess(targetPath, fs.constants.X_OK);
const allAccessResult = await checkAccess(targetPath, fs.constants.F_OK | fs.constants.R_OK | fs.constants.W_OK | fs.constants.X_OK);
if (result) {
console.group('stat');
console.log('isFile: ', result.isFile());
console.log('isDir: ', result.isDirectory());
console.groupEnd();
}
else {
console.log('file/dir does not exist');
}
console.group('access');
console.log('access:', accessResult);
console.log('read access:', readResult);
console.log('write access:', writeResult);
console.log('execute access:', executeResult);
console.log('all (combined) access:', allAccessResult);
console.groupEnd();
process.exit(0);
}());
Using Promise
import { existsSync } from 'fs'
const exists = (filepath) => new Promise((res) => {
existsSync(filepath) ? res(true) : res(false)
})
// Usage #1 (async/await)
const doesItExist = await exists('foo.txt')
if (doesItExist == false) {
// create the file
}
// Usage #2 (thenable)
exists('foo.txt').then(doesItExist => {
if (!doesItExist) {
// create file
}
})
But honestly it's rare to have a case like that,
Usually you'll just go with
import { existsSync as exists } from 'fs'
if (exists('foo.txt')) {
// do something
}
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1It's a much better solution to
import { promisify } from 'util'
instead of using the *sync methods for all file system operations. In this particular example, the promise doesn't do anything for you because the operation in the promise is synchronous.– MaxFeb 27, 2023 at 16:13 -
const doesItExist = await exists('foo.txt') if (doesItExist == false) {
could be simplyif (!(await exists('foo.txt'))) {
. "But honestly it's rare to have a case like that" -- is running an Express server a rare case? Seems like resorting to blocking Sync functions is the exceptional case, not the other way around.– ggorlenMar 19, 2023 at 22:16 -
@ggorlen--onLLMstrike My answer was so ahead of its time, nobody understood haha. The two solutions I am giving are not the same as you may think, one is synchronous (the 2nd snippet), and the first one is wrapped in a promise so you can use it both synchronously and asynchronously depending on your usecase:)– vdegenneJun 16, 2023 at 21:12
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Wrapping synchronous code in a promise doesn't make the operation any less synchronous. It still blocks the thread, then forces the calling code async with absolutely no benefit. It's misleading and worse than just calling the sync version directly, which is already bad. The only truly async versions are the ones given to you by the Node API. Sorry, but the answer isn't ahead of its time, it's misguided and incorrect and I suggest deleting it.– ggorlenJun 16, 2023 at 22:04
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@ggorlen--onLLMstrike it does, try running the code to see for yourself. You can do
exists('foo.txt').then(...); ...
(in other words executing code without waiting forexists
function to give an answer. ¯_(ツ)_/¯– vdegenneJun 16, 2023 at 22:07
fs.access('file', err => err ? 'does not exist' : 'exists')
, see fs.accessfs.access()
(elsewhere recommended on this page) to check file access without the follow-up intention to also read/manipulate the file.