statx - get file status (extended)
Standard C library (libc
, -lc
)
#define _GNU_SOURCE /* See feature_test_macros(7) */
#include <fcntl.h> /* Definition of AT_* constants */
#include <sys/stat.h>
int statx(int dirfd, const char *restrict pathname, int flags,
unsigned int mask, struct statx *restrict statxbuf);
This function returns information about a file, storing it in the
buffer pointed to by statxbuf
. The returned buffer is a
structure of the following type:
struct statx {
__u32 stx_mask; /* Mask of bits indicating
filled fields */
__u32 stx_blksize; /* Block size for filesystem I/O */
__u64 stx_attributes; /* Extra file attribute indicators */
__u32 stx_nlink; /* Number of hard links */
__u32 stx_uid; /* User ID of owner */
__u32 stx_gid; /* Group ID of owner */
__u16 stx_mode; /* File type and mode */
__u64 stx_ino; /* Inode number */
__u64 stx_size; /* Total size in bytes */
__u64 stx_blocks; /* Number of 512B blocks allocated */
__u64 stx_attributes_mask;
/* Mask to show what's supported
in stx_attributes */
/* The following fields are file timestamps */
struct statx_timestamp stx_atime; /* Last access */
struct statx_timestamp stx_btime; /* Creation */
struct statx_timestamp stx_ctime; /* Last status change */
struct statx_timestamp stx_mtime; /* Last modification */
/* If this file represents a device, then the next two
fields contain the ID of the device */
__u32 stx_rdev_major; /* Major ID */
__u32 stx_rdev_minor; /* Minor ID */
/* The next two fields contain the ID of the device
containing the filesystem where the file resides */
__u32 stx_dev_major; /* Major ID */
__u32 stx_dev_minor; /* Minor ID */
__u64 stx_mnt_id; /* Mount ID */
/* Direct I/O alignment restrictions */
__u32 stx_dio_mem_align;
__u32 stx_dio_offset_align;
};
The file timestamps are structures of the following type:
struct statx_timestamp {
__s64 tv_sec; /* Seconds since the Epoch (UNIX time) */
__u32 tv_nsec; /* Nanoseconds since tv_sec */
};
(Note that reserved space and padding is omitted.)
To access a file's status, no permissions are required on the file
itself, but in the case of statx() with a pathname,
execute (search) permission is required on all of the directories in
pathname
that lead to the file.
statx() uses pathname
, dirfd
, and
flags
to identify the target file in one of the following
ways:
If pathname
begins with a slash, then it is an absolute
pathname that identifies the target file. In this case, dirfd
is ignored.
If pathname
is a string that begins with a character other
than a slash and dirfd
is AT_FDCWD, then
pathname
is a relative pathname that is interpreted relative to
the process's current working directory.
If pathname
is a string that begins with a character other
than a slash and dirfd
is a file descriptor that refers to a
directory, then pathname
is a relative pathname that is
interpreted relative to the directory referred to by dirfd
.
(See openat(2) for an explanation of why this is
useful.)
If pathname
is an empty string and the
AT_EMPTY_PATH flag is specified in flags
(see
below), then the target file is the one referred to by the file
descriptor dirfd
.
flags
can be used to influence a pathname-based lookup. A
value for flags
is constructed by ORing together zero or more
of the following constants:
If pathname
is an empty string, operate on the file referred
to by dirfd
(which may have been obtained using the
open(2) O_PATH flag). In this case,
dirfd
can refer to any type of file, not just a directory.
If dirfd
is AT_FDCWD, the call operates on
the current working directory.
Don't automount the terminal ("basename") component of
pathname
if it is a directory that is an automount point. This
allows the caller to gather attributes of an automount point (rather
than the location it would mount). This flag has no effect if the mount
point has already been mounted over.
The AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT flag can be used in tools that scan directories to prevent mass-automounting of a directory of automount points.
All of stat(2), lstat(2), and fstatat(2) act as though AT_NO_AUTOMOUNT was set.
If pathname
is a symbolic link, do not dereference it:
instead return information about the link itself, like
lstat(2).
flags
can also be used to control what sort of
synchronization the kernel will do when querying a file on a remote
filesystem. This is done by ORing in one of the following values:
Do whatever stat(2) does. This is the default and is very much filesystem-specific.
Force the attributes to be synchronized with the server. This may require that a network filesystem perform a data writeback to get the timestamps correct.
Don't synchronize anything, but rather just take whatever the system has cached if possible. This may mean that the information returned is approximate, but, on a network filesystem, it may not involve a round trip to the server - even if no lease is held.
The mask
argument to statx() is used to
tell the kernel which fields the caller is interested in. mask
is an ORed combination of the following constants:
STATX_TYPE | Want stx_mode & S_IFMT |
STATX_MODE | Want stx_mode & ~S_IFMT |
STATX_NLINK | Want stx_nlink |
STATX_UID | Want stx_uid |
STATX_GID | Want stx_gid |
STATX_ATIME | Want stx_atime |
STATX_MTIME | Want stx_mtime |
STATX_CTIME | Want stx_ctime |
STATX_INO | Want stx_ino |
STATX_SIZE | Want stx_size |
STATX_BLOCKS | Want stx_blocks |
STATX_BASIC_STATS | [All of the above] |
STATX_BTIME | Want stx_btime |
STATX_ALL | The same as STATX_BASIC_STATS | STATX_BTIME. |
It is deprecated and should not be used. | |
STATX_MNT_ID | Want stx_mnt_id (since Linux 5.8) |
STATX_DIOALIGN | Want stx_dio_mem_align and stx_dio_offset_align |
(since Linux 6.1; support varies by filesystem) |
Note that, in general, the kernel does not
reject values in
mask
other than the above. (For an exception, see
EINVAL in errors.) Instead, it simply informs the
caller which values are supported by this kernel and filesystem via the
statx.stx_mask
field. Therefore, do not
simply set
mask
to UINT_MAX (all bits set), as one or
more bits may, in the future, be used to specify an extension to the
buffer.
The status information for the target file is returned in the
statx
structure pointed to by statxbuf
. Included in
this is stx_mask
which indicates what other information has
been returned. stx_mask
has the same format as the
mask
argument and bits are set in it to indicate which fields
have been filled in.
It should be noted that the kernel may return fields that weren't
requested and may fail to return fields that were requested, depending
on what the backing filesystem supports. (Fields that are given values
despite being unrequested can just be ignored.) In either case,
stx_mask
will not be equal mask
.
If a filesystem does not support a field or if it has an
unrepresentable value (for instance, a file with an exotic type), then
the mask bit corresponding to that field will be cleared in
stx_mask
even if the user asked for it and a dummy value will
be filled in for compatibility purposes if one is available (e.g., a
dummy UID and GID may be specified to mount under some
circumstances).
A filesystem may also fill in fields that the caller didn't ask for
if it has values for them available and the information is available at
no extra cost. If this happens, the corresponding bits will be set in
stx_mask
.
Note
: for performance and simplicity reasons, different
fields in the statx
structure may contain state information
from different moments during the execution of the system call. For
example, if stx_mode
or stx_uid
is changed by another
process by calling chmod(2) or
chown(2), stat() might return the old
stx_mode
together with the new stx_uid
, or the old
stx_uid
together with the new stx_mode
.
Apart from stx_mask
(which is described above), the fields
in the statx
structure are:
stx_blksize
The "preferred" block size for efficient filesystem I/O. (Writing to a file in smaller chunks may cause an inefficient read-modify-rewrite.)
stx_attributes
Further status information about the file (see below for more information).
stx_nlink
The number of hard links on a file.
stx_uid
This field contains the user ID of the owner of the file.
stx_gid
This field contains the ID of the group owner of the file.
stx_mode
The file type and mode. See inode(7) for details.
stx_ino
The inode number of the file.
stx_size
The size of the file (if it is a regular file or a symbolic link) in bytes. The size of a symbolic link is the length of the pathname it contains, without a terminating null byte.
stx_blocks
The number of blocks allocated to the file on the medium, in 512-byte
units. (This may be smaller than stx_size
/512 when the file has
holes.)
stx_attributes_mask
A mask indicating which bits in stx_attributes
are supported
by the VFS and the filesystem.
stx_atime
The file's last access timestamp.
stx_btime
The file's creation timestamp.
stx_ctime
The file's last status change timestamp.
stx_mtime
The file's last modification timestamp.
stx_dev_major
and stx_dev_minor
The device on which this file (inode) resides.
stx_rdev_major
and stx_rdev_minor
The device that this file (inode) represents if the file is of block or character device type.
stx_mnt_id
The mount ID of the mount containing the file. This is the same
number reported by name_to_handle_at(2) and corresponds
to the number in the first field in one of the records in
/proc/self/mountinfo
.
stx_dio_mem_align
The alignment (in bytes) required for user memory buffers for direct I/O (O_DIRECT) on this file, or 0 if direct I/O is not supported on this file.
STATX_DIOALIGN (stx_dio_mem_align
and
stx_dio_offset_align
) is supported on block devices since Linux
6.1. The support on regular files varies by filesystem; it is supported
by ext4, f2fs, and xfs since Linux 6.1.
stx_dio_offset_align
The alignment (in bytes) required for file offsets and I/O segment
lengths for direct I/O (O_DIRECT) on this file, or 0 if
direct I/O is not supported on this file. This will only be nonzero if
stx_dio_mem_align
is nonzero, and vice versa.
For further information on the above fields, see inode(7).
The stx_attributes
field contains a set of ORed flags that
indicate additional attributes of the file. Note that any attribute that
is not indicated as supported by stx_attributes_mask
has no
usable value here. The bits in stx_attributes_mask
correspond
bit-by-bit to stx_attributes
.
The flags are as follows:
The file is compressed by the filesystem and may take extra resources to access.
The file cannot be modified: it cannot be deleted or renamed, no hard links can be created to this file and no data can be written to it. See chattr(1).
The file can only be opened in append mode for writing. Random access writing is not permitted. See chattr(1).
File is not a candidate for backup when a backup program such as dump(8) is run. See chattr(1).
A key is required for the file to be encrypted by the filesystem.
The file has fs-verity enabled. It cannot be written to, and all reads from it will be verified against a cryptographic hash that covers the entire file (e.g., via a Merkle tree).
The file is in the DAX (cpu direct access) state. DAX state attempts to minimize software cache effects for both I/O and memory mappings of this file. It requires a file system which has been configured to support DAX.
DAX generally assumes all accesses are via CPU load / store instructions which can minimize overhead for small accesses, but may adversely affect CPU utilization for large transfers.
File I/O is done directly to/from user-space buffers and memory mapped I/O may be performed with direct memory mappings that bypass the kernel page cache.
While the DAX property tends to result in data being transferred synchronously, it does not give the same guarantees as the O_SYNC flag (see open(2)), where data and the necessary metadata are transferred together.
A DAX file may support being mapped with the MAP_SYNC flag, which enables a program to use CPU cache flush instructions to persist CPU store operations without an explicit fsync(2). See mmap(2) for more information.
The file is the root of a mount.
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and
errno
is set to indicate the error.
Search permission is denied for one of the directories in the path
prefix of pathname
. (See also
path_resolution(7).)
pathname
is relative but dirfd
is neither
AT_FDCWD nor a valid file descriptor.
pathname
or statxbuf
is NULL or points to a
location outside the process's accessible address space.
Invalid flag specified in flags
.
Reserved flag specified in mask
. (Currently, there is one
such flag, designated by the constant STATX__RESERVED,
with the value 0x80000000U.)
Too many symbolic links encountered while traversing the pathname.
pathname
is too long.
A component of pathname
does not exist, or pathname
is an empty string and AT_EMPTY_PATH was not specified
in flags
.
Out of memory (i.e., kernel memory).
A component of the path prefix of pathname
is not a
directory or pathname
is relative and dirfd
is a file
descriptor referring to a file other than a directory.
Linux.
Linux 4.11, glibc 2.28.