Defined in header <filesystem> | ||
---|---|---|
std::filesystem::path read_symlink(const std::filesystem::path& p); std::filesystem::path read_symlink(const std::filesystem::path& p, std::error_code& ec); | (since C++17) |
If the path p
refers to a symbolic link, returns a new path object which refers to the target of that symbolic link.
It is an error if p
does not refer to a symbolic link.
The non-throwing overload returns an empty path on errors.
p | - | path to a symlink |
ec | - | out-parameter for error reporting in the non-throwing overload |
The target of the symlink (which may not necessarily exist).
The overload that does not take a std::error_code&
parameter throws filesystem_error
on underlying OS API errors, constructed with p
as the first path argument and the OS error code as the error code argument. The overload taking a std::error_code&
parameter sets it to the OS API error code if an OS API call fails, and executes ec.clear()
if no errors occur. Any overload not marked noexcept
may throw std::bad_alloc
if memory allocation fails.
#include <iostream> #include <filesystem> namespace fs = std::filesystem; int main() { // on a typical Linux system, /lib/libc.so.6 is a symlink fs::path p = "/lib/libc.so.6"; if(fs::exists(p) && fs::is_symlink(p)) std::cout << p << " -> " << fs::read_symlink(p) << '\n'; else std::cout << p << " does not exist or is not a symlink\n"; }
Possible output:
"/lib/libc.so.6" -> "libc-2.12.so"
(C++17) | checks whether the argument refers to a symbolic link (function) |
(C++17)(C++17) | creates a symbolic link (function) |
(C++17) | copies a symbolic link (function) |
(C++17)(C++17) | determines file attributes determines file attributes, checking the symlink target (function) |
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